r. . t V : > ^ f : '> . * ' ¥■■ tl \ i>«visioo "j^ /View of the Remains . . . 'Iyttt IThe Theatre / Aiii. Cylinder of Esarhaddon. . . . XXIX. A Babylonian Landmark .... XIV. Assyrian, Egyptian, and Phoenician Pottery XV. /View of Eastern House-tops . \ Models found in Egyptian Tombs The Black Obelisk ..... The Jericho Plain ..... View from the Slope of Olivet . Egyptian and Early Christian Lamps . The Amphitheatre ..... Cylinder of Esarhaddon bearing the Name of Manasseh .... Coins of Biblical Times .... tHarp ; Assyrian Dulcimers ; Sistrum -j Procession of Elamite Harpists IRams' Horns ; Flutes ; Cymbals ; Horn . XXIV. Babylonian Deluge Tablet . . . XXV. /Egyptian Necklaces .... VIII \ Bracelet, Earring AND Rings . . . XXVI. /Cylinder for holding Kohl or Stibium . XXVI. I Egyptian Toilet-box .... XXVII. Samaritan Roll of the Law . . . XXVII. Egyptian Uas Sceptre .... XXVII. Cliffs at Petra, showing Rock-tombs . XXVIII. Enthroned before Lachish . . . Frontispiece Armed Tyrian Galley .... XXIX. Three-legged Table from Thebes . . XXXIII. View from the N. . . . . . XXX. Portrait from the Monuments . . XIV. • } XVI. XVIL XVIII. XIX. XX. XXL . XXIX. . XXIL •}XXIIL 60 XIV. IV. . V. . VI. . . 282 . 78 . 104 . 116 VIL. . 122 VIIL XXV. . 142 . 606 XXV. IX. . XIV. X. . . 606 . 200 . 282 . 232 234 234 252 826 282 330 358 390 396 398 458 458 826 558 566 568 606 142 628 628 750 750 750 798 826 942 890 282 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, AND PLANS TO ILLUSTRATE ARTICLE VERSIONS WEIGHTS i. MEASURES WRITING (I.) Aethiopic ; ; (n.)\ ENIAN. J XXXI. /'Specimens of Script , , , J Arabic; (III.) Aramaic ; (IV.) Arme> iDiTTO: (V.) Greek; (VI.) Sahidic ; (VII.)1 yvvtt I Slavonic; (VIII. and IX.) Syriac . t J<^^^ii- I'A Beetle-weight .... Weighing Rings of Gold against a Lion AND (^ Beetle-weight \ Weighing Rings I weight . . . ... /Papyrus showing Hieroglyphic Writing I Papyrus showing Demotic Writing . _ J PUGILLARIA, or WaX TaBLETS j Tessera ...... I Origin of Alphabet *^Early Alphabets XXXIII. XXXV. XXXVI. FACDTfl pa6b . 928 942 XXXIV. . 952 954 956 B. IT.TAJSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT Absalom, So-called Tomb of PAGE 8 Cenchraca, Port of, figured on a Coin page 141 Acropolis at Athens . 73 Censer, An Egyptian . 142 Adze, An Egyptian 77 Chaff driven by the Wind . 143 Agricultural Implements . 18 Chaldeans ..... 144 Ai, View from .... 24 Chameleon, The .... 144 Aijalon, Valley of . . . 25 Chariot, An Assyrian . 146 Alabaster Vases .... 25 Chariots, Egyptian 146 Alexander the Great, Coin showing Chest from Thebes 149 Head of 26 Chrisma 190 Altar of Burnt-offering 31 Cobra, The Egyptian . 67 Altar of Incense ; . . . 31 Colocynth, The .... 319 Altar Tripod from Khorsabad 32 Comb, An Egyptian . 630 Araon, The God. 35 Coney, The .... 175 Amulets, Egyptian 38 Cooking, Egyptian 177 Antioch : Gate of St. Paul . 44 Corinth, Coin of . 14X Antiochus III., Coin of 44 Cos, Coin of ... . 182 Antiochus IV., Coin of 45 Crocodile of the Nile, The . 473 Antiochus VI., Coin of 46 Crowns, Assyrian 190 Apries, Cartouche of . 678 Cups, Egyptian .... 191 Apron of Bead-work from Egyptian Cups and Vases, Egyptian . 330 Mummy ..... 629 Damascus, E. Gate of 195 Ararat, View of . 53 Damascus, Monument from 196 Areopagus at Athens . 516 Dances, Egyptian 197 Ark, An Egyptian 57 Darius, Cartouche of . 200 Assos 68 Dead Sea, The .... 774 Athens : Acropolis 73 Demetrius I., Coin of . 207 Athens : Mars' Hill . 516 Diadem, shown on Coin of Tigranes 213 Augustus Caesar .... 76 Diana, shown on Ephesian Coin . 213 Axe, An Egyptian 77 Diana, Temple of, on Ephesian Coin 253 Babil from the W. . . . 83 Dill, The Common 41 Balsam of Gilead, The . 844 Dinner-party, Ancient Egyptian . 524 Banquet, An Assyrian 89 Discus-thrower, A . . . 215 Baskets, Egyptian 95 Door, An Ancient Egyptian. 296 Bat : The Tomb -bat . 96 Dress of Bedawi .... 222 Beards of Various Eastern Nations 97 Dress of ligyptian Man 220 Bed, An Egyptian 98 Dress of Egyptian Woman . 221 Beer-sheba 99 Dress of Palestine Fellahah . 221 Bellows, Egyptian 100 Drusus, Arch of . 49 Bethlehem, from S.E. . 105 Egypt, Troops of . . . 235 Bottles, Skin .... 114 Egyptian Standards . 251 Bowl, An Inscribed Hittite . 114 Embalming : Bandaging a Mummy 248 Bozrah 115 En-dor, Cave at . 250 Bread : Carrying Cakes to Oven . 116 Ephesus 253 Bread : Kneading with Feet 116 Ephesus, Coins of . . . 253 Brick-making by Slaves at Thebes 117 Etam, The Rock .... 260 Camel, Bactrian or Two-humped 123 Ezra, Tomb of . 274 Camel : Syrian Baggage-camel . 859 Fall depicted on Babylonian Cj'linder Camphire, The .... 124 seal 276 Carmel, Place of Elijah's Sacrifice 243 Fowling Scene .... 359 Carrying Cakes to Oven 116 Frontlet or Phylactery 289 Cart, Assyrian .... 138 Gad, River of ... . 377 Castor and Pollux, Coin showing . 139 Galilee, Sea of, from Tell Hum 135 Castor-oil Plant, The . 319 Gerizim 304 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, AND PLANS Goat, Long-eared Syrian Grain, '.Goatsitreading in ,1*._^:^. J Grinding Corn "Z. Handicrafts represented in Frescoes Hanukka Lamp . Hebron from N.W. Hermon .... High-priest, Jewish Hoes, Egyptian . Hoopoe, The Hophra, Pharaoh, Cartouche of Horse, Trappings of an Assyrian Ibis, The Sacred . Jerusalem : Golden Gate Jerusalem : " St. Stephen's Gate Jerusalem : Via Dolorosa Jerusalem : W. Walls of Jordan Valley, looking S. Joseph's Tomb . Key, An Iron Kirjath-jearim, View from Kite, The . Kneading Dough with Feet Knives, Egyptian " Knop," illustrated from Monument Lammergeier, The Laver, The . Lebanon, View of Lentil, The Lily, The . " Lily- work " at Persepolis Lizard, The Fan-footed Locust, The Bald (?) . Locust, The Migratory Locust, The N. African Mallet, A . Mallow, The Mandrake, The . Manna {Tamarix gallica) Mars' Hill at Athens . Mastick, The Mattocks ; Egyptian Hoes Mena, Cartouche of Menephtah, Cartouche of Mirror, An Egyptian . Mummy, Bandaging a. Myrrh, The Nain .... Nazareth : " The Virgin's Fountain Necho II., Cartouche of Necklace, Egyptian Porcelain Nectanebus IL, Cartouche of Nero, Coin of, showing Head Net : Egyptian Landing-nets Nicaea, Gate of . Nuts (Pistachia vera) . Oil-tree, The Fruit of the . Osprey, The Ossifrage, The . Oven, An Eastern Owl, The Little . Oxen treading out the Corn . Painting of Eyes. PapjTus, The Partridge, The Greek . Paul, St., Gate of, at Antioch Pelican, The Pens, Reed . Peor, View from Persepolis . Phylactery . 312 119 544 328 206 339 344 349 523 459 678 356 631 404 850 406 400 428 430 446 453 454 116 454 454 631 798 470 471 480 875 482 483 482 482 326 504 507 508 516 520 523 236 677 552 248 569 573 576 678 629 237 120 285, 583 112 610 615 630 631 116 632 19 633 739 646 44 664 953 88 672 289 PAGE Piece of Siver, The Lost . 692 Pillow : W^ooden Head-rest. 98 Plough, etc., as still used in the East 18 Ploughman, An Eastern . 18 Poplar (Styrax officinale) • 704 Potter, The .... . 330 Potter's Furnace, An Egyptian . . 289 Pulley, A • 330 QuaU, The 727 Kabbah from the E. . 729 Rachel's Tomb .... • 730 Ramses IL, Cartouche of . . 677 Reaper, An Eastern . 19 Reed (Arundo donax) . • 740 Runner, An Arab . 192 Samala, Bas-relief from . 682 Samala, Monument at . 862 Samson, Traditional Tomb of . 782 Sandal, An Assyrian . . 786 Sandal, An Egyptian . . 786 Scorpion, The .... • 793 Scoiurge, A Roman . 189 Shabataka, Cartouche of . 678 Shadoof, The .... • 945 Shechem from S.W. . 817 Sheep, The Fat-taUed . . 818 Shishak, Cartouche of . . 827 Shrine, An Egyptian . . 57 Siloam Inscription, The ■ 954 Siloam, Pool of . . 823 Slinger, An Egyptian . • 59 Snake-charmers, Indian . 837 So (Sabaco), Cartouche of . . 838 Spikenard, The .... . 845 Standards, Egyptian . • 251 Stephen, St., Gate of . . 850 Stool, Three-legged, from Thebes • 798 Stork, The White . 852 Tabernacle, S.E. View of . 864 Tabor • 344 Tamarix gallica .... . 508 Temple at Jerusalem : Stone from placed in St. Paul's Cathedral . 876 Tent, An Arab .... 331 Tent-making .... • 331 Threshing-floor, An Egyptian • 19 Throne, An Assyrian . . 890 Thrush, The Blue 843 Thyine Wood .... . 891 Tirhakah, Cartouche of 897 Tools 329 Treading out the Corn . 19 Tree, Sacred AssjTian . 321 Turtle-Dove, The 908 Udad, or N. African Wild Sheep . 145 Ur (Muqeir), Ruins of Temple at . 915 Viper : Heads of Horned Viper anc Sand-viper .... 13 Vultiure : the Egyptian Scavenger vulture ..... 308 Water-carriers .... 942 Water raised by the Shadoof 945 Wigs, Egyptian .... 324 Wine-press, An Egyptian . 948 Winnowing with Wooden Shovels 20 Writing: Basalt Slab for grinding Paint 952 Writing : Oldest Hebrew Writing (Si loam Inscription) 954 Writing : Reed Pens . . . . 953 Writing : Scribe's Palette . 953 Xerxes, Cartouche of . 21 XVI LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, AND PLANS C. FULL-PAGE MAPS AND PLANS FACING PAGE Armenia, Assyria, etc. ... 58 Journeyings of the Children of Israel . 270 Canaan in the Time of the Patriarchs . 303 (I.) Jerusalem at the Time of Vespasian, 70 A.D. (II.) Jerusalem: Plan of Site and Walls of Modern City . . 400 Environs of Jerusalem . . . 402 Palestine in the Time of Christ . . 404 FACING PAGE (I.) The Dominions of David and Solomon. (II.) The Kingdoms of Judah and Israel .... 450 Contour Map of Palestine . . . 634 Palestine as divided among the Twelve Tribes ...... 638 Journeys of St. Paul .... 654 Mount Moriah, Plan of . . . 876 D. MAPS AND PLANS IN THE TEXT Asher, The Tribal Lot of . Athens, Plan of . Babylon : Attempted Restoration Babylon : Present State of the Ruins Babel, Plan of Temple of Tower of Benjamin, The Tribal Lot of Dan, The Tribal Lot of Ecbatana, Plan of . . . Ephesus : Plan of Temple of Diana Ephraim, The Tribal Lot of Gad, The Tribal Lot of Galilee, The Sea of . . . Issachar, The Tribal Lot of Judah, The Tribal Lot of . Naphtali, The Tribal Lot of Nineveh, Plan of . . . PAGE PAGE 64 Nineveh : Plan of the Environs . . 602 72 House of Cedars of Lebanon : Alterna- 81 five Diagram Sections . . . 633 82 Lower Egypt, showing the Route of the 85 i Israelites 737 102 Dead Sea : Map and Longitudinal 197 I Section 773 225 Solomon's Palace : Plan of Fergusson's 253 Restoration 839 254 Tabernacle : Plan of Outer Court . 863 291 Tabernacle : Diagram of the Dimen- 303 sions (in Section) .... 865 375 Solomon's Temple, Plan of . . . 877 435 Herod's Temple, Plan of . . . 878 574 A Hebrew Tomb, with Kokim . . 900 600 Zebulun, The Tribal Lot of . . . 962 MURRAY'S ILLUSTRATED BIBLE DICTIONARY Aalap. [Addan.] Aapon, son of Amram and Jochebed, and elder brother of Moses and Miriam (Num.26. 59), a Levite, who could " speak well " (Ex. 4.14), and was therefore qualified to be the " mouth " and " interpreter " of his brother Moses, who was slow of speech (4. 16). He thus became not only the organ of communication with the Israelites and Pharaoh (4.30,7.2), but also the actual instrument of working most of the miracles of the Exodus (7. 19), and his prominence in the work of his people's de- liverance was recognized in later days (iSam. 12.6 ; Ps.77.2o). He was indispensable to his brother, whose weary arms he helped to up- hold during the struggle against Amalek (Ex. 17.12), but was incapable of leadership by him- self, yielding to pressure from the people in Moses' absence and making the golden calf (32. 4). His weakness was rewarded by seeing " a feast to the Lord " degraded to the lowest form of heathen sensuality (Ex. 32. 5, 25 ; iCor.lO.7). He was brought to a sense of his sins by Moses' rebuke (Ex. 32. 22), and was forgiven by God in response to Moses' prayer (Ex.32. 33 ; Deut.9.20). It was after this'that Moses by God's command delegated to Aaron the office of High-priest (Ex.29; Lev. 8). The solemnity of the office and the need for re- verence in the discharge of its duties was vindicated by the death of Nadab and Abihu, Aaron's two eldest sons, for offering strange fire, perhaps through being intoxicated (LeV. 10.1,2,9). Thenceforward Aaron is specific- ally "the priest" (Ex. 31. io,35. 19,38.21 ; Lev. 13.2 ; Num.l8.28), who stays a plague by an offering of incense (Num.l6.46-4S) ; to his charge the tabernacle is committed (4.5,19,27, 33) ; and to him the Levites are given in ex- change for the firstborn (8.41). Against his pre-eminence Korah and his companions re- belled, but it was vindicated by the blossoming of his rod (17.i-ii). The only occasion on which his individual character is seen is when, prompted by Miriam, he complained against Moses (I2.2), but he speedily repented; and leaning, as he always did otherwise, on Moses, it is not strange that he should have shared his sin at Meribah and its punishment (2O.10-12). His death soon followed, hastened on perhaps by exposiure to a sandstorm. It took place on mount Hor, after the transference of his robes and office to his son Eleazar, who alone with Moses was present at his death and performed his burial (20.28). So he was " gathered unto his people " (2O.24) — the phrase which speaks ABADDON of the faith of those days in a conscious life beyond the grave. He had been married to Elisheba (Ex. 6. 23), and his two younger sons Eleazar and Ithamar survived him ; for thirty days the congregation, even all the house of Israel, wept for Aaron " the saint of the Lord " (Num.20.29 ; Ps.106.i6), who, though com- passed with infirmity (Heb.5.2), had yet been called by God to receive that anointing for consecration to His service which made him a type of the sinless Messiah. [c.r.d.b.] Aaron's Pod. (i) Like that of Moses, with which a Jewish legend {Yalkiit to Ps.llO, §869) identifies it. Aaron's rod (Ex. 7.9ff., 8. 5, 16) played an important part in the miraculous events which preceded the Exodus from Egypt. For Moses' rod, see Ex.4.2ff.,7.i'i,i9 (may refer to 4.3 or 7.9), 9.23,10.13,14.16'. (2) Aaron's rod that budded (Num.17. 2-11). Twelve rods, the name of a tribe inscribed on each, with the exception of Aayon for Levi, were deposited in the tabernacle " before the Testimony " for a night. In the morning it was found that Aaron's rod had put forth buds, blossoms, and ripe almonds. This sign was accepted as proof of the right of the family of Aaron to the priesthood. This rod was to be put back "before" the testimony; according to Heb.9.4 it was in the ark. [Ark of the Covenant.] See further, Jewish Encyc. i. 5. [h.h.] Ab (father), an element in the composition of many proper names, of which Abba is an Aram. form. Applied to God by Jesus Christ (Mk. 14.36), and by St. Paul(Ro.8.i5 ; Gal.4.6). Ab. [Months.] Ab'aeuc (2Esd.l.4o) = Habakkuk. Abaddon (\ibhadd6n ; LXX. 'ATrwXem : lit. ruin, destruction) occurs in O.T. in the Wisdom literature only. It is always (unless Job 31.12 is an exception) a proper noun, de- noting that part of the intermediate state (s/i'-'o/) which is reserved for the punishment of the wicked. In Job 26.6, Pr.15.ii, 27. 20, it is joined with sh''6l ; in Ps.88.ii with the grave; in Job 28.22 with death. This last passage, in which Abaddon and Death are personified, forms a transition to N.T. usage. In Rev.9.ii Abaddon appears as Apollyon ('XttoWvwv, "Destroyer"), the angel, not of Sheol or Hades, but of the Abyss (Gehenna), and king of the tormenting locusts. Perhaps we have here, not a person, but a vivid per- sonification, so that in N.T. Apollyon or Abaddon is simply a name of hell (Gehenna). Rabbinical usage, which makes Abaddon the lowest compartment of Gehenna, confirms this. [ASMODEUS.] [C.H.] 2 ABADIAS Abadi'as, son of Jezelus (iEsd.8.35) = Obadiah, 7, son of Jehiel (Ezr.S.g). Abas' tha, one of the seven eunuchs in the Persian court of Ahasuerus (Esth.l.io). Abana' {Amanah, R.V. marg.), one of the " rivers of Damascus " (2K.5.12). The Barada and the 'Awaj are now the chief streams of Damascus, and there is little doubt that the former is the Abana and the latter the Pharpar. The Barada rises in the Anti-libanus near Zebddneh, and is joined by an affluent from 'AinFijeh farther S. ; the main source is some 23 miles from the city, after flowing through which it runs across the plain, till it loses itself in the lake Bahret el-Qibliyeh. [c.r.c] Abarim', the mountains E. of Jordan, in Moab (Num. 27. 12,33. 47,48; Deut. 32.49 ; also R.V. Je.22.20, A.V. passages). [Nebc] For Ije-abarim, see Iim. [c.r.c] Abba. [Ab.] Abda'. — 1. Father of Adoniram (iK.4.6). — 2. Son of Shammua (Ne.ll.17) = OBADiAri, son of Shemaiah (iChr.9.i6). Abdeel', father of Shelemiah (Je.36.26). Abdi'. — 1. A Merarite, and ancestor of Ethan the singer (iChr.6.44). — 2. The father of Kish, a Merarite, in the reign of Hezekiah (2Chr.29.12). — 3. A Jew in the time of Ezra, who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.26). Abdias'(2 Esd. 1.39)= the prophet On ADi AH. Abdiel', <>ne of the Gadites settled in the land of Bashan (iChr.5.15) in the days of Jotham king of Judah. Abdon'.— 1. (Judg.i2.13.) Son of Hillel of Pirathon of Ephraim. The last of the minor judges ; a polygamist and wealthy. — 2. Son of Shashak (iChr.8.23). — 3. Eldest son of Jehiel son of Gibeon (8.30,9.35,36).— 4. Son of Micah, a courtier of Josiah (2Chr.34.20) = Achbor (2 K.22.I2). [H.M.S.] Abdon' (tillage; Jos.2i.30; iChr.6.74)- Cf. Jos. 19. 28, where Hebron {R.V. Ebron) is per- haps a clerical error for Abdon. [Hebkon, 2.] A Levitical town of Asher. Now 'A bdeh, a ruin 10 miles N.E. of Accho (Vandevelde). [c.r.c] Abed'-nego' {servant 0/ Nego — i.e., per- haps, 0/ Nebo), the Babylonian name given to Azariah, one of the three friends of Daniel (Dan. 1.6, 7). [Siiadkach.] A'bel (ileb. hebhel, i.e. breath, vanity, pos- sibly so called from the shortness of his life, or else from the Bab. ablu = "son"), the second son of Adam, murdered through jealousy by his brother Cain ((ien.4.i-i6 ; ijn. 3.12). Jehovah showed respect for Abel's offering, but not for that of Cain, because Abel " by faith offered a more excellent sacrifice than Cain" (Heb.ll.4). In Mt.23.35 our Lord speaks of Abel as the first martyr, and in Heb.12.24 the death of Abel is contrasted with that of Christ as pleading not for pardon, but for vengeance. The place of his murder and his grave are shown near Abila [.Abilene] ; a tradition as to his burial still lingers there (Stanley, Sinai and Pal. ed. i>^i^^, p. 407). Abei (Arab, abil, a "moist" meadow, or grass near a stream). In (ien.50.ii there is a play on the word as meaning also " wceiMiig." — 1. "T//E GREAT ABEL (iSain.B.i8), in the field near Beth-shemesh, sliould apparently , read "the great \'bhen" (or stone), as in I,.\.\. A site supposed to be Ebenczer (probably ABIATHAB now the village Deir Abdn, 2 miles E. of 'Ain Shems, Clermont-Ganneau) was shown in 4th cent. a.d. "close to Beth-shemesh" (Euseb. Onowa.s/ico«),perhapsconnected with this Abel. —2. ABEL BETH-MA'ACHAH was a city (2Sam.20.i4,i5) near the town of Dan (iK.15. 20), taken by Assyrians in 734 b.c (2 K. 15. 29), otherwise ABEL-M.A'IM (meadow of waters, 2Chr.l6.4), probably Abl, a village on a hill just E. of the main Jordan source, 6 miles W. of Bdnids, in the N.E. comer of the land of Israel. [Beth-ma'achaii.] It was a "mother" city (2Sa1n.2O.18) of Israel. The speech of the wise woman of Abel is obscure, and the LXX. differs from the Hebrew — perhaps it means : " they say, first of all, that they ask a question in Abel, and so have ended . . .why wilt thou swallow up the inheritance of the Lord ? "—3. ABEL-MEHO'LAH, in the Jordan Valley (Judg.7.22), noticed with Beth- shean(iK.4.i2). The home of Elisha (19. 16) is placed by Eusebius 10 miles S. of Scythopolis (Onomasiicon), or at the present 'A in Helweh.'^ 4. ABEL-MIZRA'IM (Gen.50.ii),' between Egypt and Hebron. " Beyond Jordan" is a difficult phrase here, but perhaps Yor-dan(3iS in Assyrian) meant "the great river," or Nile.— 5. ABEL-SHITTIM', the valley opposite Jericho E. of Jordan (Num. 33. 49). [Shittim.] It should be noted that these sites (except 4, which is not fixed) are all well watered. — 6. ABEL-CERAMIM'. [Vineyards, Plain OF.] [c.r.c] A'bez (white), a town of Issachar, perhaps between Kishion and Remeth (Jos. 19. 20). Possibly the ruin el Beida (" the white ") in the plain 4 miles N.E. of Jokneara. [c.r.c] Abi', wife of Ahaz, mother of Hezekiah (2K.I8.2). The name is Abijah in 2Chr.29.i. Her father's name was Zachariah ; perhaps the Zechariah of Is. 8. 2. Abia', Abiah', or Abijah'. — 1. Son of Becher, the son of Benjamin (iChr.7.8). — 2. Wife of Hezron (iChr.2.24). — 3. Second son of Samuel, whom together with his eldest son Joel he made judge in Beer-sheba (iSam.8.2 ; iChr.6.28). Tlie corruptness of their adminis- tration was the reason alleged by the Israelites for their demanding a king. — 4. (iChr.3.io ; Mt.1.7) = Abijah or Abijam, 2. — 5. (2Chr. 29.1.) [Abi.]— 8. (Lu.1.5.) [Abijah, 4.] Abi-albon. [Abiel.] Abiasaph' (l{x.6.24), otherwise written Ebiasaph' (iChr. 6. 23, 37,9.10). the head of one f)f the families of tlie Korhites (a house of the Kohatliites), but his precise genealogy is somewhat uncertain. In Ex.6. 24 he appears at first sight to be represented as one of the sons of Korah, and as the brother of Assir and Elkaiiah. But in iChr.6.22,23 he appears as the Son of P-lkanaii. the son of .Assir, the son of Korah. Probably, therefore, in Ex. 6.24 " the sons of Korah " merely mean the fam- ilies into whioh the house of the Korhites was subdivided. Among the remarkable descend- ants of .Abiasaj)!). arcoriling to the text of iClir.6.33-37, were Samuel the prophet and ILIkanaii his father (iSam.l.i), and Heman the singer ; but Ebiasaph seems to be im- |)ro|)erly inserted in ver. 37. Abiathan' {father of plenty, or, the Great one is father), high-jiriest and fourth in descent ABIATHAR from Eli, of the line of Ithamar, the younger son of Aaron. Abiathar alone of all the sons of Ahimelech the high-priest escaped the slaughter inflicted upon his father's house by Saul (iSam.22). [Ahimelech ; David. J Abi- athar, having become high-priest, fled with an ephod to David, and was thus able to in- quire of the Lord for him (iSam.23.9,30.7 ; 2Sam.2.i,5.i9, etc.). The fact that David had been the unwilling cause of the death of all Abiathar's kindred, coupled with his gratitude to his father Ahimelech for his kind- ness to him, made him all his hfe a firm and steadfast friend to Abiathar, who on his part was firmly attached to David. Abiathar ad- hered to him in his wanderings while pursued by Saul ; was with him while he reigned in Hebron (2Sam.2.i-3), the city of the house of Aaron (Jos. 21. 10-13) ; carried the ark before him when David brought it up to Jerusalem (iChr.15.li) ; continued faithful during Absa- lom's rebellion (2Sam. 15. 24, 29, 35, 36, 17. 15-17, 19.li) ; and "was afflicted in all wherein David was afflicted." He was also one of David's chief counsellors (iChr.27.34). He supported, however, Adonijah's abortive in- surrection, perhaps in rivalry to Zadok, who was on Solomon's side. For this Abiathar was banished to his native village, Anathoth, in the tribe of Benjamin (Jos.21.i8), Solomon sparing his life only because of his long service to David, and conferring his high-priesthood on Zadok (iK.2.27,35). Two difficulties are connected with Abiathar. (i) It is difficult to determine his position relatively to Zadok, and to account for the double high-priesthood. Zadok was descended from Eleazar, the elder son of Aaron, and is said to have joined David while he reigned in Hebron (iChr.12.28,38). From this time we read, both in the books of Sam. and Chr., of " Zadok and Abiathar the priests," Zadok being always named first. Yet we are told that Solomon on his accession put Zadok in the room of Abiathar. Perhaps the superior strength of the house of Eleazar, which enabled it to furnish 16 out of the 24 courses (iChr.24'), contributed to the preced- ence given him over Abiathar. It is remark- able how, first, Saul's cruel slaughter of the priests at Nob, and then the political error of the wise Abiathar, led to the fulfilment of God's denunciation against the house of Eli (iK.2.27). (2) In 2Sam.8.i7, in the duplicate passage iChr.l8.i6, and in iChr.24.3,6,31, we have Ahimelech substituted for Abiathar, and Ahimelech the son of Abiathar instead of Abiathar the son of Ahimelech; whereas in 2Sam.2O.25, and in every other passage in O.T., we are uniformly told that it was Abia- thar who was priest with Zadok in David's reign, and that he was the son of Ahimelech, and that Ahimelech was the son of Ahitub. The difficulty is increased by finding Abiathar spoken of as the high-priest in whose time David ate the shew-bread, in Mk.2.26. How- ever, the evidence in favour of David's friend being Abiathar the son of Ahimelech pre- ponderates so strongly, that one can only suppose ^that {,the error was a clerical^one originally, and propagated from one passage to another. The mention of Abiathar by our Lord, in Mk.2.26, might perhaps be accounted ABIJAH 3 for, if Abiathar was the person who persuaded his father to allow David to have the bread, and if, as is probable, the loaves were Abia- thar's (Lev. 24. 9), and given by him with his own hand to David. [a.w.s.] Abib. [Months.] Abidah' or Abida', a son of Midiau (Gen.25.4 ; iChr.1.33). Abidan', chief of Benjamin at the Exodus (Num.1. 1 1,2.22,7.60,65,10.24). Abiel'. — 1. The father of Kish and Ner, and consequently grandfather of Saul and Abner (iSam.9. 1,14.51). According to iChr.8. 33,9-39, Ner was father of Kish, a mistake pos- sibly due to an error of the scribe ; but see Ner. — 2. One of David's mighty men (1Chr.ll.32). In 2Sam.23.31 he is called Abi-albon, which Budde reads Abibaal {Sacred Books of O.T. p. 80). [h.c.b.] Abie'zer. — 1. Eldest son of Gilead, and descendant of Manasseh, and apparently at one time the leading family of the tribe (Jos. 17.2 ; iChr.7.i8 ; Num. 26. 30, where the contracted form Jeezer, Heb. i'ezer, is given). In Chronicles Abiezer is, in the present state of the text, said to have sprung from the sister of Gilead (iChr.7.i8). He was the ancestor of Gideon. The name also occurs in Judg.6.34, 8.2 ; and in an adjectival form (" the Abiez- pite")injudg.6.ii,24,8.32. — 2. One of David's "mightymen" (2Sam.23.27 ; iChr.ll. 28, 27.12). Abigail. — 1. The beautiful wife of Nabal, a wealthy owner of goats and sheep in Carmel. When David's messengers were slighted by Nabal, Abigail took the blame upon herself, supplied David and his followers with pro- visions, and appeased his anger (iSam.25. 14-35). Ten days later Nabal died, and David made Abigail his wife {vv. 36-42). By her he had a son, called Chileab in 2Sam.3.3, but Daniel in iChr.3.i. — 2. A sister of David, married to " Ithra an Israelite " (2Sam.i7.25), more correctly J ether the Ishmeelite (iChr.2. 17), and mother, by him, of Amasa. [Nahash.] Abiha'il. — 1. Father of Zuriel, chief of the Levitical family of Merari, a contemporary of Moses (Num.3.35). — 2. Wife of Abishur (iChr.2.29). — 3. Son of Huri, of the tribe of Gad (iChr.5.14). — 4. Daughter of Eliab, the elder brother of David (2Chr.ll. 18). The A.V. makes Abihail the wife of Rehoboam, but according to R.V. she was the mother of Reho- boam's wife Mahalath. — 5. Father of Esther and uncle of Mordecai (Esth. 2.15, 9.29). Abihu', 2nd son of Aaron (Ex. 6. 23) ; accom- panied Moses to the top of Sinai (Ex. 24. 1-9) ; ordained priest (Ex.28.i ; Num. 3. 2, 3) ; con- sumed by fire from heaven for offering "strange fire" (Lev.l0.i,2 ; Num.3. 4). [h.c.b.] Abi'hud, son of Bela, 3 (iChr.8.3). Abijah', or Abijam'. — 1. The son and suc- cessor of Rehoboam, king of Judah (1K.I4.31 ; 2Chr.i2.16). Heis cdXled Abijah in Chronicles, Abijam in Kings, the latter name being proba- bly an error in the MSS. He began to reign in the 1 8th year of Jeroboam, and reigned 3 years (2Chr.l3.i,2). From iK.15.7 we learn that Abijah endeavoured to recover the kingdom of the 10 tribes, and made war on Jeroboam. We are also told (3) that he walked in all the sins of Rehoboam (idolatry and its attendant immoralities, iK. 14.23,24), and that his heart 4 ABILENE " was not perfect before God, as the heart of David his father." In aChr.lS his war against Jeroboam is more minutely described ; he was successful in battle, and took the cities of Bethel, Jeshanah, and Ephrain, with their dependent villages. It is said that his army consisted of 400,000 men, and Jeroboam's of 800,000, of whom 500,000 fell in the action ; but our MSS. are frequently incorrect as to numbers, and there are reasons for reducing these to 40,000, 80,000, and 50,000. Nothing is said in Chronicles of his sins, but we read that he " waxed mighty, and married fourteen wives," whence we may infer that, elated with prosperity, he, like his grandfather Solomon, fell, during the last two years of his life, into sin, as described in Kings. He was succeeded by Asa. — 2. The second son of Samuel, called Abiah in A.V. [Abia, Abiah, 3.] — 3. The son of Jeroboam I., king of Israel, in whom alone, of all the house of Jeroboam, was found " some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel," and who was therefore the only one of his family who was suffered to go down to the grave in peace. He died in his childhood, immediately on his mother's return from the prophet Abijah, to whom she had been sent by Jeroboam to seek help in the child's sick- ness (iK.14.i-i8). — 4. A descendant of Eleazar, who gave his name to the 8th of the 24 courses into which the priests were divided byDavid(iChr.24.io; 2Chr.8.i4; Ne.12.4,17). To this course belonged Zacharias, the father of John the Baptist (Lu.1.5). — 5. One of the priests who entered into a covenant with Nehemiah to walk in God's law (Ne.lO.7) ; unless the name is rather that of a family, and the same with the preceding. Abile'ne (Lu.3.i). The passage refers to 15th year of Tiberius, and should therefore read, " Philip tetrarch of Ituraea, and of the region of Trachonitis, and of that of Lysanias the tetrarch of Abilene." It is thus distin- guished from Abila (Tell Abil) in Bashan. [Decapolis.] It is called by Josephus the " kingdom of Lysanias " (2 Wars xi. 5, xii. 8), or the " tetrarchy of Lysanias" {20 Ant. vii. i), given to Philip and afterwards to Agrippa with its capital at Abila (19 ^«<. v. i). Lysanias was the son of Ptolemy son of Menneus, who ruled at Chalcis in Lebanon (14 /In/, vii. 4) about 50 B.C., and near Damascus (13 /In/, xvi. 3). By 30 B.C. the " house of Lysanias " had fallen into the hands of the robber Zenodorus, who died in 20 b.c. (15 Ant. x. 3 ; i Wars xx. 4), but the region was still called " Abila of Lysanias " in Agrippa's time, 41 a. d. (ig Ant. v. i), though it is clear that Lysanias was not ruling in the 15th of Tiberius. It is clear also that Abilene lay in Lebanon. The site of its capital is now- called Suq IVddy Barada, " the narrow place on the Abana River," being at a pass through which a Roman road was cut. The ruins near the village, and S. of the river, include founda- tions of a small Roman temple, and rock -cut tombs N. of the stream, with busts in low relief over the doors, and Gk. texts, some of them Christian {Surv. W. Pal., Special Papers, pp. 112-113). On the crag above, on S., the tomb of Abel is shown, with a legend from the Koran attaching (Sura v. 34). But the most important text is in Latin, on the rock ASIXOAM wall of the Roman road-cutting (Waddington, No. 1874), relating that the emperors M. Aurelius and Verus (c. 163-165 a.d.) restored the road damaged by the river by cutting the mountain " impendiis Abilenorum," or at the expense of the people of Abilene. [c.r.c] Abimael , a descendant of Joktan (Gen.lO. 28 ; iChr.1.22), and probably the progenitor of an Arab tribe. Abimelech (Melekh is father). There was a Canaanite deity, Milk. In the Amarna tablets (c. 1400 b.c.) .■ibimilki is the governor of Tvre, who was a vassal of Egypt ; melekh in Heb. = king.— 1. (Gen.20,21.) The king of Gerar, who took Sarah into his harim, but made amends to Abraham on learning her true relationship. Afterwards he allied himself with Abraham and settled their dispute as to the well at Beer-sheba. — 2. (Gen. 26. ) Another king of Gerar has a similar experience with Isaac, and makes a similar treaty. Critics assign i to " E " and 2 to "J," and treat them as variants. [Genesis.] The mention of Philistines (21.32,34,26.1) is perhaps proleptic. [Philistines.] — 3. Title of Ps.34. Achish is intended. Perhaps Abime- lech (= father king) was, like Pharaoh, not a personal name.— 4. Gideon's son (Judg.9) by a Shechemite whom Jotham calls a maid- servant ; but she was related to the lords (Baalim) of Shechcm and had probably con- tracted a Sadiqa marriage. [Judges, Book OF.] On Gideon's death, .Abimelech gained the jealous Ephraimites by the appeal — would they obey Gideon's sons ? — while his relations intrigued with the Canaanitcs, who were dominant in Shechem and boasted their descent from Hamor. With money from the temple of Baal-berith he hired bravoes and slew all his brethren except Jotham on one stone. The words imply a formal execution. Then the Shechemites elected him king by the terebinth [or "oak"; Pillar, Plain of] of the pillar (Judg.9. 6; cf. Jos. 24.26). He reigned 3 years. But Shechem, situated near the junction of two trade routes, was a nest of bandits. Abimelech suffered the fate of usurpers. He could not control the worthless people through whom he obtained power. He retired to Arumah (Judg.9.41), leaving Zebul governor of Shechem. A conspiracy was formed against him at the harvest feast of Baal-berith, but with early intelligence from the double-dealing Zebul, he defeated Gaal, and on the next day by an ambush seized Siicchem and destroyed it. Subsequently he burnt out the refugees in the tower (Millo). He then attacked Thebez, but was struck down by a millstone thrown from the wall by a woman (Judg.9.53 ; f/. 2Sam.ll.21). To avoid dying by a woman's hand, he requested his armour-bearer to slay him. — 5. (iChr.l8.i6.) [.AuiATHAK.] [11. M.S.J Ablnadab'.— 1. A Levite of Kirjath- jearim, in whose house the ark remained 20 years (iSam.7.i,2 ; iClir.13.7). — 2. Second son of Jesse, who follnwetl Saul to war against the Philistines (I Sam. 16. 8, 17. 1 3). — 3. .\ son of Saul, slain on mount Gilboa(31.2). — 4. Father of one of the 12 oflicers of Solon\on (i K.4. 11). [Dor.] Ablnoam', father of Barak (J udg.4.6.i2, 5.1,12). ABIBAM Abipam'. — 1. A Reubenite, son of Eliab, who with Dathan and On conspired against Moses (Num.16 ; Deut.11.6). [Dathan.]— 2. Eldest son of Hiel, the Bethehte, who died when his father laid the foundations of Jericho (1K.I6.34), thus fulfilling the first part of the curse of Joshua (Jos. 6. 26). Abipon' (Ecclus.45.i8) = Abiram, i. Abise'i (2Esd.l.2) ; called Abisum (lEsd. 8. 2), an ancestor of Ezra ; = Abishua, 2. Abishagr'i a beautiful Shunammite, taken by David to comfort him in his extreme old 4ge (iK. 1.1-4). Jewish tradition agrees with ver. 4, which asserts that she preserved her virginity. After David's death Adonijah induced Bath-sheba, the queen-mother, to ask Solomon to give him Abishag in marriage ; but this imprudent petition cost Adonijah his life (1K.2.13, etc.) [Adonijah; Canticles; Family.] Abisha'i, the eldest of the three sons of David's sister Zeruiah, and brother to Joab and Asahel (iChr.2.i6). First of the three brothers, he appears as the devoted follower of David. He was his companion in the desperate night expedition to the camp of Saul, and desired to avenge and terminate his uncle's quarrel by stabbing the sleeping king with his own spear. But David indignantly restrained him, and the adventurous warriors left the camp as stealthily as they had come, carrying with them Saul's spear and the cruse of water which stood at his head (iSam.26.6-9). During David's outlaw life among the Philis- tines, Abishai was probably by his side, though nothing more is heard of him till he appears with Joab and Asahel in hot pursuit of Abner, who was beaten in the bloody fight by the pool of Gibeon. Asahel fell by Abner's hand : at sunset the survivors returned, buried their brother by night in the sepulchre of their father at Bethlehem, and with revenge in their hearts marched on to Hebron by break of day (2Sam.2.i8,24,32). In the prosecution of their vengeance, though Joab's hand struck the deadly blow, Abishai was associated with him in the treachery, and " Joab and Abishai killed Abner " (2Sam.3.3o). [Abner.] In the war against Hanun, undertaken by David as a punishment for the insult to his messen- gers, Abishai, as second in command, was opposed to the army of the Ammonites before the gates of Rabbah, and drove them headlong before him into the city, while Joab defeated the Syrians who attempted to raise the siege (2Sam.l0.io,i4 ; iChr.l9.ii,i5). The defeat of the Edomites in the valley of salt (iChr. 18. 1 2), which brought them to a state of vassalage, was due to Abishai, acting perhaps under the immediate orders of the king (see 2Sam.8.i3), or of Joab (Ps.60, title). On the outbreak of Absalom's rebellion and the con- sequent flight of David, Abishai remained true to the king ; and the old warrior showed a gleam of his ancient spirit, as fierce and relent- less as in the camp of Saul, when he offered to avenge the taunts of Shimei, and urged his subsequent execution (2Sam.l6.9,19.2i). In the battle in the wood of Ephraim, Abishai commanded a third part of the army (2Sam. 18.2,5,12), and in the absence of Amasa was summoned to assemble the troops in Jerusalem ABNEB a and pursue after the rebel Sheba, Joab being apparently in disgrace for the slaughter of Absalom (2Sam.20.6,io). The last act of service which is recorded of Abishai is his timely rescue of David from the hands of a gigantic Philistine, Ishbi-benob (2Sam.2i.17). His personal prowess on this, as on another occasion, when he fought single-handed against 300, won for him a place as captain of the second three of David's mightv men (2Sain. 23.18 ; iChr.11.20). Probably this act of daring was achieved while he was the com- panion of David's wanderings as an outlaw among the Philistines. Of the end of his chequered life we have no record. Abishalom' = Absalom (2Sam.3.3 ; cf. i K. 15.2, 10; 2Chr.ll. 20, 21). Abishu'a. — 1. Son of Bela, of the tribe of Benjamin (iChr.8.4). — 2. Son of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, and father of Bukki, in the genealogy of the high-priests (iChr.6.4,5,50,51 ; Ezr.7.4,5). According to Josephus (8 Ant. i. 3), he became high-priest, but after him the office passed to the house of Ithamar ; the descendants of Phinehas. till Zadok, falling into the rank of private persons. Abishup', son of Shammai (iChr.2.28). Abisum' (iEsd.8. 2) = Abishua, 2. Abital', one of David's wives ; mother of Shephatiah (2Sam.3.4 ; iChr.3.3). Abitub', son of Shaharaim (iChr.8.iT). Abi'ud (Mt.1.13) is equivalent to Juda (Lu.3.26, R.V. Joda), and Hodaiah (iChr. 3.24). The grandson of Zerubbabel through his daughter Shelomith (iChr.3.19). [Gene- alogy OF Jesus Christ.] [c.r.d.b.] Ablution. [Purification.] Abnep' (my father is Ner, or, is a lamp). — 1. Son of Ner, who was probably brother of Kish (1Sam.i4.50f. ; cf. iChr.9.36, but Kish's father according to iChr.8.33). If so, Abner would be Saul's first cousin. He was made by him commander-in-chief of his army (iSam. 14.50). It was he who conducted David into Saul's presence after the death of Goliath (17-57) ; and afterwards accompanied Saul when he sought David's life at Hachilah (26.3-16). From this time we hear no more of him till after the death of Saul, when he rises into importance as the mainstay of his family. Immediately after the disastrous battle of mount Gilboa, David was proclaimed king of Judah in Hebron, and Abner pro- claimed the weak and unfortunate Ishbosheth, Saul's son, as king of Israel, at Mahanaim beyond Jordan (2Sam.2.8-ii), Judah alone remaining faithful to David. War soon broke out between the rivals, and a " very sore battle" was fought at Gibeon between Israel under Abner and Judah under Joab, son of Zeruiah, David's sister (iChr.2.i6). When the army of Ishbosheth was defeated, Joab's youngest brother Asahel, who is said to have been " as light of foot as a wild roe," pursued Abner, and in spite of warning refused to leave him, so that Abner in self-defence was forced to kill him. After this, success inclined more and more to the side of David, till at last the imprudence of Ishbosheth deprived him of the counsels and generalship of the hero, who was in truth the only support of his tottering throne. Abner had married Rizpah, 6 ABOMINATION OF DESOLATION Saul's concubine, and tliis, according to the views of Oriental courts, might be interpreted to imply a design upon the throne. After in- dignantly repelling Ishbosheth's insinuation to this effect, Abner opened negotiations with David, by whom he was most favourably received at Hebron, David demanding, liow- ever, as a significant preliminary, that his wife, Michal, daughter of the late king, should be given up to him. Aimer undertook to procure David's recognition throughout Israel ; but leaving his court for the purpose was enticed back by Joab, and treacherously uiurdcred by him and his brother Abishai, at the gate of the city, partly no doubt, as Joab showed afterwards in the case of Amasa, from fear lest so distinguished a convert to their cause should gain too high a place in David's favour, but ostensibly in retaliation for the death of Asahel. This murder caused the greatest sorrow and indignation to David ; but, as the assassins were too powerful to be punished, he contented himself with showing every public token of respect to Abncr's memory by follow- ing the bier and pouring forth a simple dirge over the slain (2Sam.3.33,34).— 2. The father of Jaasiel, chief of the Benjamites in David's reign (iChr.27.2i) : almost certainly the same as the preceding. [a.w.s.] Abomination of desolation. Among the signs foretold by Christ to precede the destruction of Jerusalem was to be the appear- ance in the temple of " the abomination of desolation," which was, moreover, to be the signal for the flight of the Christians from Judaea (Mt.24.i5 ; Mk.lS.i.}). The original of the expression is found in Daniel (9.27,11.31, 12.li), the exact force being " the abomination that maketh desolate." The reference here is to the desecration of the temple by Antiochus IV. (Epiphanes), by whose orders a heathen idol-altar was built upon the altar of burnt- offering. The very phrase, [jd^Xi'y fia (prjuibaaos, is actually used (iMac.l.54) to describe this idolatrous erection. But our Lord gives also a futurist interpretation to the words of Daniel, and regards his aiwcalyptic expressions as destined to find fulfilment in the troubles that would usher in the final destruction of the Jewish polity. From this point of view the abomination of desolation was inter- preted as referring to some conspicuous de- secration of the temple that would take place in those last days. The exact interpretation must fulfil two conditions : (r) the abomina- tion f>f desf>latiori is represented as a concrete object " standing " in the holy place ; and (2) its appearance would be near the beginning of the final struggle ; for it was to give the signal for the flight of the Christians from danger. But we have no means of determining in what precisely the sign consisted. [j.r.v.D.l Abpaham, or Abram. Abt-rdmn is the name of the f.ither of a witness to a document of the time of I tanunurabi's grandfather ; Abu- rdmu an Assyrian official, 677 n.c. Abram (possibly the name of Terah's father-in-law, see Bk. Jub. xi. 14,15) — "Tiie father fa divine titlej is exalted," used till 0^.17.5, when altered to Abraham, which, according to the etymology of Gcsenius, ^.AbhSmOn, "the fatlierof a multi- tude [of nations]" (c/. Ecclus. 44. 19). — l.InGcn. ABRAHAM II.2G-25. (i) The eldest son of Terahd 1.26), descendant of Shem. The fact that among his ancestors is Peleg, the brother of Joktan, father of many Arabian tribes (10.25ft.), sug- gests that Abraham's family came from Arabia; but see Races. If so, it perhaps moved to Babylonia with the stock of Hammurabi's dynasty, if Hommel is right in considering that Arabian. Abraham li\ed in " Ur of the Chal- dees " — I.e. probably IMuqeir, on the right or western bank of Euiihrates, a great commercial centre. [Ur.] It is possible that that district was called the land of Eber — i.e. across the river from Babylon — and that the title " the Hebrew" in 14. 13 refers to thts. Although Terah was a polytheist (Jos. 24.2), Abraham worshipped one God only. It appears that in the time of Hammurabi there was a great de- velopment of the worshi]i of Merodach, who was now regarded as chief of the Babylonian pantheon. Abraham's religion may be con- nected with this fact cither by way of further development, for to Merodach were attributed the powers of all the gods, or (much more probably) by opposition to this fresh outburst of heathenism. In the latter case Abraham represents the revival and development of an older and purer religion handed down in his family, though forsaken by his immediate progenitors. (2) Terah's choice of Haran, some 550 miles from Ur, as the city to which he removed, may be connected with the fact that it, like Ur, was a centre of moon-worship, and that therefore there would be much com- mercial intercourse. It was also in itself of great commercial and strategic importance. On Terah's death (so the order of the narrative and Ac. 7.4 ; but 60 years before, according to the numbers of Gen. 11. 32 in the Massoretic text) Abraham goes to Canaan, probably pass- ing Damascus (where he may have obtained Eliezer, Gen. 15. 2 ; see details of the probable route in Driver on 12. 5), even in Canaan, as it seems, being still under Babylonian do- minion. (3) His progress through Canaan is marked by altars, the first being at Shechem, under "the terebinth of the director" (12.6, LXX., at the high oak ; see Moreu) — i.e. a sacred tree perhaps already known for the delivery of oracles, just as much later he himself plants a sacred tree by a sacred well at Beer-sheba (21.30,33). The impression that his journey through Canaan gives us is that he was a man of wealth, culture, and ability in leadership. (4) Driven by a famine into Egypt (12.iofT.), .Abraham, fe.aring the licen- tiousness of the I'liaraoh and an attack on him- self, gives it out that S.arah is his sister. (5) Returning to Canaan through the nciihcbh (13. i), he treats Lot magnanimously, realizing the claims of brotherhood to mutual forbearance and to self-denial, and receiving a special pro- mise of the country. He settles in or near Hebron, again by trees. ((^) The narrative of ch. 14 has been ridiculed, and is called "a late midrash " by even recent scholars; but the setting of the incidents related is so con- firmed by the cuneiform inscriptions (see CiiEnoRLAOMicK, AMRAruKi., and even Mel- ruiZEDEK) that soon its statements will doubt- less be generally accepted as accurate. Abraham's character, however, is so far dififerent ABRAHAM in it that he is depicted as a warrior. But it is difficult to suppose that so powerful a chieftain as he evidently was (23.6) should not have been able to light on occasion. His love for Lot and his service of God, as related here, are in complete accord with what we know of him elsewhere, and his refusal to accept the rescued goods at the hands of the ungodly king of So- dom marks, at most, spiritual advance on his willingness to receive presents from Pharaoh. (7) In ch. 15, when Abraham complained of having no child, and was assured that he should have a son and that his descendants should rival the stars in number, he "believed in the Lord, and He counted it to him for righteousness." He receives a further pro- mise that he shall inherit the land, and for proof of this he is bid prepare a covenant sacrifice, the symbols of the Lord's presence passing between the pieces (cf. Je.34.i8), and he is told of the affliction of his descendants, i.e. in Egypt (cf. 2Esd.3.i4, R.V.). (8) Ob- serve that the setting of the story of Hagar (Gen. 16,21.8-21) is borne out by the Hammu- rabi Code, under which Abraham still lived, and according to which (§§ 144-146) Sarah had no power to sell her own maid Hagar after the latter had borne a son to Abraham. She had therefore to get Abraham to send her away. (9) Abraham adopts the non-Babylonian practice of Circumcision (q.v.). (10) For his reception of the " three men " (18. 2) and the relation of one of them to the Lord, see Angel ; Theophanies. (11) The stories of Abraham's relations with Abimelech, king of Gerar, both as regards Sarah (ch. 20) and the dispute about the well (21.22-34), are, in the opinion of the present writer, best explained as duplicates of the similar narratives of Isaac (26.1-12,13-33) ; but see Genesis, and note that the details are different, see Beer-sheba. (12) The sacrifice of Isaac (ch. 22) is the supreme test of Abraham's faith (cf. Wis.10.5 ; Ecclus.44.20 ; iMac.2.52 ; 4Mac.l6.20), possible only in a time and place where such sacrifices were regarded as the test of a father's obedience to oracles of God. Abraham obeys, and by the result God's char- acter is more fully revealed and the sacredness of human life is reaffirmed. Henceforth human sacrifice is regarded with horror by the religious teachers of Israel, even though ap- parently often practised from the time of the second generation after the Exodus (Ezk.20. 26) until the time of Ezekiel himself just before the destruction of Jerusalem (16. 20, 21,20.31). It is perhaps intentional that it is the angel of Jehovah (not Elohim) who bids Abraham spare Isaac's life (Gen.22.ir). (13) On ch. 23, see Sarah, Ephron, Hittites, Machpelah. (14) The mission of Eliezer (ch. 24) again shows Abraham's faith and common sense. Sure that God had led him to Canaan, he will run no risk in letting his son return East even temporarily, while keeping Isaac's re- ligion pure from contact with the heathenism of the Canaanites. (15) On 25.1-6, see Keturah and infra. (16) On his death he is biiried by the side of Sarah in Machpelah, his relationship to Ishmael as well as to Isaac be- ing publicly acknowledged (25. 7-10). (17) Ob- serve Abraham's importance in the history of revelation. Apart from the names in Gen.l- ABRAHAM 7 11, Abraham is the first example in history of insistence on the personal relation to God, not for a specific purpose but for a lifetime. In non-Semitic religions the fundamental thought is the relation of nature to divinity ; and also in non-Abrahamic Semitic religions it is hardly otherwise, judging from the polytheism of the Babylonians, the South Arabians, and the Egyptians (if the latter may be called Semitic). But in all the forms of religion connected with Abraham there is the worship of one God, re- sulting at last, whatever the earlier stages may have been, in strict monotheism. There is no trace in Abraham of a belief in a merely local god, and no hint that he worshipped another god than the Lord, of Whose goodness and power (almightiness ; cf. El Shaddai) he was convinced, and with Whom he expressly ident- ified the " God Most High " (EI 'Elyon) of Melchizedek (14.19,20,22). His household was evidently managed with the Lord in view, in accordance with 18. 19. (18) Yet his per- sonality has been doubted. He has been thought to be a myth, or a personification of one or more nations (e.g. H. P. Smith, O.T. Hist. pp. 50 ff.). But (with the possible ex- ception of 25.1-6, Abraham's relation to Ke- turah) these views are contradicted by the whole background of his history. For though a record of Abraham himself neither has been, nor is likely to be, discovered in the monu- ments, yet his history touches contemporary history at many points, and wherever we are able to test these the statements of Genesis are confirmed. Also notice the unity of his char- acter under varying circumstances. — II. In the O.T. outside Gen. ii. 26-25. Abraham is recognized as the founder of the nation and of its religion, not only in the Pentateuch (e.g. Ex. 3. 6) and in Jos. 24. 2, 3, but also bv Elijah (1K.I8.36), Isaiah (29.22), Micah (7.2o), Jere- miah (33.26), during the Exile (Ezk.33.24 ; Is. 51. 2), by Nehemiah (9.7), and in Chron- icles (e.g. iChr.1.28), besides the references in two Psalms whose date is uncertain, 47.9,105.6,9,42. — III. In the Pseudepigrapha. These are interesting as showing the increasing importance of Abraham in the estimation of Israel, (i) Ethiopian Enoch. § 89. 10, Abraham is the white bull who brought forth a wild ass (Ishmael) and a white bull (Isaac). § 93. 5, Abraham is the plant of righteous judgment followed by the plant of righteousness (Israel), -(z) Testaments of XII. Patriarchs. Levi, §9. 12, Abraham teaches Isaac to offer leaves from twelve trees. § 15. 4, Israel- ites receive mercy through Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Judah, ^ 25. i, Abraham will arise to a resurrection on earth with Isaac and Jacob. (3) Jubilees, § 12. 12-14, Abraham burns the idol-house with its contents (perhaps an explanation of " Ur ") ; 16, Abraham turns from observing stars to considering God ; § 17. 17 ; 19. 8, Abraham's ten trials ; § 22. 25- § 23. I, Abraham dies with Jacob present. (4) 4 Mac. xiii. 17, Abraham with Isaac and Jacob will receive us after we have suffered ; xvi. 25, Abraham, with them, the type of those who die because of God, but live to Him; vi. 17, 22, Abraham the type of courage. (5) Apoc. Bar. iv. 4, the heavenly Jerusalem is shown to Abraham " by night among the portions of 8 ABRAHAM'S BOSOM the victims" (c/. Gen.15.io); Ivii. 2, the un- written law e.xisted in Abraham's time. — IV. In N.T. (i) Abraham is recognized as the founder of the nation, e.g. in our Lord's gene- alogy (Mt.l). (2) The trust of the Jews to physical descent from Abraham is repeatedly opposed, e.g. Mt.3.9 ( = Lu.3.8), J n. 8.33, Ro. 9.7 ; cf. Gal. 4. 22. (3 ) Abraham with Isaac and Jacob will be present at the great feast in the kingdom of heaven (Mt.8.11 ; cf. Lu.i3.28). (4) Abraham's Bosom (apparently = closest intercourse with Abraham) receives Lazarus (Lu.l6.22). (5) Abraham had such living faith in Jesus that he saw His day (Jn.8.56). (6) Abraham is taken by both St. Paul and St. James as the type of true religitm, St. Paul showing that this consisted in his faith apart from works (Ro.4.iff. ; (ial.S.Gff.), St. James in his faith as perfected by his work ; the latter adding that he was called the Friend of God (Jas.2.21-23 ; cf. Is.41.8, 2Chr.20.7, also Clem. Rom. § 10 with Lightfoot's note. The Arabs call Abraham Khalil Allah (the friend of God), or El Khalil, to the exclusion of his proper name. (7) So the ep. to the He- brews insists on Abraham's faith (11. 8, 17), and draws lessons from his intercourse with Melchi- zedek (7. 1-9). (8) St. Peter alludes to Sarah's obedience to Abraham (iPe.3.f)). [a.l.w.] Abraham's bosom. In Jewish writings one of the names of the abode of the blessed dead. That Abraham was in a state of perfect bliss was never questioned, and the righteous were to share this by being admitted into fellowship with him in the unseen world {cf. 4 Mac. xiii. 16; Mt.S.ri). The term probably contains an allusion to the ancient custom of reclining at meals, the head of the one guest being near or resting on the bosom of the one next to him {cf. Jn. 13. 23, 21. 20). In Tal. Bab. {Kid. 72b) it is said of Adda bar Ahabah, a Babylonian rabbi of the 3rd. cent., that "this day he sits in Abraham's bosom," meaning that he had died and entered Paradise. The phrase occurs in the jiarablc of the rich man and Lazarus (I. u. 16. 22, 23). fl^AKAniSE.] [h.ii.] Absalom {my father of peace), — 1. Third sf>n of David, by Maachah, daughter of Talmai, king of Gesiiur. His history, rebellion, and tragic death (2Sam. 13-18) not only have direct importance as incidental to Solomon's accession, but as the means by which David's violation of covenant law in the murder of Uriah and the taking of Bathsheba arc pun- ished. The sequence of events is dramatic. Absalom is of the greatest personal beauty, and has grown up at Hebron the darling of his father and the people's idol. Anmon, Ab- salom's half-brother and David's eldest son, h.as wronged Tamar, Absalom's full sister. By every custom Absalom is bound to avenge the injury. David does not. When, therefore, Amnon appears to have escaped with impunity, Absalom invites him to his " shceji shearing " at Beth-hazor, and there causes him to be killed during the drinking feast. .Absalom flics to his mother's father ; but so great is 1 )avid's love for him, that he is persuaded by J oab's instrument, the wise woman of Tekoa, to recall him. .This act of pardon falls in with the rough-and-ready manners of the time, and shows the great love which David has for Absalom. On his return ABSALOM Absalom remains secluded and in disgrace for 2 years, but forces Joab to plead for him, and sees " the king's face." Restored to his posi- tion, Absalom uses the popularity he had never lost to foster sedition. He lets his wonderful hair grow long, perhaps (as Robertson Smith surmises) to mark the sacredness of his person, introduces horses in his chariots, and so rivets the attention of the people upon himself. He appeals to popular sentiment by the personal sympathy and unconventionality which ensure good will in the East. Judah was discontented, and when all is ready .4bsalom rebels. David, whose influence had waned, is forced to fly over the Jordan to Mahanaim. Ahithophel and all (except a few) of David's great men join Absalom. Absalom enters the capital, and commits himself and his followers to a death- struggle with his father. He openly takes possession of the concubines whom Da\id had left behind, and thus effects dramatically the retribution of the divine justice, .\hithophel recommends immediate pursuit of David ; but Hushai (who is faithful to the king) persuades Absalom to dally in Jerusaleur until Joab and the king have gathered an army of sufficient strength. Absalom, having been crowned, at last crosses the Jordan, and is decisively beaten in the wood of Ephraim. As he turns to flee, he is caught by his hair in a "great oak," and his mule leaves him. Joab, learning tliat he is hanging there, kills him with his own hand, in spite of David's prohibition. When the Cushite runner comes to him at Mahanaim, David for- gets all, and (remembering his own sin) utters the fanailiar and pathetic lamentation "O my son Absalom, my sou, my son .Absalom ! would God I had died for thee ! " Absalom's body was cast into a pit, and (perhaps a mark of bitter contempt, cf. Jos.7.2r)) covered with great stones by the soldiery. In contrast, the historian parenthetically recalls " the pillar in the king's dale " which .Absalom had erected in his lifetime. His name occurs in the monuments : see Records of the Past, new THE (SO-CALLF.D) TOMB"OF ABSALOM. ABSAIiON series, vol. vi. The so-called Absalom's tomb in the king's vale is proved by its Ionic columns to be of late date. — 2. Father of Mattathias (iMac.11.70) and Jonathan (13. 11). [j.a.d.] Ab'salon (2Mac.ll. 17), an ambassador from the Jews to Lysias, " chief governor of Celosvria and Phoenice." Abu'bus (iMac.l6.ii,i5). father of Ptolemeus, 3. Aeatan' (iEsd.8.38) = Hakkatan. Aeead' [Akkad), one of the cities of the land of Shinar (Babylonia), which, with Babel, Erech, and Calneh, were the beginning of Nimrod's kingdom (Gen.lO.io). This city, which lay near, or formed part of Sippar (Sip- para), now Abu-habbah, is the Agade (also Agate), semiticized Ak{k)ad, of the earlier inscriptions. It lay about 16 miles S.W. of Baghdad, and was the capital ^of one of the earliest of Babylonian rulers, Sargani sar dii (the Babylonian Sargon), who, according to the indications of Nabonidus, lived c. 3800 e.g. From the earliest times it was the seat of the worship of the Sun-god and the goddess Istar. Being the capital of the northern district, that tract becamevknown as "the land of Akkad." " King of Sumer and Akkad" was one of the official titles of the kings of Babylonia from exceedingly early times, and the Assyrian kings who occupied the Babylonian throne in later days also adopted it. The non-Semitic popu- lation called the province of Akkad Ura or Uri. See Babel, Chaldea, Shinar, in this work and in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904). [t.g.p.] Aeeapon. [Ekron.] Accho' (R.V. A ceo), a Phoenician city close to the river Belus, at N. end of the bay of Carmel. The Gk. Ptolemais became the later St. Jean d'Acre, and modern 'Akka. It was not taken by the tribe of Asher (Judg.l. 31), and appears never to have belonged to Israel till given (for a time) to Jonathan the Hasmonaean, by Alexander son of Antiochus Epiphanes, in 152 B.C. (iMac.5.15,22,55, 10.1,39,56-58,60,11.22,24,12.45.48,13.12). The town has a small port, but is almost entirely modern with i8th-cent. walls. It is mentioned as subject to Egypt in the Amarna tablets (Berlin, 8, 93, 94, 95 ; Brit. Mus. 17, 32), and though it revolted in the 15th cent. B.C., it was still so subject in 14th. It was taken by Sennacherib in 702 b.c. In 2nd cent. a.d. it was a pagan town with a " bath of Aphrodite " (Mishna, Aboda Zara iii. 4). [c.r.c] Ae'eos, grandfather of Eupolemus the Jewish ambassador to Rome (iMac.8.17). Ac'eoz (iEsd.5.38) = Hakkoz. Acel'dama' ('A/ceXSa/^d), " the field [or, place] of blood." Apparently the Aramaic is NO~IT'3n (Hakhel-dama), " enclosed place of blood." Judas is briefly said (Ac.l.18,19) to have " purchased a place (x^plov) with the reward of iniquity " ; for he left to the priests the money with which — as detailed in Matthew (27.7,8)— they bought the " field " (ayp6s) of the "potter" for 30 pieces of silver. The latter passage quotes a prophecy (which a scribe wrongly ascribed to Jeremiah later) now found in Zech.ll.13: and it follows the Heb. text (see R.V. marg. ; LXX. and Syr.). The site of Aceldama is not, however, indi- ACHIAS 9 cated. The traditional site is now called Haqq- ed-dumm — a corruption of the Aramaic words — and is a rock-cut vault, 30 ft. by 20 ft., with a I2th-cent. vaulting over it, supported on two masonry piers. The place was used for the burial of pilgrims in the Middle Ages, but the site was shown yet earlier. It lies on S. brink of Wddy Rabdbeh (Hinnom), S. of Jerusalem. There are several Christian tombs cut in the rock near it, which belonged to earlv monks of the church of St. Sion (Stirv. W. Pal., Jerusalem vol., pp. 380, 417-420). [c.r.c] Acha'ia signifies, in N.T., a Roman pro- vince which included the whole of the Pelopon- nesus and the greater part of Hellas proper with the adjacent islands. This province, with that of Macedonia, comprehended the whole of Greece : hence Achaia and Macedonia are frequently mentioned together in N.T. to indi- cate all Greece (Ac.18. 12, 27,19.21 ;Ro.l5.26,16. 5; 1C0r.l6.15 ; 2Cor.l.i,9.2,ll.io; iTh.l.7,8). A narrow slip of country upon the N. coast of Peloponnesus was originally called Achaia, the cities of which were confederated in an ancient League, renewed in 280 b.c for the purpose of resisting the Macedonians. This League subsequently included several of the other Grecian states, and became the most powerful political body in Greece ; hence it was natural for the Romans to apply the name of Achaia to the Peloponnesus and to the S. of Greece, when they took Corinth and destroyed the League in 146 b.c. In the division of the provinces by Augustus between the emperor and the senate in 27 b.c, Achaia was one of the provinces assigned to the senate, and was governed by a proconsul. Tiberius in the 2nd year of his reign (16 a.d.) took it away from the senate, and made it an imperial province governed by a procurator ; but Claudius restored it to the senate. This was its con- dition when Paul was brought before Gallio, who is therefore (Ac.18. 12) correctly called the "proconsul" (A.V. deputy) of Achaia. Acha'icus, a Corinthian Christian who, at Ephesus, ministered to St. Paul (iCor.l6.i7)- Achan' (troubler), a man of the tribe of Judah, who after the fall of Jericho secreted a portion of the spoil in his tent. Jericho was regarded as the first-fruits of conquest, and as such was to be " accursed " — i.e. devoted " to the Lord," as a whole burnt-offering (Jos. 6.17- 19). Achan's act of sacrilege marred the sacrifice, and consequently involved the whole nation in sin (Jos.7.i). For this Jehovah punished Israel by their defeat in their attack upon Ai. When Achan confessed his guilt, and the booty was discovered, he was stoned with his whole family in a valley situated between Ai and Jericho, and their remains, together with his property, were burnt. The valley was called thence AcHOR (i.e. "trouble"), [h.c.b.] Achap' (iChr.2.7) = Achan. Achaz' (Mt.1.9) ~ Ahaz, king of Judah. Achbop'. — 1. Father "of Baal-hanan,kingof Edom (Gen.36. 38,39 ; iChr.l.49).— 2. Son of Michaiah, a contemporary of J osiah (2K. 22.12, 14; Je. 26. 22,36.12), called Abdon in 2Chr.34.20. Achia'ehapus, chief minister at the court of Sarchedonus, or Esar-haddon, king of Nine- veh (Tob. 1.21, 22, 2. 10,14.10). Achi'as, son of Phinees ; high-priest and 10 ACHIM progenitor of Hsdras (jlisd.l.j), but omitted in the genealngics of Ezr.7.1-3 and iEsd.8.1-2. A'chim, the fifth in succession before Jo- seph, the husband of Mary (Mt. 1.14). TheHeb. form of the name would be ydkhin, short for Jehoiachin. Achiop', captain of the Ammonites in the army of Holofcrnes, to whom he recounted God's i>ast favours to tlie IsracHtcs, advising leaving them alone. Tliis was resented by the army and by Holofcrnes, wlio sent him bound to the Israelites who received him with grati- tude. .\fterwards he was circumcised and became a proselyte to Judaism f J th. 5,6,14). Achish', a Philistine king of Gath, son of Maoch, who in the title to Ps.34 is called Abimelech. David twice found a refuge with him when he fled from Saul. On the first occasion, being recognized by the servants of Achish as one celebrated for his victories over the Philistines, he was alarmed for his safety, and feigned madness (iSam.21.io fl.). [David.] From Achish he fled to the cave of Adullam. On a second occasion David fled to Achish with 600 men {iSam.27.2), and remained at Gath a year and four months. Whether the Achish to whom Shimei went in disobedience to the commands of Solomon (1K.2.40) is the same person is uncertain; the word may be a title rather than a name. Achitob'(iEsd.8.2 ; 2Ksd.l.i) = AHrruB, 2. Achmetha. [Ecbatana.] Achop', Valley of: " valley of trouble," according to the etymology of the text ; where Achan, the " troubler of Israel," was stoned (Jos. 7. 24, 26). On the N. boundary of Judah (15. 7; also Is.65.io; H0.2.15). This valley is now called Wddy Qelt, running into the Jordan from W. [c.R.c] Achsa' (iChr.2.49), Achsah', elsewhere, and throughout R.V. ; — anklet. Caleb's daughter. She was given in marriage to her uncle or cousin Othniel as a reward for captur- ing Kirjath-sephir (Debir). She moved her husband to demand a further dowry, but finally herself made the request, which Caleb granted. neghebh (A.V. south)'\s the name of a district : so apparentlv are Gullath-maiii {springs of water) and (uillath-'illith and (hillatli-tehtith (the upper and nether springs). They have been identified with the well-watered region :^eil ed-Dilheh between Hebron and Derir. The twice-told tale (Jos. 15. 15-19 ; Judg.l. 12-15) indicates the necessity felt in later times for explaining why the territory geographically connected with Hebron should belong to Debir. [Othniel; Caieh.] [ii.m.s.I Achshaph', a royal Canaanite city (Jos. 11. i) in Galilee (12. 20), on the border of .'Xsher (19.25). Probably, from position, the village Kcfr Ydsif, 6 miles N.E. of Accho. [c.R.c. 1 Achzib'. — 1. A city of Judah (Jos.i5.44) in the Shephclali, noticed with Kkilah and Maufsuaii (Mi.l.ii); ntherwisc Chezib (Gen. 38. 3), near Adiu.i.am (xcr. i). The name survives at 'Ain Kezbch, dose to Beit Nettif on S., in the valley of Ivlah, 3 miles N. of Adullam. — 2. An important shore town of Ashcr (J OS. 19. 29) not taken from the Canaanites (Judg.l. 31) ; now ez Zib, a village on the shore 9 miles N. of Accho. It was the border town of Galilee (Tal. Bab. Giltin ACTS OF THE APOSTLES 7 b), called Ecdippa or Actipous bv Josephus (i Wars xiii. 4 ; 5 Ant. i. 22). It is noticed by Thothmes III. in i6th cent. b.c. (No. 40), and probably by the Egyptian Mohar who tra- velled along the coast in the 14th cent. e.g. It is mentioned immediately before Accho, as taken by Sennacherib in 702 B.C. [c.R.c.] Acipha' (iEsd.5.31) - Hakupiia. Acitho', an ancestor of Judith (Jth.8.1); possilily Achitdb is the correct reading. Acrabattine. [Akrahbim.] Acre. [Weights and Measures.] Acts of the Apostles. The author- ship is, by English scholars almost without ex- ception, ascribed to St. Luke, the writer of the third gospel, the " former treatise " of Ac.l.i. Both writings are addressed to Theophilus, both exhibit remarkable resemblances of style and vocabulary, and in particular both show that special medical knowledge and vocabu- lary which we should expect in Luke the be- loved physician. No other suggested name — Timothy, Silas, Titus — suits the facts as well. Further, external evidence from the Mura- torian Fragment and Irenaeus onwards sup- ports the traditional view, and there is evidence of the use of the Acts as early as Ignatius and Polycarp, if not earlier. — The integrity of the book is also beyond doubt. The so-called " we sections," beginning with 16. 10, are not a " travel-diarv " found and used by a 2nd- cent. writer without changing the first person, but are by the same hand as the rest of the book, which therefore comes to us as a whole from a companion of St. Paul who was an eye- witness of much that he records, and had excellent 0])i5ortunities of learning at first hand and on the spot about that part of the history which precedes 16. 10. — The question of in- tegrity is therefore important for its bearing on the sources used by the writer. For the earlier part of the Acts he had to collect his informa- tion from oral and written sources, and in doing so he no doubt used the same extreme care .as in tlie gospel (Lu.l.3). These may have been in minor details inaccurate — the most serious difficulty is in regard to the " speaking with tongues " on the day of Pentecost — and the ground they covered must have determined St. Luke's choice of incidents. At the same time it is clear that St. Luke is not hampered by want of information, for he selects and discards what was not to his purpose. It is impossible to identify or estimate the extent of the separate sources. But the long stay at Caesarea (Ac. 24. 2 7) and the connexion with Philip (21.8) and Manaen (a disciple from the beginning, i.e. the Day of Pentecost), St. Luke's own possil)le connexion with Antioch (11. 27, D), his certain connexion with St. Paul and with St. Mark (Col. 4. 10,14) and through St. Mark with St. Peter and St. Barnabas, suggest to us abundant opportunities of obtaining accurate information. This oral information may have been supplemented by written accounts, e.g. of the proceedings in the Sanhe- drin, the trial of St. Ste|)hen, and the con- ference at Jerusalem. For the latter part of the book, from 16. 10 onwards, we have the evidence of an eyewitness, educated, in- terested, accurate, and observant. There is no ground for regarding Josephus as one ACTS OF THE APOSTLES of the sources used by St. Luke. Where they meet — c/., e.g., 5.36 (Theudas) and I2.3 (death of Agrippa) with Josephus, 20 Ant. V. I and 19 Ant. viii. 2 — they are obviously independent, and many of the supposed re- semblances in diction are useless for proving St. Luke's acquaintance with Josephus. Nor can we suppose that the epistles of St. Paul were among the sources used by St. Luke. There are a large number of " undesigned co- incidences " showing the accuracy of both ac- counts, but there are also many instances (e.g. Gal. 1,2) of independence amounting almost to discrepancy, and of omissions, e.g. of St. Paul's trials and persecutions (c/. 2C0r.ll), to which St. Luke must have referred with the epistles before him. — The relation of the Acts to Josephus and to St. Paul's epistles is important because of its bearing on the date of the book. If a use of these writings were established, a comparatively late date must be assigned to it. Harnack sees little objection to the possi- bility of its being written soon after 60, i.e. immediately after the close of the " two years " of Ac. 28. 30. This early date is adopted by some as explaining the supposed abruptness of the conclusion, the absence of any references to St. Paul's subsequent fortunes and death (to which some have supposed St. Luke intended to devote a rpiros \6yos), and the favourable attitude taken by the writer towards the Ro- man government — an attitude which, it is said, would have been impossible after the Neronian persecution of 64-67. The greatest, and pro- bably an insuperable, objection to such an early date for the Acts is that it requires an almost impossibly early date for the gospel which preceded it (l.i). The determining ter- minus a quo must therefore be the date of the gospel of St. Luke (Luke, Gospel of], and for a terminus ad quern we must not go beyond the lifetime of a contemporary of St. Paul. Sanday, Plummer, and Zahn would fix it before 80 a.d. and after 70 a.d. It has been suggested that two editions of the Acts and the gospel were published by St. Luke, and the phenomena presented by the so-called " Western text " have been used in support of this view. Certainly the readings found in authorities belonging to this family of MSS. are often most noteworthy in the Acts, e.g. at 11.28,12.10, etc., and deserve the attention of the student. The additions are often valuable, and seem to go back to a trustworthy source, but they do not seem sufficient to justify the theory which has been based on them. — The purpose of St. Luke was not to give a complete record of either words or deeds, for he alludes to things passed over (2.40,43, etc., etc.), but a selection determined partly by his informa- tion and still more by his object in writing. The student has to find out St. Luke's object and scheme of arrangement, for he does not state them. He has to ask why St. Luke dwells so long on the healing of the lame man and its consequences (3.1-4.31), or the incident of Ananias and its consequences (5), or St. Peter's escape from prison (12). Probably we may define his object best by saying that he wished to mark the salient points in the spread of Christianity (1.8) from Jerusalem, and found his climax in the arrival of St. Paul at Rome, ACTS OF THE APOSTLES 11 and his preaching there a.KO)\vTus (28.31). In doing this he emphasizes the beginning of Christianity in various important centres and districts, and the beginnings of new lines of movement and policy in the Church itself, and in its relation to outside bodies [e.g. the Jews, the Gentiles, the Roman government). An- other marked feature of his narrative is the stress laid on the fact that the course of the history is continually under divine guidance, a guidance given to the work of the Church as a whole (13.2,15.28, etc.), and to that of individuals (10.19,16.7, etc.). It was not St. Luke's purpose to write a book which should be an apology for Christianity against Judaism or paganism, or for St. Paul's line of action, or one which should be an eirenicon between a Petrine and a Pauline Christianity, or one which should give a favourable presentation of the attitude of the Roman government to- wards Christianity, though it may do these things, so far as a truthful statement of the facts allows. — The historical value of the Acts is the most important point to be considered by the reader, and although it has been depreciated for the groundless reasons just mentioned, its value may be established by considering the exactness with which St. Luke refers to political and geographical details (cf. 13.7,16. 20, etc.), and the fidelity with which he records the language, ideas, and organization of primi- tive Christianity instead of adopting those of a later period. St. Luke does not hesitate to mention differences of opinion, nor does he try to conceal things discreditable or to gloss over discrepancies {e.g. between the accounts of St. Paul's conversion in 9,22, and 26). " It would be difficult in the whole range of literatiure to find a work where there is less attempt at pointing a moral or drawing a lesson from the facts " (Ramsay). The genuineness of the speeches has been questioned by some, and it has been suggested that St. Luke, like Thu- cydides, put his own words into the mouth of the speakers. A comparison of the speeches of St. Peter and St. James with their writings shows many resemblances of thought and diction, and the language of the speeches seems true to the primitive type of teaching. It has to be remembered that what is preserved in the Acts is but an abstract of what was said, giving the main headings, and therefore bears the impress of St. Luke ; but those headings, in St. Paul's recorded speeches, agree in a re- markable way with what would be likely to have been said, and also with what we find in his epistles {e.g., cf. Ac. 20 with Ep. to Ephesians). There is no reasonable ground, on account of the speeches, to depreciate the historical value of the book. — Satisfied as to its historical value, the student must try to get a clear con- ception of the book as a whole by marking {a) the progress of time or the chronology, (&) the gradual widening of the horizon, (c) the im- portance of the chief persons and incidents. — The chronology is often vague, and " the crucial date " for fixing the end of the Acts — viz. the date of Festus' arrival in Judaea — cannot be definitely assigned to any particular year. But the Acts covers roughly a period of about thirty years, divided almost evenly by the only fixed date, the death of Herod Agrippa I. in 12 ACUA 44 A.D. (Ac.l2). — The widening of the horizon | involves a consideration of the relations of the Church to those Jews who did not believe, Sadducecs, Pharisees, and " the people " gener- ally, and of its attitude towards " those of the circumcision " who became believers and re- mained " zealous of the law," and towards the Gentiles.— T/!f importance of the chief persons and incidents involves a consideration of the contributions to the progress and policy of the early Church made by SS. Peter, Paul, Barnabas, Stephen, etc., and of the in- fluences which moulded them, and prompted their line of action. It bids us seek for the crises or turning-points in the history, the issues involved, the difficulties to be faced, and the helps or hindrances in the march of events. But the interest of the Acts is not exhausted when we have grasped the main outlines of the narrative. Almost every verse has something to tell us of the early Church, what it was, what it did, what it taught and believed. These data have to be collected, sifted, and grouped, and in doing so we must remember (i) to adopt a proper method of exegesis ; cf. 17.3, ^lavoiytiiv Kai TrapaTidefxevos ; (2) to clicck our con- clusions by the Gk. ; (3) not to read into expressions and words later meanings and as- sociations ; (4) to expect isolated instances of a practice or a dogma before it becomes general ; (5) to " study the principles and ideals " of early Christianity rather than to " copy its pre- cedents " ; (6) to distinguish between the facts and our conclusions from the facts. Bearing these precautions in mind, we may gather a rich harvest from the Acts as to (a) what ''the Church " was, what terms are used for those who became Christians, what names are given them, how they were admitted to the Church, what obligations membership implied, how they were organized, and what were the method of appointment, qualifications, and duties of its officers. (^) What the Church did involves a study of the life of the early Christians in prayer, in worship, in social relations ; and we may gather what were some marked character- istics of that life — its grace, its power, its effort, its joyfulness. (7) The teaching and belief of the primitive Church may be studied by seeing what is not there as well as what is there, or by a comparison with the different clauses of the Apostles' Creed. In particular, we must notice the great stress laid on the con- nexion of Christianity with O.T. — an insistence providential in view of Gnosticism — and group the teaching about the person and work of Christ and the person and work of the Holy Spirit. Arts, on Acts in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904 ; sound and thorough) and Encyc. Bibl. (very fanciful) ; Ramsay, St. Paul the traveller, and The Church in the Roman Empire ; Haw- kins, Horae Synopticae (invaluable on the style); Vaughan, Church of the Eirst Days (a homi- Ictiral running ronimcntary) ; Comm. by Kackham, Knowliiig (in Expositor's Gk. Test. — the best Hug. comm. on the lik. text), and Meyer-Wendt (German) , Harnack, Bcitrdgc zur Einleitung in das Neue Testament (import- ant as accepting very many " conservative " views). [ll.j.m.b.] Acua' = Akkub, 3 (iEsd.5.30 ; cf. Ezr.2.45). Acub' = Bakbuk (iEsd.5.31 ; cf. Ezr.2.51). ADAM, CITY Adadah', a city in the extreme S. of Judah named with Dimonah and Kedesh (Jos.15.22). Now 'A d'adah, a ruin 7 m. S. E. of Arad. [c.r.c] Adah' {ornament, beauty). — 1. The first of the two wives of Lamech, who bore to him Jabal and J ubal (Gen. 4.19).— 2. A Hittitess, daughter of Elon, one of the three wives of Esau, mother of his firstborn son Eliphaz, and so the ancestress of six (or seven) tribes of the Edomites (Gen.36.2ff.). InGen.26.34 she is called Bashemath. Adaiah'. — 1. Maternal grandfather of king Josiah, and native of Boscath in the lowlands of Judah (2K.22.1).— 2. A Levite, of the Gershonite branch, and ancestor of Asaph (rChr.6.41). In ver. 21 he is called Iddo. — 3. A Benjamite, son of Shimhi (iChr.8.21), who is apparently the same as Shema in ver. 1 3. — 4. A priest, son of Jeroham (iChr.9.i2 ; Ne.ll.12). — 5. Ancestor of Maaseiah, 15 (2Chr.23.i). — 6. One of the descendants of Bani who had married a foreign wife during the Exile (Ezr.lO. 29). He is called Jedeus in iEsd.9.30. — 7. The descendant of another Bani, who had also taken a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.39). — 8. A man of Judah, of the line of Pharez (Ne.ll.5). Adalia', fifth son of Haman, slain by the Jews in Shushan (Esth.9.8). Adam (Heb. the man), from a root signi- fying ruddy or rosy. He is described as being " formed," or " moulded," as distinct from the act of creation or " making " (all three words are found used of the divine methods in Is. 45. 18), from the " dust of the earth," i.e. from material particles. "A breath of life was com- municated to him, and he became a living soul." He was originally placed in a garden of delight [Eden], i.e. in one of the most fertile portions of the earth, apparently the territory between the Tigris and the Euphrates, known as Meso- potamia. It was his duty to cultivate the soil, and he was to have perfect freedom of action (Gen. 2. 17), so long as he did not contravene the laws of his being imposed upon him by his Crea- tor. Death was the penalty attached to such infringement. In order to put an end to his loneliness, a counterpart or complement was provided for him [Eve], and he was bidden to cleave irrevocably to her in love, since he and she were to become " one flesh." Through the subtilty of the serpent [Fall] he was induced to violate the conditions on which his sojourn in the garden of delight was permitted. He and live were driven out from the garden, andcom- jiellcd to dwell in a land on which a curse rested ; and henceforth labour was to be no longer a pleasure to him, but a burden. In his banish- ment two children were born to him, but the results of his evil-doing had already begun to work, and the younger fell by the hand of the elder. [Cain : Abel.] Erom a third son, Seth, sprung a worthier progeny than tliat of Cain, the munlcnr and fugitive. Adam lived, we arc infiirnud, to tlie ageof 930 years. [j.j.L.] Adam', City (Jos.3.i6). The Jordan was blocked at a distance from the Jericho ford, and the waters " rose up in a heap a great way off, at Adam, the city that is beside Zaretan" (sec R.V.). It is doubtful whether this site could have been the Aumaii of the kikkdr (Gen. 14.2), though not impossible. The name probably survives at the DcLmieh AD AMAH ford, 20 miles N. of the Jericho ford ; and an Arab historian asserts that in the time of Bibars (about 1265 a.d.) the Jordan was here blocked for several hours. The bridge at this site was built about the same time, [c.r.c] Adamah', one of the " fenced cities " of Naphtali, named between Chinnereth and ha- Ramah (Jos. 19. 36) ; now Admah, 4 miles S.E. of Jabneel (Yemma). [c.r.c] Adamant, the translation of the Heb. Shamir in Ezk.3.9 and Zech.7.i2, translated in Je.17.1 "diamond." Dr. Pinches suggests that it may be compared with the Ass>t. shemiru, the word used for a ring (the object in which a precious stoiie was set). Our Eng. adamant is derived from the Gk., and signifies " the un- conquerable." In that language it is always applied to some very hard material. Hesiod (8th cent. B.C.) probably uses it for steel, while in Theophrastus (d. 287 b.c.) it is almost cer- tainly corundum. Adamant in Eng. is also not constant in meaning, sometimes signifying the diamond (which is merely a corruption of the word adamant), but often any impenetrably hard substance. Some hard cutting stone is apparently intended in Jeremiah (17. i) : "The sin of Judah is written with a pen of iron and with the point of a diamond." That stone, however, can hardly have been known to the Hebrews in the prophet's days [Diamond], and the expression in Ezk.3.9, "adamant harder than flint," suggests that by shdmir is intended some variety of corundum, a mineral inferior only to the diamond in hardness. Of this mineral — crystallized alumina — the purer kinds are valued as gems, the red being named ruby ; the blue, sapphire ; the yellow. Oriental topaz ; the green, Oriental emerald ; the violet. Oriental amethyst. A common kind of corundum is dark or dull coloiured, and practically non- transparent ; this, on account of its hardness, is still often used for cutting purposes, as is emery, a more granular form, and frequently less pure, of the same, which often contains magnetite (an iron oxide) as an impurity and is thus not quite so hard. The Gk. name for this material is crfiApis or a^iipi's, which the Heb. lexicographers derive from Heb. shdmir, and there seems no doubt that the two words are identical. [t.g.b.] Adami' (R.V. Adami-nekeb), on the border of Naphtali, mentioned after Allon Bezaanannim (Jos.i9.33) ; riow ed Damieh, 5 miles W. of Tiberias. [c.r.c] Adap', a place on the S. boundary of Palestine and of Judah (Jos. 15. 3), called Hazar-addar in Num. 34.4. [Hazer.] Adap. [Months.] Ad'asa, a place in Judaea, 30 stadia from Beth-horon (Josephus, 12 Ant. x. 5). Here Judas Maccabaeus encamped before the battle in which Nicanor was killed (i Mac. 7. 40, 45). Now 'Adaseh, a ruin 8 miles S.E. of Beth-horon, on the road thence to Jerusalem. [c.r.c] Adbeel', a son of Ishmael (Gen. 25. 13 ; iChr.1.29), and probably the progenitor of an Arab tribe. Prof. Sayce {Higher Crit. and Monuments, p. 202) says that Adbeel is mentioned by Tiglath-pileser, under the form of Idibi'ilu. Addan', a place whence some of the Captivity returned with Zerubbabel to J udaea ADDI 13 (Ezr.2.59). Ill Ne.7.6i the name is Addon ; in iEsd.5.36, Aalar. Addap', son of Bela (iChr.8.3), called Ard in Num.26.40. Addep. This word is used for any poisonous snake, and applied in this general sense by the translators of A.V., who use in a similar way the term Asp. The word adder occurs 5 times in the text of A.V., and 3 times in the margin as synonymous with cockatrice — viz. Is. 11. 8, 14.29, 59. 5. It represents 4 Heb. words, (i) 'akhshubh, found only in Ps.140.3, " They have sharpened their tongues like a serpent, adder's poison is imder their lips " ; the latter half of this verse being quoted by St. Paul in R0.3.13. Here serpent -poison is of course a figure for evil-speaking. The number of poisonous serpents with which the Jews were acquainted was probably limited to some 5 or 6 species [Serpent] ; and as there are reasonable grounds for identifying pethen and sh'phtphon with two well-known species — viz. the Egyptian cobra and the horned viper — it is not improbable that 'akhshubh may represent the sand-viper (Echis W.D.A. Head of (a) the Horned Viper (Cerastes coruiitiis). \b) the Sand-viper (Edits carinatiis). carinatus) of Transcaspia, Arabia, and other parts of S. Asia and N. Africa. (2) pethen. [Asp.] (3) cephd, or (iph'oni, occurs 5 times in the Heb. Bible. In Pr.23.32 it is translated adder, but in Is.ll. 8, 14.29,59.5, Je.8.17, it is rendered cockatrice. From Jeremiah we learn that it was venomous, while from the parallelism of Is.ll. 8 it appears that ciph'ont was more dreaded than pethen. fiph'ont may, then, quite possibly indicate the Algerian viper (Vipera lebetina), a very poisonous snake ranging from N. Africa to Syria and Persia. (4) sh''phiph6n occurs onl}' in Gen. 49. 17, " Dan shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, that biteth the horse's heels, so that his rider shall fall backward." This habit of lurking in the sand and biting at horses' heels suits the character of the horned viper, or Cleopatra's asp (Cerastes cornutus), abundant in the deserts of Egypt, Syria, and Arabia. This venonious species averages from 12 to 15 in. in length, but occasionally larger individuals are found. [r.l.] Ad'di. — 1. An ancestor of Jesus Christ (Lu.3.28). — 2. The ancestor of Israelites who put away their foreign wives (iEsd.9.31). The same place in the list of Ezr.lO.30 is occupied by Pahath-moab. 14 ADDO Addo' (lEsd.e.i) = Iddo, 5. Addon'. [Addan.] Ad'dus. — 1. ('A55o(''j.) His sons are named (iEsd.5.34 only) among the sons of Solomon's servants who returned under Zerubbabel. — 2. ('ladSovs, R. V. Jaddus.) A priest whose descen- dants were unable to establish their genealogy in the time of Ezra and were removed from their priesthood (iEsd.5.38). He is there said to have married a daughter, and adopted the name, of Berzelus (K.V. Zorzellus) or Barzil- lai {cf. 2Sam.i7.27), and is called by this name in Ezr.2.6i and Ne.7.63. [c.d.] A'dep, a Benjamite, son of Beriah, chief of the inhabitants of Aijalon (iChr.8.15). The name is more correctly Eder, as in R.V. Ad'ida, a town on an eminence over- looking the low country of Judah, fortified by Simon the Hasmonaean in his wars with Tryphon (iMac.12.38,13.13). Probably iden- tical with Hadid. Adiel'. — 1. A prince of the tribe of Simeon, who took part in the raid made by his tribe upon the Hamite shepherds of the valley of Gedor in the reign of Hezekiah (iChr.4.36ff.). — 2. A priest, ancestor of Maasiai (iChr.9.12). — 3. Ancestor of Azmaveth, David's treasurer (iChr.27.25). Adin', ancestor of a family of which some members returned from captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.15 ; Ne.7.2o) and with Ezra (Ezr.8.6). They joined with Nehemiah in a covenant to separate themselves from the heathen (Ne.l0.i6). Adina', one of David's captains beyond the Jordan ; a Reubenite chief (1Chr.ll.42). Adino', the Eznite. [Jasiiobeam.] Ad'inus = Jamin, 3 (iEsd.9.48 ;c/. Ne.8.7). Aditha'im, a town of Judah, in the She- phelah, named, between Sharaim and hag- Gederah, in Jos. 15. 36. [Adida.] [c.r.c] Adjupation. [Exorcist.] Adla'i, father of Shaphat, 5 (iChr.27.29). Ad'mah, one of the Cities of the Plain, i.e. of the kikkdr of Jordan (Gen. 10. 19,14.2,8 ; Deut.29.23 ; Ho.11.8). [Adam, City.] [c.r.c] Admatha', one of the seven princes of Persia who were counsellors to Ahasuerus (Esth.1.14). Adna'. — 1. One of the family of Pahath- moab who returned with Ezra and married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.30). — 2. A priest, descend- ant of Harim in the days of Joiakim, the son of Jeshua (Ne.i2.15). Adnah'. — 1. A Manassite who deserted Saul and joined David on his road to Ziklag from the camp of the Philistines. He was captain of a thousand, and fought with David in the jiursuit of the Amalckites (iChr.l2.20, 21). — 2. A man of Judah; the chief captain in Jehoshaphat's army (2Chr.i7.14). Adon, Adonai. [Lord.] Adoni-be zek, king of Bezek, a city of the Canaanites. [Bezek.] This chieftain was vanquished by the tribe of Judah (Judg.l. 3-7), who cut off his thumbs and great'toes, and brought him prisoner to Jerusalem, where he died. He confessed that he had inflicted the same" cruelty upon 70 petty kings wiioni lie had conquered. Adonljah' (my Lord is Jehovah). — 1. The fourth of David's sons by Haggith, thus ADOPTION coming next after Absalom (2Sam.3.4). When his father's strength was visibly declining, he put forward pretensions to the crown. David promised Bathsheba that her son Solomon should succeed (1K.I.30), for there was no absolute claim of primogeniture in these Eastern monarchies. Adonijah's cause was espoused by Abiathar the priest, and Joab the commander of David's army. [Joab.] His name and influence secured a large number of followers among the captains of the royal army belonging to the tribe of Judah {cf. iK.1.9 and 25); and these, together with ail the princes except Solomon, were entertained by Adonijah at a great sacrificial feast. Nathan and Bathsheba, thoroughly alarmed, apprised David of these proceedings, who immediately gave orders that Solomon should be conducted on the royal mule in solemn procession to Gihon, a spring on the E. of Jerusalem (2Chr.32.30). [Gihon.] Here he was anointed and proclaimed king by Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet, and joy- fully recognized by the people. Adonijah fled to sanctuary, but was pardoned by Solomon on condition of good behaviour (iK.l. 50-53). The death of David quickly followed on these events ; and Adonijah begged Bathsheba, who as " king's mother " would now have special dignity and influence [Queex], to procure Solo- mon's consent to his marriage with Abishag, who had been the nurse of David in his old age (1.3,4). This was regarded as equivalent to a fresh attempt on the throne [cf. Absalom ; Abner] ; and therefore Solomon ordered him to be put to death by Benaiah, as having vio- lated the terms of his previous pardon. — 2. A Levite in the reign of Jehoshaphat (2Chr.l7.8). — 3. (Ne.l0.i6.) [Adonikam.] [a.w.s.] Adonikam', the head of a family of which some members returned with Zerub- babel (Ezr.2.13 ; Ne.7.i8 ; iEsd.5.14), and the remainder with Ezra (Ezr.8.13 ; lEsd. 8.39). The name is Adonijah in Ne.l0.i6. Adonipani' (iK.4.6,5.14; Adoram, 2Sam. 20.24, iK. 12.18, Hadorain, 2Chr.IO.18; LXX. 'ASwj'ipd/x; Viilg- Adonirara, Aduram), son of Abda. He was placed over the levies under David and Solomon. This made him very unpopular, and when he was sent by Rohobnam to put down tiie revolt of the Ten Tribes, he was stoned to death. [g.m.y.] Adoni-ze'dec (lord of righteousness), the Amorite king of Jerusalcni who organized a league with four other Amorite princes against Joshua. The confederate kings having laid siege to Gibeon, Joshua marched to the relief of his new allies and put the besiegers to flight. The five kings took refuge in a cave at Makkedah, wlience they were taken and slain, their bodies hung on trees, and then buried in the cav'e (Jos.lO.i-27). Adoption, a figure of speech peculiar to St. Paul, by wliich he describes the new relation- ship to C,i)d of man rede(Mned in Christ and endowed with the Sjiirit, both as regards pre- sent privileges (R().8.i5 ; Gal. 4.5 ; Eph.l.5) and future hojic (Ri).8.23). He also once ap- plies tlie wiird to the original choice of Israel by God (i\().9.|)- J he word was no doubt suggested by the custom, common under Rt)- man law, by which a childless person adopted, Adoba as his son, one born of other parents. The child thus adopted was entitled to the name of his new father, and a share in his ancestral religious observances {sacra privata), and he ranked as his heir-at-law. The father was also entitled to the property of his adopted son, and exercised towards him all the rights and privi- leges of a father. Adoption was not a Jewish practice [Family], and would have been in- consistent with the Mosaic law as to inherit- ance. Parallel instances alleged in O.T. (Gen. 15. 3, 16. 2) are not cases of legal adoption to full family privileges. The leading thought in St. Paul's use of the word is that the adop- tion of man in Christ is an act of God's grace, transcending natural relationship. Liddon, Expl. Analy. of Ep. to Romans (1893); Maine, Ancient Law (5th ed. 1873). [a.r.w.] Adopa. [Adoraim.] Adopa'im, a city fortified by Rehoboam (2Chr.ll. 9), in Judah, apparently near the Shephelah ; noticed with Lachish and Mare- shah ; probably " Adora " (iMac.l3.2o). Robinson identiiied it with Dura, a village on a ridge 5 miles W. of Hebron. Josephus calls it Adora, and Dor, in Idumaea. [c.r.c] Adopam. [Adoniram.] Addpation. Though, to the Christian, adoration (or worship) in its strict sense means the prostration of the whole being before God alone, yet it must not be forgotten that Orientals naturally make outward de- monstrations of reverence and respect towards those who are regarded as in any way superior, which to a Western seem extravagant and out of place. Hence passages abound in the Bible where bodily prostration and similar gestures are described, not only towards Almighty God, but also towards idols and human beings ; and in the East such gestures are still retained. In N.T., however, there are indications of a tendency, as the result of Christ's teaching, to restrict such attitudes (whether of mind or body) to times and modes of divine worship ; e.g. St. Peter'srebuketoCornelius(Ac.l0.25,26) and the angel's to St. John the Divine (Rev. 19. ID ; c/. Col. 2. 18). Hence it is significant that oiu: Lord Himself in the Gospels does not refuse to accept such signs of honour when paid to Him, whether before (Mk.5.22 ; Lu.8. 41 ; Jn.11.32) or after His resurrection (Mt. 28.9). [C.L.F.] Adpamme'lech. — 1. (2K.I7.31.) Adram- melech and Anammelech were the two deities introduced into Samaria by the Sepharvites, some of the heathen colonists transplanted thither by Sargon, king of Assyria. Their wor- ship resembled that of Moloch, as it included the sacrifice of infants by fire. The meaning of the names is somewhat uncertain. The probability is that, with Schrader and others, we should take them as Adar (A tar) the prince, and Anu the prince. (For the juxtaposition, cf. the analogous Jehovah Elohim.) "Anu the king" is frequently found in Assyrian inscriptions, but there is no certain evidence of the rite of child-burning. There is also some doubt as to the locality of Sepharvaim ; but the recurrence of the name Adrammelech as — 2. One of the two sons of Sennacherib, who murdered their father in the temple 680 b.c. (2K.I9.37 ; cf. 2Chr.32.21 ; Is.37.38), favours its identification ADULIiAM 15 with the Syrian Sabara'in, rather than with the Sippar of N. Babylonia. [b.f.s.] Adpamyt'tium, a seaport in the province of Asia, situated in the district anciently called Aeolis, and also Mysia (see Ac.16.7). Adramyttium gave, and still gives, its name to a deep gulf on this coast, opposite to the opening of which is the island of Lesbos. [MiTYLENE.] St. Paul was never at Adramyt- tium, unless perhaps during his second mis- sionary journey, on his way from Galatia to Troas (Ac.l6), and its only Biblical interest is in illustrating his voyage from Caesarea in a ship belonging to this place (Ac.27.2). Ships of Adramyttium must have been frequent on this coast, for it was a place of considerable traffic. It lay on the great Roman road be- tween Assos, Troas, and the Hellespont on one side, and Pergamus, Ephesus, and Miletus on the other, and was connected by similar roads with the interior of the country. The modern Adramuti is a poor village, though still a place of some trade and shipbuilding. A'dpia, more properly A'dpias. The meaning of this word in Ac.27.2 7 is important. The word seems to have been derived from the town of Adria, near the Po ; and at first de- noted the part of the gulf of Venice in that neighbourhood. Afterwards its signification was extended to embrace the whole gulf, and subsequently farther still, so that in the apos- tolic age it denoted that natural division of the Mediterranean which Humboldt names theSyrtic basin (seeAc.27.i7, R.V.), and which had the coasts of Sicil)', Italy, Greece, and Africa for its boundaries. This definition is explicitly given by the geographer Ptolemy, almost a contemporary of St. Paul, who says that Crete is bounded on the W. by Adrias. Later writers state that Malta divides the Adriatic Sea from the Tyrrhenian Sea, and the isthmus of Corinth the Aegean from the Adriatic. Thus the ship in which Josephus started for Italy about the time of St. Paul's voyage foundered in "Adrias," and there he was picked up by a ship from Cyrene and taken to Puteoli {Life iii. ; cf. Ac. 28. 13). It is through want of attention to these facts that an argument has been drawn from this geographical term in favour of the false view which places the apostle's shipwreck in the gulf of Venice. [Melita.] Adpiel', a son of Barzillai the Meholathite, to whom Saul gave his daughter Merab, although he had previously promised her to David (1Sam.l8.19). His five sons were amongst the seven descendants of Saul whom David surrendered to the Gibeonites (2Sam. 21.8) in satisfaction for the endeavours of Saul to extirpate them, contrary to the league made with them by Joshua (Jos.9.15). In 2Sam.21.8 they are called the sons of Michal, which is probably a transcriber's error for Merab (see marg. ad loc). Aduel', a Naphtalite, ancestor of Tobit (Tob.l.i). Adullam', a royal city (Jos.i2.15) in the Shephelah, or low hills of Judah (Gen. 38. i; Jos.15.35), near Socoh (2Chr.ll. 7) ; fortified by Rehoboam. The cave of Adullam was David's stronghold at a " rock," after he left Gath, and apparently near Keilah 16 ADULLAMITE AGAPE (iSam.22.i,23.i ; 1Chr.ll.15). In Mi.l.15 we read (see R.V.), "The glory of Israel shall come to Adullam." [Odollam ; 2Mac.l2. 38.] Now the ruined site '.4 id-el-md (Clermont- Ganneau) 011 VV. side of the upper valley of Elah. Eusebius places Adullam 10 Roman miles E. of Beit Jibriii (actually 7 English miles). The ruins are on an isolated rocky hill, 300 to 400 ft. above the valley, and a cave on the N. slope is still inhabited. (Surv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 311, 361.) The town was in- habited after the Captivity (Ne.ll.30) and was still a small village in 4th. cent. a.d. [c.r.c] Adul'Iamite, a native of x\dullam; the designation given to Hirah (Gen. 38. 1,12,20). Adultery. The parties to this offence as conceived in a polygamous society are a married woman and a man other than her hus- band. For further information as regards O.T., see Crimes; Ordeal of Jealousy; Water of Bitterness. [h.m.w.] In N.T. Adultery was the only cause for which our Lord would permit Divorce (Mt.5. 32,19.9), thus agreeing with the school of Shaminai against the Hillelitcs, who allowed divorce for the most trivial offences (Git. ix. 10 ; Je. Soiah 1. i. 166 ; cf. Mt.19.3). The active party to a divorce marrying again was guilty of adultery (Mk. 10.11, 12 ; Lu.l6.i8rt) ; also he who married a divorced woman was likewise guilty (Lu.ie.icS/) ; Mt. 5.326,19.96). Some think Mt.i9.9a permits the innocent party to re-marry if the cause was adultery, but see R.V. marg. notes to verse and art. Divorce. J ewish law did not permit the mar- riage of the guilty parties, and it is supposed that the guilty woman might not marry again. According to Jewish authorities, adultery was so prevalent in N.T. times {cf. Lu.l8.11) that the Mosaic punishment of stoning was super- seded by divorce. For the same reason the ordeal of the " bitter waters " was about this time abolished by the Sanhedrin [Sotah ix. 9), since, according to R. Akiba, the test took effect only if the husband was innocent of the same offence (Siphri, Naso 21 ; Sotah 476). This may throw liglit on our Lord's action in the case of the woman brought before Him (Jn.8.3-11, especially vv. 7,9). [11. h.] Adummim' (Jos.l5.7,18.i7 ; the ascent of blood), the present Tal'at ed Diimm {ascent of blood) on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho, S. of the Oelt gorge, 9 miles N.E. of Jerusalem. The limestone is here covered with red stains like blood. [c.r.c] Advent. [Incarnation ; Coming of Christ, Second.] Advocate, tlie word used in A.V. and R.V. to translate irapaKXrjTO^ in ijn.2.i, elsewhere rendered " Comforter " (Old I'jig. for "Streiig- thener "). In this place the title is given to the ascended and glorified Ciirist in His capacity as Mediator and Intercessor. l-Hsewiierc it is applied to the Holy Spirit (Jn.l4.i6,26,15. 26,16.7), though ji the expression "another Comforter" in the first of these passages shows tiiat the title may be properly applied in the same meaning to eitlier the Second or Tiiird Persf)n of tlie Trinity. And it should b(; noted that tiie oftice of intcrtx'ssioii for the faithful, usually attributed to the glorified Christ, is in Ko.8.26,27 assigned to the Holy Spirit also. It is in fact this work, rather than the secon- dary one of " comforting " or consoling, which is implied in the Gk. word. For TrapdK\r]Tos meant in legal phraseology an advocate or champion, one who was " called to the side " of an accused person to defend him, or bear witness in his behalf. Hence the thought seems to be that Christians accused by Satan (the Diabolos, or slanderer) may look both to the exalted Son of God as their Advocate or Champion (Ro.8.33, 34), and also to the Holy Spirit in the Church, Who makes their prayers and intercessions on earth efficacious. Westcott, Gosp. ace. to St. John{iSSi): Epp. of St. John {18S3). [a.r.w.] Aedi'as (iEsd.9.27 ; cf. Ezr.lO.26). Per- haps a corruption of Eliaii, 2, or of Abdi, 3. Aegypt. [Egypt.] Aene'as, a man healed of his palsy at Lydda by St. Peter (Ac. 9. 33, 34). Ae'non, near Salim (Jn.3.23), where St. John baptized "because there was much water there." As in the cases of Bethabara and Sychar, the Fourth Gospel here shows special knowledge of Palestine, these sites being otherwise unnoticed. N.E. of Shechem is the perennial stream of Wddy Fdr'ah, flowing E. to Jordan. It was the old boun- dary of Judaea and Samaria. The ruin 'Aindn is 4 miles N. of the stream, and the village Salim 4 miles S. of the stream. The two names are not found near together any- where else in Palestine. The wild valley is a fit site for baptism in pure water. [c.r.c] Aethiopia. [Ethiopia.] Affinity. [Marriage.] Ag-'aba (iEsd.5.30). [Hagab.] Ag'abus, mentioned in Ac.ll.28,21.io. His story is important as an evidence that the gift of prophecy in apostolic times was not limited to exposition of divine truth, but included prediction of the future. For his prophecy of a famine " over all the world," and the fulfilment of it, see Claudius. He also predicted St. Paul's arrest and deliverance to the Gentiles, repeating therein more circum- stantially an inspired warning already given at Tyre (Ac.21.4). Being a Jew, he naturally used the symbolic method of emphasizing his prediction, which we meet with in Jeremiah, Ezekiel and others {ef. Je.i3.1-13). [e.r.b.] Agrag-', a king of Ainalek, whom Saul spared, together with the best of the spoil, although the will of Jehovah was that the Amalekites should be extirpated (Ex.1 7. 14 ; Deut.25.17 ; 1Sam.i5.1-3). For this dis- obedience Samuel declared that Jehovah had rejected Saul from being king, and himself sent for Agag and slew him " in the presence of Jehovah" (iSani.l5). The name Agag seems to be used in Num. 24. 7 as the general title of the kings of Amalek, like Pharaoh of Egypt. [h.c.b.1 Agag'ite. Haman is so called in Esth.S.i, 10.8.3.5. The Jews consider Haman a dc- sccuiiatit of Agag the Amalekite, and hence account for his hatred against their race. Aera^pe {'Ayairrj). The solemn repast taken in common by the Christians of the apos- tolic age, and retained in use uniler varying conditions for many centuries. In N.T. the word occurs in this sense only in Ju.12, and in a doubtful reading of 2Pe.2.i3. It is found, AGAR apparently in the same sense, in Ignatius {Smyrn. viii. 2), but not elsewhere known earlier than the last years of 2nd cent. It then becomes frequent, having been adopted by Latin as well as Gk. -speaking Christians. " Cena nostra," says TertuUian (Apol. 39), "de nomine rationem sui ostendit : id vocatur quod dilectio penes Graecos." Under other terms there seems to be a reference to the practice in Ac.2.46,20.11, 1Cor.lO.21, and more definitely in iCor.ll.20,21,33,34. Such solemn repasts were common to all ancient religions, in connexion with sacrifices, with funeral observances (indications of which are found in Je.16.7 and Tob.4.17), and with the meetings of confraternities. The name agape seems to be peculiarly Christian, but there is perhaps a parallel in the Roman Caristia (Ovid, Fast. ii. 617). The Christian practice appears to be referable to the general custom, but acquired a special significance from the association of the agape with the Euch.^rist (q.v.). At a date which cannot be ascertained these two observances were separated, and the agape had thenceforward a development of its own. Apart from the sacrificial banquets of licitae religiones, Roman legislation from the time of Augustus or earlier discouraged any such gatherings, except as held by burial- clubs, and the agape tended to assume the character thus allowed by law, becoming even- tually a feast held in commemoration of martyrs or provided in memory of departed friends. Grave abuses sprang up in this con- nexion, especially in Africa (Aug. Ep. 22, 29 ; Conf. vi. 2). In the year 363 the 28th Canon of the Council of Laodicea forbade the cele- bration of the agape in churches ; but this pro- hibition did not obtain in the W., for in 397 St. Paulinus of Nola {Ep. 13) describes an immense gathering of the kind in the Vatican Basilica. In the 7th cent, the Council in Trullo still found it necessary to renew the prohibi- tion, and the gradual disappearance of the agape cannot be definitely traced. Keating, The Agape and the Eucharist ; Fustel de Cou- langes. La cite antique ; Mommsen, De col- legiis et sodaliciis Romanoriim ; Liebenam, Zur Geschichte und Organisation des Romischen Vereinswesen ; Foucart, Des associations re- ligieuses chez les Grecs. [t.a.l.] Agar. [Hagar.] Ag-are'nes (Ba.3.23). [Hagarenes.] Agate, mentioned four times in text of A.V. —viz. in Ex.28. 19,39.12, Is. 54. 12, and Ezk.27. 16. In Ex.28. 19, 39. 12 it is represented by the Heb. sh''bh6 (probably from a Sumerian word read shubu and in Ass\TO-Babylonian shubil), and is spoken of as the second stone in the third row of the high-priest's breastplate ; in Is-S*. 12 and Ezk.27. 16 the original word is kadhkodh (R.V. rubies), by which, no doubt, is intended a different stone. [Rubies.] In Ezk.27. 16 the marg. has chrysoprase, whereas in 28.13 chrysoprase occurs in marg. in place of the emerald of the text, as the translation of a different Heb. word, nophekh ; the translators evidently being perplexed (and this may some- times be said of the R.V. also) as to what minerals were intended by the writers. Pro- bably, however, that sh''bhd means some variety of agate, for all interpreters so understand it. AGRICULTURE 17 Our Eng. agate, or achat, derives its name from the Achates, in Sicily, on the banks of which, according to Theophrastus and Pliny, it was first found ; but as varieties of it are found in most countries, it was doubtless known very early to the Orientals. A grey and white kind was employed in ancient Egypt, and a dark coloured and white by the early Greeks. Agate is formed of minutely crystallized quartz, in layers and other arrangements, differing in tint, which in some cases receive separate names [Chalcedony; Jasper; Onyx; Sardine; Sardonyx], and varieties of it are still used for ornamental purposes. They occur in veins and cavities of more than one kind of rock, [t.g.b.] Ag-ee', a Hararite, father of Shammah, 3 (2Sam.23.11). Ag-ge'us (iEsd.6.1,7.3 ; 2Esd.l.4o) = Haggai. Agricultupe. The tilling of the earth and the planting of the vine are noticed from the first inO.T. (Gen.2.8,4.2,9.2o), and though the Hebrew patriarchs led a pastoral life, especially in the Beer-sheba plains, yet Abraham bought a field with trees (Gen. 23. 17) as private property, and Isaac sowed corn at Gerar (26.12), while Jacob's family were engaged in agriculture (37.7) as well as in feeding flocks. The spies sent by Moses to Hebron (Num. 13. 23, 24) found there vines, pomegranates, and figs cultivated by the Amorite population, and Palestine is described as a land of brooks, springs, and deep pools, of wheat, barley, vines, figs, pomegranates, and olives (Deut.8.7,8) in the time of Moses, just as it is now. This description is fully borne out by monumental notices of even earlier date. The first information as to agriculture is found in the laws of Hammurabi (about 2100 B.C.) respecting the cultivation of his empire, and referring to the tillage of fields, the renting of orchards, and the careful irrigation of the plains. The spoil-lists of Thothmes III., a century before the Exodus, show that agriculture flourished among the Canaanites in Palestine (Brugsch. Hist. Egt. i. pp. 327, 330, 332), for he mentions 280,000 measures of corn reaped near Megiddo, "be- sides what was destroyed, in gathering it in, by the soldiers of the king." In the S. of Palestine wine was found stored in cellars as well as in skins, and at each " resting-place " — or military post — the Egyptian soldiers were supplied by the natives with bread, oil, balsam, wine, honey, wheat, barley, spelt, and fruits. In the Amarna letters a century later we find frequent notice of corn grown both at Gebal in the N. and also in Philistia, where the 'Abiri exacted tribute of corn and oil from Ashkelon (Berlin 103), while mul- berries appear (Brit. Mus. 26) to have been cultivated at Beirut. — The Seasons. The Hebrew year (like the Babylonian) consisted of 12 lunar months of alternately 30 and 29 days, beginning with the new moon about the vernal equinox. As this lunar year of 354 days fell behind the solar year, it was restored, to fit the seasons, by intercalating a 13th month (Ve-adar) at the end of the calendar. Such intercalation was as old as 2100 e.g. in the Babylonian Empire. The year (as in Egypt and among the early Aryans) appears 2 18 AGRICTJLTTJRE to have been divided into three seasons, of ' four months each in a normal year, these being the seasons of harvest, vintage, and sowing. Barley harvest began in the valleys about "Passover time, or early in April (Jos. 3. 15), and a month later in the hills. Wheat harvest began at Pentecost, in May (Ex. 34. 22), and continued in the mountains till June or the 4th month. In the fruit season the " in- gathering" occurred at the " end" of the civil year, or the end of the 6th month (Ex. 34. 22), early in September; and the Feast of Booths, in the middle of the 7th month, followed the vintage. Prayers for rain began on the 3rd or 7th of the 8th month (in October), and a fast was ordained (Mishna, Taanith i. 4) if it had not fallen by the middle of the month. [Rain.] In the third season the fasting for rain became more severe if it had not fallen in November. On the 28th of the nth month (in February) the " wave sheaf " of wheat (Lev.23.io) was sown 70 days before the Passover. The earliest sowings of any Fig. I.— PLOUGH, KTC. AS STILL USHD IN THE EAST. (From Fellows' ylsin Minor.) {a) Plough ; (/>, l>) yokes ; (< ) share ; d/l handle ; {e, f) iron shoes. crop had begun already in the middle of the 7th month (or in September), when the ploughing began if the rains were early. On the 8th or 9th of the last month (or in Feb- ruary) rejoicings for rain were celebrated, except in years of complete drought. This was the ordinary routine oi the year, and the AGRICULTURE seasons for ploughing, sowing, harvest, and vintage, for the rains and dry months, remain unchanged to the present day. — Agricultural Operations. The cultivation, from the earliest time, included that of corn in open fields, of vegetables and fruit in enclosed gardens, and of olives in groves — especially in the lower hills — or of vines on the terraced mountains, where the September mists and the heat reflected from stone walls swelled and ripened the grapes. The lands, ploughed in autumn and winter and harrowed [Harrow], appear to have been manured (2K.9.37; Je.9.22), as they certainly were about the Christian era (Mishna, Shebiith iii. 2), as well as the fruit trees (Lu.13.8). The ploughing was not deep (Pliny, Hist. Nat. v. 47), and the soil, especially in Philistia, Sharon, Esdraelon, and Bashan, was naturally rich. It was not irrigated, like that of Egypt or of Babylonia, and " watering with the foot " — or directing the stream (as is still done) by damming the mud bank of the shallow ditch with the naked foot — was confined to gardens (Deut.ll.io). In later times palm groves were irrigated at Naarath, 5 miles N. of Jericho (17 Ant. xiii. i), and the aqueduct with its irrigation channels still remains there (at el 'Atijeh). Irrigated gardens (Can. 4. 2), and even fields, are mentioned in the Mishna {Moed Katon i. 3 ; Pcah v. 3). The crops included wheat, barley, and spelt (A.V. rie), the latter (kussemeth) being the Arab. kirsineh. These are still grown, but not rye nor oats. The land was cleared of stones and thorns (Is.5.2 ; Job 5-5; Pr.24.30,31), and even of forest or copse (Jos. 17. 18), which now grows often over remains of vineyards. Thus firewood was often — -as now — scarce, con- sisting of the roots of bushes ; and perhaps charcoal from the wild broom was used in- stead (Ps. 120.4). The corn, represented on Egyptian frescoes, was reaped standing ; and Hebrew barley was heavier than the short- stalked grain now reaped crouching on the 1 in- 2.— (The n.islern ploii^'hin.in Ruides (he plouRh with our hand ; t/. I.u.9.';.) AGRICULTTJRE AGRICITLTURE 19 •^U] Fig. 3.— GOATS TREADING IN THE GRAIN', V.'HEN SOWN IN THE FIELD, AFTER THE WATER HAS SUBSIDED. (Wilkinson, from the Tombs near the Pyramids.) heels. It was carried in a Cart (Am. 2.13), the sheaves, or armfuls (Ps.129.7), being stacked in shocks ("umey, Arab, ghumr). The stubble (and often the standing corn) was The threshing-floor (Heb. goren, Arab, jurn) was a fixed site (Gen.50.io; 2Sam.24.i8) ; no doubt, as now, a flat rock-surface in the hills, or a clay floor in the plains, out- side the village, usually to the W. to catch the breeze. The corn was trampled by oxen (Ho.lO.ii), as in the Egyptian picture, or driven over with a sledge (Heb. moragh, Syrian Arab, murej), on the under side of which sharp pieces of basalt were let in as teeth (Is. 28. 28, 41. 15 ; 2Sam. 24.22), this being dragged by an ox or horse, driven by a boy I on the sledge, with a goad, or reins and whip. ' The ox was not muzzled (Deut.25.4). The owner slept on the floor to guard the corn (Ru.3.4,7). The corn, heaped in the centre, was winnowed with a wooden shovel or Fan (Ru.3.2 ; Job 21.18 ; rs.35.5 ; I\It.3.i2), and the flour sifted (.^m.Q.g). Lighter crops — the nigella (A.V. Fitches) and cummin — were not crushed by a stone roller, nor by the moragh (Is. 28. 27), but beaten out by a staff or rod. The corn was stored in granaries as in Egypt (Lu.l2.i8), or commonly in rock-cut pits (Arab, matmurah), which are still often large enough to hold more than one man (2Sam.i7.19; Je.41.g ; JI.I.17). The olives were beaten down with rods, as they still are (Deut. 24.20; Is.17.6), and crushed in a Mill. Vineyards and vegetable gardens had stone Fig. 4.— EASTERN REAPER (Mk.4.29). W.D.A. liable to catch fire in summer, or was pur- posely burned (Jl.2.5 ; Na.l.io). Land lay fallow at least in the seventh year (Je.4.3; Ho. 10. 12), and rotation of crops was contrary to the prohibition of mixtures (Deut. 22.9). ; Fig. 5.— THRESHING-FLOOR. The oxen driven round the heap of already-winnowed corn. (Wilkinson, Thebes). Fig. 6.— OXEN TREADING OUT. CORN (Deut.: walls or thom-hedges [Hedge] with a rock- cut vat, and a low tower or platform for the guard to stand on (Is.l.8,5.5 ; Mt.2i.33). The grapes were gathered in baskets (Je.6.9) : the best vines were trained low over terrace walls (Mishna, Menahoth viii. 6 ; Pliny, Hist. Nat. 20 AGRICTTLTUIIE xvii. 35) ; others were planted in quincunx order (Kilaim iv. 5), or trained on trellises (Mi.4'.4 ; Ps.128.3). Hired labourers were employed in the vintage (Mt.20.i), and the tenants (as in Babylon) paid a proportion Fig. 7. -WINNOWING wriH WOODF.N SHOVELS. (Wilkinson, r/;L. ^^ *«L_ _. ■, 11 u ikmm ai. (I roin ,111 original sketch by Col. Condcr.) AJAH ALABASTER 25 THE VALLEY OF AIJALON, LOOKING W. FROM LOWER BETH-HORON. (From an original sketch by Col. Conder.) See art. " Aijalon." temple," or Nethinim, whose sons returned with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.31). Perhaps = Reaiah, 2. Ajah' (Gen. 36. 24) =^ Aiah, i. Ajalon' {Jos.lO.12, 19.42 ; 2Chr.28.18). Cor- rectly Aijalon, i, as in R.V. Akan', son of Ezer, one of the " dukes " or chieftains of the Horites, and descendant of Seir (Gen. 36. 27). He is called Jakan in iChr. 1.42 and Jaakan in Deut.10.6, which last should probably be read in all three cases. Akkub'. — 1. A descendant of Jeconiah and son of Elioenai (iChr.3.24). — 2. One of the doorkeepers at the E. gate of the temple. His descendants succeeded to his office, and appear among those who returned from Babylon (iChr.9.17 ; Ezr.2.42 ; Ne.7.45.11.i9.12.25 = Dacobi, iEsd.5.28). — 3. One of the Nethinim, whose family returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr. 2.45). Perhaps = AcuA (iEsd.5.30), though some identify with Acub (5.31). — 4. A Levite who assisted Ezra in expounding the law to the people (Ne.8.7) ; =Jacubus, iEsd.9.4S. Akrabbim', The ascent of, and The g'oing- up to ; also Maaleh-acpabbim (the scorpion pass). A pass between the S. end of the Dead Sea and Zin, forming one of the landmarks on the S. boundary of Judah (Jos.15.3) and of the Holy Land (Num. 34.4). Also mentioned with Sela (or Petra) as the boundary of the Amorites (Judg.l.36). Judas Maccabaeus gained here a great victory over the Edomites (iMac.5.3, Arabattine). Scor- pions abound in the whole of this district. Alabaster occurs only in N.T. in the no- tice of the alabaster-box of ointment with which a woman anointed the Saviour in the house of Simon the leper at Bethany (Mt.26.7 ; Mk.l4. 3 ; Lu.7.37). The Eng. word alabaster is ap- plied to two different kinds of rock, the one a hydrous sulphate of lime (the commoner varieties of which are called gypsum), the other a carbonate of lime. The former, being soft and easily carved, is much employed in this country for decorative purposes inside build- ings, its nearly white colour, veined and mottled with red (oxide of iron), producing a very good effect. The latter, often known as Oriental alabaster, is a peculiar variety of carbonate of lime, deposited in a series of irregular bands of varied tints, the more delicate colours in this case also being due to oxides of iron. It was ALABASTER VASKS. I Brit. Mus.) (Dennis, liliuria.) employed from a remote antiquity in Egypt, much of it being obtained from quarries near Tell el Amarna. It occurs in the limestone of Ass^Tian sculptures, and is, in Dr. Pinches' opinion, the material designated by theSumero- Akkadian word na gish-nii-gal and the Ass>to- Babylonian pan'itu (meaning the " stone of the west of the great Ught"). Pliny distinguishes 26 ALAMETH gypsum (the sulphate) from alabaster (the carbonate), remarking that varieties of the former resemble the latter, in which, he says (Nat. Hist. xiii. 3), imguents are best kept. He repeats this statement (xxxvi. 12), and mentions places where the material was worked. Of it no doubt the " cruse" of " pistic nard" was made, and probably the woman actually broke it in her hand. [t.g.b.] Ala'meth (R.V. Alemeth), a son of Becher the son of Benjamin (iChr.7.8). Alamme'lech (king's oak), a place within the limits of Asher, named between Achshaph and Amad (Jos. 19.26 only). Alamoth. [Psalms, Titles of.] Alcimus (valiant), a Gk. form of Eliakim (God establishes), obtained by changing the vowel points. The son or nephew of Jose ben-Joeser, the famous pupil of Antigonus of Socho, and of Aaronic descent (iMac.7.5,14). The fact that he is known as a leader of the Hellenizing party, which largely rested on the priests, and the objective of which was social rather than religious, is an explanation of the passionate resistance encountered by his movement. [Hellenist.] Alcimus was nominated "through bribery" (162 B.C.) to the high-priesthood by Antiochus Eupator, to the exclusion of Onias, nephew of his pre- decessor Menelaus. The influence of Judas Maccabaeus at first prevented Alcimus from se- curing his position, and he withdrew to Antioch. Demetrius Soter, on his accession, sent Bac- chides to restore him, and Alcimus was received bymany evenof the Hasidim. A massacre of 60 of these, however, was followed by the return of Judas and a second withdrawal of Alcimus to Antioch. Nicanor was next sent into Pales- tine, but was defeated and killed at Beth-horon (161 B.C.). Bacchides now returned (160 B.C.), and the fall of Judas was followed by Alcimus's unchallenged restoration. The scope of his plans for change in the temple and its services has been much discussed. He was engaged in an operation described (9.54, but cf. Josephus, 12 Ant. x. 6) as pulling down the "wall of the inner court of the sanctuary" and " the works of the prophets," an obscure and disputed expression, when " he was taken with a palsy," J. e. paralysed, and died. Later writers also give him the title of " the wicked " (!.()), and speak of him with greater bitterness than the author of iMac. [j.a.d.] Alema (iMac.5.26), a city where the Jews were besieged in 164 e.g., mentioned with Casphon. Now the large village Ke/r el md, 4 miles E. of Khisfin, and 7 miles S.W. of Car- naim. The ruins include a Greek altar, and a curious bas-relief of Aesculapius (Schumacher, Across the Jordan, pp. 79-82). [c.k.c] Ale'meth, a Benjamite, son of Jehoadah or Jarali (iCi)r.8.36,9.42), descended from Jonathan, son of Saul. Alemeth' (R.V. Allemeth), the form under which Almon, the name of a city of the priests in Benjamin, appears in iChr.6.60. Now the village 'Alinit, a mile N.E. of Ana- thoth. Among the genealogies of Benjamin the name occurs in connexion with Azmaveth (iChr.8. 36,9.42). [Bahurim.] [c.r.c] Alexander III. (helper of wen ; b. 356 u.c.,d. 323), the Great, son of Philip II. of ALEXANDER III. Macedonia and Olympias. Having quelled the disloyalty which he. found on Philip's murder (336), Alexander prepared his forces, and in 334 crossed the Hellespont. In 3 years he had largely realized the dream of world- wide conquest which he had inherited. The victories at the Granicus (334) and Issus (333) made him master of S.W. Asia and of Egypt. In 331 he founded Alexandria. The murder of TETRADRACHM (ATTIC TALENT) OF LVSIMACHUS. KING OF THRACE. 0*7'. • Head of Alexander the Great as a young Jupiter Ammon. AVz'. .' Pallas seated to left, holding a victory. Darius by Bessus (320), and the subjugation of Persia and Bactria were followed by his famous and abortive campaign into India (327). The discontent of his troops, however, compelled his return to Babylon, where he died. Ten years later his empire had broken up into the kingdoms of the Diadochoi. [Ptolemy I.; .Seleucus IV.] — Alexander and the Jews. An account is given by Josephus (9 Ant. viii. 3-6) and in the Talmud of a visit paid by Alexander to Jerusalem. The facts that Alexander paid a similar visit to Gordium, and that the visit to Jerusalem is not mentioned by Gk. historians, have raised the suspicion that there is no basis for the narrative. The probability, however, is that it rests on an historic event, for the Greeks rarely show interest in Palestine, and, both from policy and temperament, it is improbable that .\lexander would have passed through Pales- tine without visiting Jerusalem. Jaddua (Ne. 12. 1 1 ) the high-priest, it is said, refused demands made by Alexander while besieging Tyre. After razing that city, Alexander marched on Jerusalem. Jaddua, acting on a dream, met him in the pomp of his office near the city. Alexander worshipiiod the tetraerammaton on the high-priest's turban, and when Parinenio remonstrated with him for "adoring the high-priest " replied that he did not adore him, but his God, and that he had seen Jaddua in a dream at Dium " encouraging him to cross into Asia " (11 .int. viii. 5). Alexander then went with Jaddua to the temple, offered sacrifices, and accepted such prophecies as Dan. 8. 21, II. 3 as applying to himself. Not only was Alexander anxious to identify him- self with national cults, but the Jews seem to have received exceptional treatment from him (see esp. Ewald, Hist, v.) He planted a favoured Jewish colony in Alexandria, is said to have given his Jewish troops freedom to exercise their religion, and was perhaps influenced by Jewish animosity in his treat- ment of Samaria. Zcch.9.i-8 is thought to allude to Alexander's conquests. The re- ferences to his empire in Dan. 2. 40, 8,5, 6. 7, 21, 11.3 are unquestionable. Alexander bulks ALEXANDER BALAS largely in Eastern legends, in which he is known as the " lord of horns." [j.a.d.] Alexan'dep Ba'las claimed, probably falsely, to be a natural son of Antiochus IV., and assumed his title Epiphanes (iMac.lO.i). In 153 B.C. he disputed the Syrian throne with Demetrius I. (Soter), who had lost the friend- ship of the neighbouring kings and the affections of his own subjects. Jonathan, now leader of the Jews (9.73), supported Alexander, who landed at Ptolemais (10. i), and in 150 b.c. de- feated and killed Demetrius (10. 48-50). After this Alexander married Cleopatra, daughter of Ptolemy VI. (Philometor) ; and appointed Jonathan governor of Judaea (10.65,11.57). But Alexander proved an incapable and self- indulgent king. A fresh claimant to the throne, Demetrius II. (Nicator), son of De- metrius Soter, landed in Syria in 147 B.C., and received the support of Apollonius, governor of Coelosyria (10.67ff.). Jonathan defeated and slew Apollonius, and was rewarded by Alexander with fresh favours (10. 68-89). But in 146 B.C. Ptolemy entered S>Tia with a large force ; garrisoned the chief cities of the coast, as Alexander's friend ; and then, on the plea that Alexander was conspiring against him, declared himself in favour of Demetrius (11. i-ii). Alexander hastened from Cilicia to meet Ptolemy, but was defeated, and fled to Abae in Arabia, where he was murdered (11. 14-17). The Jews loyally supported Alexander as " the first that entreated of true peace with them " (10. 47) ; and they showed the same zeal for his son Antiochus VI. Alexandep in N.T. — 1. Son of Simon, it, of Cyrene (Mk. 15.21 ). [Rufus.]— 2. One of the high-priestly family (Ac.4.6). — 3. A Jew of Ephesus (Ac. 19. 33), whom the other Jews put forward during the tumult there, their object being probably to disavow to the mob any responsibility for the action of the Christians. — 4. An apostate Christian (iTim.l.20). [Hy- MENAEus.] — 5. A smith, probably of Ephesus, concerned in the persecution of St. Paul in that city (2Tim.4.i4). [e.r.b.] Alexandria, Alexandrians, referred to three times in N.T. In Ac.l8.24 Apollos is spoken of as " born at Alexandria " ; 6.9 speaks of the synagogue of " the Libertines, Cyrenians, and Alexandrians," referring pro- bably to a synagogue in Jerusalem used by Jews from Alexandria, where a great many resided ; and in 27.6, describing St. Paul's famous journey to Rome, it is related that the centurion found at Myra " a ship of Alexandria sailing into Italj'," in which the apostle sailed to Malta, afterwards voyaging in another Alex- andrian vessel to Puteoli, at that time a prin- cipal port of Rome to which much of the corn supply of Egypt was carried. The city of Alexandria was one of the most beautiful in the world. It possessed many natural advan- tages, notably of climate and of site, and its harbours were spacious and secure. It was founded by Alexander the Great in 332 b.c, opposite the island of Pharos, between Lake Mareotis and the Mediterranean Sea. Dio- dorus states that Alexander measured out the ground on which the city was to stand, marked out its streets, and called it after his own name. It became the flourishing Hellenic ALGUM 27 capital of Egypt. As a commercial centre it stood almost without a rival. Egyptians, Jews, and Greeks made up its population, which at one time amounted to nearly a mil- lion. The Jews, who were numerous there, oc- cupied a quarter of their own, a great propor- tion of the trade of the city falling into their hands. Great attempts were made to estab- lish the city as a centre of intellectual fame, and within its walls was stored the greatest library of ancient days. To the student, how- ever, the chief interest of Alexandrian history will probably lie in the belief that it was the scene of the labours of the 70 or 72 translators of the Heb. O.T. into the Gk. version known as the Septuagint. Irenaeus, Justin Martyr, Epiphanius, and other writers give detailed accounts of the translators' methods ; and the (so-called) Letter of Aristeas describes the arrival of translators at Alexandria ; the feast which was celebrated in their honour, lasting 7 days ; and the duration of the period of their labours. Eusebius states that St. Mark went to Egypt, where he preached Christianity, pro- claiming the truths which his own gospel con- tained, and that he established churches in Alexandria. Its remarkable school of Jewish philosophy arose with the view of interpreting O.T. teaching in such a way as to commend itself to Hellenic thought. It is not easy to determine to what extent N.T. writers were influenced by Jewish philosophy. The Alexan- drian Jew claimed to show good cause for maintaining the thesis that from his scripture proceeded all divine knowledge, and all guid- ance as to the daily life of man. Eusebius, Hist. Eccl. ; Budge, Hist, of Egypt ; Jowett, Philo and St. Paul ; Neander, Hist, of Chr. Church ; Smith, Voyage of St. Paul, [a.h.p.] Alg-um or Almugr-tpees ; the former form occurs in 2Chr.2.8,9.io, 11, the latter in iK. 10.11, 12. We read that the "almug" was brought in great plenty from Ophir, together with gold and precious stones, by the fleet of Hiram, for Solomon's temple and house, and for the making of musical instruments. In 2Chr.2.8 Solomon is represented as desiring Hiram to send him " cedar-trees, fir-trees, and algum-trees out of Lebanon." It is improbable that Lebanon, as well as Ophir, should have produced algum-trees. Perhaps the wood had been brought from Ophir to Lebanon, and Solomon's instructions to Hiram were to send on to Jerusalem the timber im- ported from Ophir that was lying at the port of Tyre, with the cedars which had been cut in mount Lebanon. It is impossible to identify the algum-tree with certainty, but the argu- ments favour the red sandal-wood (Pterocar- pits santalinus) more than any other species. This tree, which belongs to the Leguminosae, is a native of India, chiefly on the Coromandel coast. Its wood is very heavy, hard, and fine grained, and of a beautiful garnet colour. The word algum has been identified by Max Miiller with the Skt. valguka, a name for the sandal- wood tree, which may have been corrupted from an earlier form (valgu) by the Phoenician sailors. Celsius believed it to be the sandal. Josephus considered it a kind of fir, the Vulg. rendering being ligna thyina. Wyclif reads, " cedre trees, pyne trees, and thyne trees of the 28 A LI AH Liban." The red sandal-wood is employed in the E. " in the manufacture of idols and for musical instruments, examples of which may be seen in the Indian Museum at South Ken- sington " (Groscr). Almus may be regarded as an erroneous form ; unless, as Col. Conder suggests, the word is Assyrian and= "precious (or strong) wood." [Ophir.J [h.c.h.J Aliah. [Alvah.] Allan. [Alvan.] Alleg-opy, a figure of siicech, defined by Bishop Marsh, in accordance with its ety- nuilogv, as "a representation of one thing which is intended to excite the representation of another thing," the first representation being consistent with itself but requiring, or being capable of, a moral or spiritual interpre- tation beyond its literal sense. It is often difficult to draw a line between metaphor and allegory, the two running into one another in Biblical language. The distinguishing feature seems to be that a metaphor implies a mere resemblance which appeals to the imagination (c/. 2 K. 19. 28, where the king of Assyria is metaphorically described as an unruly wild beast) ; an allegory or an allegorical interpre- tation aims definitely at suggesting moral or religious truth. In e\'ery allegory the im- mediate, historical, or literal sense is either true or possible (hence the distinction from fable, see below), while the secondary or alle- gorical sense may be either intended by the writer or only discovered in it by a later reader. An illustration is seen in Gal. 4. 24, where the apostle gives an allegorical inter- pretation to the historical narrative of Hagar and Sarah, not indeed treating it as an allegory in itself (as A.V. would lead us to suppose), nor implying that this meaiung was originally intended by the writer or by the Holy Spirit (in which case it would be a Tvpu), but draw- ing from it by his own spiritual insight a deeper and more edifying sense than is con- veyed in the original narrative. Allegories are also classified as pure or mixed. In the first no direct allusion is made to the spiritual meaning, which is left to the reader to dis- cover. In this sense there is no necessary dis- tinction between an allegory and a Parable. In a " mixed " allegory some hint is given of the spiritual meaning, or the literal and spiri- tual are interwoven, as in the allegories oi the (;ood Shepherd and of the Vine (J n. 10, 15). The fable, like the allegory or parable, is intended to convey moral truth, but its distinguishing feature is the falseness or impossibility of its literal meaning. The lower animals or in- animate objects are introduced as speaking or acting like hmnan beings. There are two examples of this in O.T. : (i) the fable of the trees choosing their king, addressed by Jotham to the men of Shechem (J udg.9.8-13) ; and (2) tlie fable of the cedar of Lebanon and the thistle record<les of it in O.T. and its disappearance in later parts of the Bible. It was evidently felt inadeipiate as the exponent of the higher sjiiritual truths which it was the mission of Israel and of the Church to teach ALLIANCES mankind. The fable may serve to exhibit the relations between man and man, but it fails to represent in a worthy manner those between man and God. Hence its place is taken by the parable. " Fable " is also used in a bad sense of the lying and misleading stories told by false teachers (iTim. 1.4,4.7 ; Tit. 1. 14 ; 2Pe.l.i6). Marsh, Lectures on Criticism and Interpretation of the Bible (1838) ; Trench, Notes on Parables (15th ed. 1886) ; Lightfoot, Ep. to Galatians (8th ed. 1884). [a.r.w.] Alleluia or Hallelujah (=" Praise ye Jeho\'ah ") is found as a doxologv to Pss.105, 106,112,113,135,146-150. Pss.113-118, called by the Jews the Hallel, were sung at the feasts of Dedication, Tabernacles, Weeks, and Passover, At the last named, Pss.113,114 were sung be- fore the feast, and 115-118 at its termination, after filling the fourth cup. The hymn (Mt. 26.30) sung by Christ and His disciples after the Last Supper seems to have been the Great Hallel, which varied according to the feast. The literal meaning of " Hallelujah " indicates the character of the Psalms in which it occurs, which are hymns of praise and thanksgiving. They are all in the last book of the collection, and bear marks of being intended for use in the temple service. In Rev. 19. 1-7 the apostle hears the word sung as the keynote of the chorus of the redeemed, and thus it finds its way from the Jewish into the Christian Church. Edersheim, Temple and its Services. Alliances. In the patriarchal age, alli- ances of a simple and friendly sort were made bv Abraham and his descendants with the tribes inhabiting Palestine (Gen. 21. 22,26. 26fT. ). But the Mosaic law (Ex.34.i2ff. ; l)eut.7.2lf.) forbade such alliances, and though under the kings, the Hebrews were brought more into connexion with the surrounding nations and tempted to ally themsehes with them, the influence of the prophets was always exerted against this tendency, as contrary to the divine ideal of the holy nation. Solomon, how- ever, made acommcriial treaty with (i) Hiram of Tyre, originally with the view of obtaining materials and workmen for the temple, and afterwards for the supply of shiii-builders and sailors (iK.5.2-12,9.27) ; and (2) with Pharaoh of ligypt, by which he secured a monopoly of the trade in horses and other Egyptian i>ro- ducts (10.28,29). Alliances for other pur- poses, ofTensi\'e and defensive, followed the division of the kingdoms. So long as Syria was the chief danger, each kingdom sought alliance with that nation, as .Asa with Ben- hadad (ch. 15) and Pekah with Rezin (Is.7). Israel and Judah allied themsehes with each other under .-\hab and Jehoshaphat. Ahaz sought the alliance of .Assyria against the coalition t>f Israel and Syria (2K. 16. 7), in spite of the warnings of Isaiah. But the most at- tractive, and as it proved, the most deceptive alii.ince, for both kingdoms was with Egypt, which was looked to as a ]irotection against both Assyria and Babylon (H0.7.11, etc. ; Is.30). The later kings of Judah either allied them- selves with Babylon, or tried (like Zedekiah) to play off Egypt against Babylon (Jc.37.i-i i ) with disastrous results. In later days Judas Maccabaeus sought an alliance with the Ro- mans as a counterpoise to the Greco-Syrian ALLOM enemy (iMac.8). This alliance was renewed by Jonathan (eh. 12) and by Simon (15.17) ; and the independence of the Jews was re- cognized by Rome, and formally notified to neighbouring nations 140 B.C. (15.22,23). Treaties were at the same period concluded with the Spartans, under the impression that they came of a common stock (12. 6, 14. 20). The Roman alliance, renewed in 128, ultim- ately proved fatal to Jewish independence, for in 63 a quarrel referred to Rome gave Pompey the opportunity to place the country under tribute. The formation of an alliance was attended with religious rites, a victim was slain and divided into two parts, between which the contracting parties passed (Gen. 15. 10-17 ; Je. 34. 18-20). Generally speaking, how- ever, the oath alone is mentioned in the con- tracting of alliances either between nations (Jos. 9. 15) or individuals (Gen. 26. 28, etc.). A feast was held on these occasions, and salt played an important part as a symbol of fidelitv. Cf. the expression " a covenant of salt "' (Num.18. 19 ; 2Chr.l3.5). The Jews had a reputation for faithfulness to engage- ments {cf. J OS. 9. 18) ; a breach of covenant being visited with severe punishment, and deemed specially hateful to God (2Sam.21.i ; Ezk.l7.i6 ; Am.l.g). Negotiations between Israel and other nations were naturally con- ducted by ambassadors. Examples of such special envoys are seen in early times in the messengers sent to Edom, Moab, and the Amorites (Num.20. 14, 21. 21 ; Judg.ll. 17-19), and by the Gibeonites who deceived Joshua (Jos. 9). Ambassadors appear frequently in the days of the monarchy, and were usually men of high rank or office. Sennacherib's ambassadors toHezekiah were the Rab-shakeh (head chief or cup-bearer), the Rabsaris (or chamberlain), and the Tartan (or commander- in-chief). Ambassadors of a friendly character usually bore presents (iK.15.i8 ; Is. 30. 6 ; iMac.l5.i8). Other interesting examples of various sorts of ambassage are seen in 2K.14. 8,18.14 ; 2Chr.32.31. The persons of am- bassadors were probably considered inviolable, the only example of insult offered to them being in 2Sam.lO.2-5, which was punished by David with wholesale and merciless severity. St. Paul frequently speaks of the apostolic and ministerial office under the figure of ambassa- dorship ; see especially 2Cor.5.20. The ordinary sacredness of the ambassador's person gives particular point to his description of himself as "an ambassador in chains" (Eph.6.20). [Foreigner ; Law in O.T.] [a.r.w.] Allom' (iEsd.5.34) = Ami. Allon', ancestor of Ziza, i (iChr.4.37). AUon', a large strong tree, a terebinth or oak. The word is found in two names in the topography of Palestine. — 1. Allon, more accurately Elon, a city of Naphtali (Jos. 19. 33). Probably the more correct construction is to take it with the following word — i.e. "the oak [or, plain] Bezaanannim" (R.V.), see Judg.4.ii, " by Kedesh." [Zaanaim.] — 2. Al'lon-bachuth', near Bethel (oak of weeping), the tree under which Rebekah's nurse, Debor- ah, was buried (Gen. 35. 8). The palm of Deborah (Judg.4.5) was also near Bethel. [c.r.c] Almodad', eldest of the descendants of ALMOND-TREE 29 Joktan (Gen. 10. 26 ; iChr.l.20). His settle- ments must be looked for, in common with those of the other descendants of Joktan, in the Arabian Peninsula ; and his name appears to be preserved in that of Mudad, a famous personage in Arab tradition, the father of Ishmael's Arab wife, and the chief of the Joktanite tribe Jurhum. Altnon', a city of Benjamin, with " sub- urbs " given to the priests (Jos. 21. 18). In iChr.6.60 Alemeth. [c.r.c] Almon-diblatha'im, one of the latest stations of the Israelites, between Dibon-gad and the mountains of Abarim (Num.33. 46,47). [Beth- diblath AIM.] Almond-tpee, Almond. These words are foundinGen.43.ii ; Ex. 25. 33, 34,37. 19,20 ; Num.17. 8; Ec.12.5 ; Je.l.ii, in the text of A. V. They are invariably represented by the same Heb. word (s/(rt(7t"rf/)), which sometimes stands for the whole tree, sometimes for the fruit or nut ; e.g. in Gen. 43. II, Jacob commands his sons to take as a present to Joseph "a little honey, spices and m\Trh, nuts and almonds." Here the fruit is clearly meant. In the passages of Exodus given above, the " bowls made like unto al- monds," which were to adorn the golden candle- stick, seem also to allude to the nut. Aaron's rod, that budded miraculously, yielded almond- nuts. In Ec.12.5 and Je.l.ii shdqcdh is trans- lated almond-tree, which the context certainly requires. It is clearly then a mistake to sup- pose, as some have done, that shdqedh stands exclusively for " almond-nuts," and that luz signifies " the tree." Probably this tree, con- spicuous for its early flowering and useful fruit, was known by both names. The Heb. luz occurs only in Gen. 30. 37, where it is translated hazel in A.V. : but undoubtedly R.V. is correct in rendering it almond, the Arab, name of which is loz. shdqcdh is derived from a root which signifies " to be wakeful," " to hasten," for the almond-tree blossoms very early in the season, the flowers appearing before the leaves. Hence it was regarded by Hebrews as a wel- come harbinger of spring, and a token of the passing of winter (cf. Can. 1.11,12). A tree which hastens to blossom is, therefore, a very fitting poetical description of the luz, or almond- tree. This tree has been noticed in flower as early as the gth of January ; the 19th, 23rd, and 25th are also recorded dates. This fact explains the play upon words in Je.l.ii, 12, " The word of the Lord came unto me, saying, Jeremiah, what seest thou ? And I said, I see the rod of an almond-tree [shdqedh]. Then said the Lord unto me. Thou hast well seen, for I will hasten [shdqedh] my word to perform it." The almond-tree has always been regarded by Hebrews with reverence, and at the present day English Jews carry a bough of flowering almond to the synagogue on their great feast- days, just as Hebrews of old used to present paim-branchesinthe temple. The almond-tree is about 12 or 14 ft. high ; the flowers are pink, and the leaves are lanceolate and serrate. The covering of the fruit is downy and succu- lent, enclosing the hard shell which contains the kernel. It is curious to observe, in connexion with the almond-bowls of the golden candle- stick, that, in the language of lapidaries, al- monds are pieces of rock-crystal, even now used 30 ALMS in adorning branch-candlesticks. Gen.43.ii implies that the almond was not cultivated in Egypt in the days of J acob, and it is little grown there now, much less so than in Syria. It is mentioned, however, by Pliny amongst Egyp- tian fruit-trees, so that it must have been in- troduced before his time. The almond passed from its home in the middle parts of Asia Minor at a comparatively late period. Pliny says (Holland's translation) : " Now whether the Almond-tree were in Italic during the life I of Cato [2nd cent, b.c], there is some doubt and ; question made : because he naraeth the Greeke ' nuts, which some doe hold for a kind of Walnut." [h.c.h.] Alms. This word is not found in A.V. in | the canonical books of O.T., but occurs re- j peatedly in N.T., and in Tobit and Ecclesias- ticus. The duty of almsgiving, especially in kind, consisting chieHy in portions to be left designedly from produce of the field, the vine- | yard, and the olive-vard (Lev. 19. 9,10,23.22 ; beut. 15.11, 24.19,26.2-13 ; Ru.2.2), is strictly enjoined by the Law. [Corner.] Every third year also (Deut.i4.28) each proprietor was directed to share the tithe of his produce with " the Levite, the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow." The theological estimate of alms- giving among the Jews is indicated in the following passages: JobSl.iy ; Pr.lO.2,11.4 ; Esth.9.22 ; Ps. 112.9 ; Ac.9.36, the case of Dorcas ; 10. 2, of Cornelius ; and also Tob.4. 10,11,14.10,11 ; and Ecclus.3.30,40.24. The Talmudists went so far as to interpret righteous- ness by almsgiving in such passages as Gen. 18. 19 ; Is.54.14 ; Ps.i7.15. In the women's court of the temple there were 13 receptacles for voluntary offerings (Mk.i2.41 ), one of which was devoted to alms for education of poor children of good family. Before the Captivity there is no record of mendicancy, but it evi- dently existed in later times (Mt.2O.30 ; Mk. 10.46 ; Ac.3.2). The Pharisees were zealous in almsgiving, but their too great ostentation therein was censured by our Lord (Mt.6.2). There is no ground for supposing that the ex- pression " do not sound a trumpet " is more than a mode of denouncing their display, by a figure drawn from the frequent and well-known use of trumpets in religious and other celebra- tions, Jewish as well as heathen. The duty of relieving the poor was always recognized by Christians (Mt.6.1,4 ; Lu.i4.13 ; Ac.2O.35 ; Gal. 2. 10). Every Christian was exhorted to lay by on the first day of each week some por- tion of his profits, to be applied to the wants of the needy (Ac.ll.30 ; R0.I5.25-27 ; iCor.16. 1-4), and widows were specially to devote themselves to ministering to such (iTim.S.io). [Tithe.] Alinug--tpees. [Algum-trees.] Alnathan' [IClnathan, 2] (iEsd.8.44). Aloes, Lilgrn aloes (Heb. 'ahalim, or 'uhd- luth), a costly and sweet-smelling wood men- tioned in Num. 24.6 ; Ps.45.8 ; Pr.7.17. In Can. 4. 14 Solomon speaks of " myrrli and aloes, with all the chief spices." 'AX^tjs occurs once in N.T. (Jn.19.39), when Nicodemus brings "a mixture of myrrh and aloes, abf)ut an hundred pound weight," to anoint the body of our Lord. It is usually identified with the Aqui- laria agallochum, a tree which supplies the ALTAR agallochum, or aloe-wood of commerce, much valued in India on account of its aromatic qualities for fumigating and for incense. It grows to the height of 120 ft., being 12 ft. in girth. Dioscorides mentions that the wood of aloes was formerly exported from Arabia. The best sort of this wood (agalloch) comes from Sumatra and the Moluccas. " Aloes " has, of course, nothing to do with the flowering Aloe or Agave of modern gardens. [Spices.] [h.c.h.] Aloth' (high places ; R.V. Bealoth), forming with Asher the jurisdiction of the ninth of Solomon's officers (1K.4.16). The name may survive at 'Alia, a ruin about 9 miles E. of Achzib. [c.r.c] Al'pha, the first letter of the Gk. alphabet, used typically of a beginning, as the last, Omega, is of an end (Rev. 1.8, 11, 21. 6, 22. 13 ; cf. Is. 41. 4). The Greeks employed the letter^ of the alphabet as numerals. [Number.] Alphabet. [Writing.] Alphaeus. — 1. Father of Levi (Mk.2.14). [Matthew.] — 2. Father of James, who is always described as son of Alphaeus (Mt.lO.3), to distinguish him from James, son of Zebedee. Alphaeus has been identified with Clopas (Jn.19.25 ; A.V. Cleophas). If James " the little " (Mk.15.40) is the apostle and the son of Alphaeus (R.V.), then the mother of that James is wife of Alphaeus. But the mother of James is almost certainly the same woman as Mary (the wife) of Clopas (Jn.i9.25), and thus Alphaeus and Clopas are one and the same. It is also argued that Clopas, like Alphaeus, is a transliteration in another form of the Aramaic Halphai.more accurately represented as Alphaeus. But Aramaic scholars deny the possibility of this. If the man is the same, the names are different. Double names, Aramaic and Gk., for the same man were common. No probable Aramaic or Gk. origin for Clopas has been suggested. It can hardly be an anomalous contraction for Cleopas, which is a shortened form of Gk. Cleopatros. If it were, Clopas might be identical with the Cleopas who went toEmmaus (Lu.24.i8). The identification of Alphaeus and Clopas is im- portant in deciding the relationship meant by the " brethren of the Lord." [James.] Hege- sippus mentions a Clopas, brother of Joseph, husband of the Blessed Virgin. But all conclusions are precarious on account of the vagueness of the Gk. genitives, before which we have to supply by guesswork, " son," " wife," daughter," etc. [e.r.b.] Altane'us ( i i:sd.9.33) = Mattenai, i. Altap (mizbcah, from the root zdbhah, "to slay"), place of (sacrificial) slaughter. The simplest form of altar was a rock or a large movable stone, and in the absence of con- structed altars these were utilized down to the period of the Judges, e.g. by Gideon (Judg.6.24, 26), Manoah (13. 19), Saul at Michmash (iSam. l*-33)- From primitive times altars were built of stone or earth, e.g. by Noah (Gen. 8. 20), by Abraham at Shochcm (I2.7), at Bethel (ver. 8), on Moriah (22.9), by Isanc at Boer-shcba (26.25), at Bethel (35-7) ; by Moses at Rcphidim (Ex.17. 15), at Horcb (24-4) ; by Aaron for idolatrous worship (32-5) ; by Balak at Bamoth-baal (N\uri.23.i), at Pi.sgah (ver. 14), at Peor (ver. 29). It is only once said of an altar: that it was ALTAR erected (Gen. 33. 20), where, however, " altar " may have been read for "pillar," the two Heb. words being very similar in form ; or it may have been an altar-pillar (Ariel). In one instance the altar was not intended for sacrifices, but as a Witness (Jos.22.10-29). The Covenant code prescribes altars made of earth (Ex.2O.24), with the permission added to build them of unhewn stones, without steps (ver. 25), not restricting the number or locality of such altars. Hence Moses commanded the children of Israel to build an altar of stones on moimt Ebal (Deut.27.6; cf. Jos.8.30) ; others were built by Gideon at Ophrah (Judg.6.24), by the people at Bethel (21. 4), by Samuel at Ramah (iSam.7.17), by Saul after Michmash (14-35). by David on the threshing-floor of Araunah (2Sam.24.25 ; cf. iChr.22.i), and by Elijah on Carmel (1K.I8.30). The law prescribing one altar, to be located at the central sanctuary (Deut. 12.5,11-14), had no reference to the preceding, which were not under regular priestly control. This, and the altar for incense, were to be made (Ex.27. i, 30.1,37.25,38.1,30; 2Chr.4.i,i9, etc.). A most important distinction was made between the (national) altar at the central sanctuary, administered by the regular order of priests, and local or occasional altars. An integral and most sacred part of the great altar was the horns, one at each corner, a feature which was copied in the rival altar made by Jeroboam for the shrine at Bethel (1K.12.33 ; Am.3.14). The altar of incense had the same appendages. Their origin is obscure, but not so their pur- pose, (i) They were an essential and dis- tinctive part of the structure of these two altars, and had a definite place in the ritual of the sanctuary. Sin was represented as en- graved on the horns of the altar (Je.l7.i), hence the blood of the sin-offering was applied to these horns (Ex. 29.12, SO.io ; Lev.4.7,i8, 25,30,34,8.15,9.9,16.18). (2) The horns of the great altar afforded sanctuary, which failed only in certain cases (Ex.21. 14 ; cf. iK. 1.50,51,2.28,29). (3) There may be a re- ference to an ancient custom in Ps.ll8.27, " Bind the festal victim with cords, (even) unto the horns of the altar." I. Altars in Tabernacle, (i) Altar of burnt-offerings (Ex. ALTAR 31 27.1-8,38.1-7). It was a hollow frame of acacia wood overlaid with copper or bronze. It was 5 cubits square by 3 high, and had a border or ledge half-way up the sides, probably for the priests to stand on. Ex- tending from the edge of this border to the ground was a grating or network to which ALTAR OF UURNT-OFFERING. (After Calmet.) SUPPOSED FORM OF THE ALTAR OF INCENSE. brass rings were attached for the acacia wood staves with which to carry the altar. There was a horn at each corner of the altar, " of the same piece with it " (27.2). The utensils for the service of the altar are enumerated in ver. 3 — viz. pans for removing the ashes, shovels, basons for the blood, flesh-hooks {cf. iSam.2. 13,14), and firepans. [Censer.] The pro- hibition against steps (Ex.2O.26) would ob- viously have no meaning in connexion with an altar only 3 cubits in height (27. i). (2) Altar of incense (30.1-5, also called mizbeah by an extension of use). This also was made of acacia wood overlaid with gold, and was i cubit square by 2 high (ver. 2). It had a flat top with a gold moulding round it (ver. 3), be- neath which at each corner was a^gold ring for the gold-covered poles used in carrying it. Its horns were, like the other parts, covered with gold. It was only to be used for the burning of incense. On the Day of Atone- ment Aaron was to apply the blood of the sin-offering to the horns (ver. 10). It is called the golden altar (39.38,40.5,26 ; lslum.4.ii, where directions are given for its care when carried about), and the altar of sweet incense (Lev.4.7). It stood in the centre of the W. end of the holy place (Ex.30.6). II. In Solomon's Temple, (i) The altar of burnt-offerings was made of bronze (iK.8.64 ; 2K.I6.14; 2Chr.4.i, where it is said the altar was 20 cubits square by 10 high. No other details are given). Ahaz had this put on one side, and used in its stead a 32 Ali-TASCHITH copy of one he had seen in Damascus (2K.I6). This latter, called the great altar, was prob- ably of stone, since it is said to have been built (ver. 11). After the reformation under Josiah (2 K.23), theonly altar was the one at the central sanctuary. (2) The altar of cedar plated with gold (iK. 6. 20,7. 48) was the altar of incense (c/. 2Chr.4.i<).26.i6). III. InEzekiel's ideal Temple, (i) The ideal altar of burnt- offerings (Ezk.43.13-17). The dimensions were probably those of Solomon's altar. The upper part was the Ariel, the altar-hearth, 12 cubits square by 4 high ; beneath this was a platform 14 cubits square by 4 high ; another platform and a base, each i cubit in heigiit, giving a total height of 10 cubits. The base was probably 20 cubits square. The ascent was by steps (ver. 17). The altar was a horned one (ver. 15). (2) The altar of wood 3 cubits high and 2 long, described as " the table that is before the Lord " (41.22), might be cither the altar of incense or the; table of shewbread. IV. Post- Exilic ; (a) The second temple, (i) The altar of burnt-offerings was of stone (iMac.4.44-46), and was built before the temple was com- menced (Ezr.3.2,3). It was profaned by Antiochus Epiphanes (iMac. 1.54,4. 44), taken ALTAR TRirOD. FROM KHORSAIJAD. (I-ayard's Nineveh and its Kemains.) down by Judas and the stones carefully pre- served (4.44-4(>). (2) A new altar of iiirense reijlacod the one that had been defiled (4.49). (b) In Herod's temple. The great altar was of stf)ne, and was 50 cubits square by 15 high (Joscphus, 5 Wars v. 6). These measurements do not, however, agree with those in the Mishna (i1//V/. iii. 1). It was horned, and the approach was by a gradual ascent. The altar of incense docs not appear on tlie Arch of Titus, nor is it mentioned l>y Joscphus, 14 Ant. iv. 4. (c) For Heb.l3.io, etc., see Euciiakist. Toy, Ezekiel, in Haupt, Sacred Books of O.T.; Greene, " Hebrew Roek Altars," in Bib. World, ix. 329 ff. ; Smitii, Neligion 0/ Semites. (Sacri- fice, A.) [11.11.] Al-taschith. [1'salms, Titles of.] AMALEKITES Alush', a station of the Israelites on their journey to Sinai, the last before Rephidim (Num. 33. 13, 14). Alvah', a duke of Edom (Geu.36.40), writ- ten Aliah in iChr.l.51. Alvan', a Horite, son of Shobal (Gen. 36. 23), written Allan in iChr.l.40. Amad', in Asher, between Alammelech and Misheal (Jos.19.26 only). Probably the ruin el 'Ainild, N. of Accho. [c.r.c] Amadatha' (Esth.16.10,17), and Amad- athus' (Esth.12.6). [Hammedatha.] Amal', an Asherite, son of Helem (iChr. 7.35)- Amalek', son of Eliphaz by his concubine Timnah, grandson of Esau, and chief {duke, A.V.) of Edom (Gen.36.i2,i6 ; iChr.l.36). Amalekites, a \'ery ancient nomad race, declared by Balaam to be " the first of the na- tions" (Num. 24. 20). In the account of the ex- pedition of Chedorlaomer and his allies, Amalek is mentioned as one of the defeated peoples, to- gether with the Emim, Rephaim, and Zuzim, the ancient giant races of Palestine (Gen. 14. 7). .\t one time they appear to have occupied the ter- ritory assigned to the Ephraimites (Judg.5.14, " Out of Ephraim came down they whose root is in Amalek," R.V. ; Judg.i2.15, "Intheland of Ephraim, in the mount of the .Amalekites "). [Benjamin. J An Amalek is mentioned in Gen. 36.12 as a grandson of Esau, by the union of ICliphaz with a concubine called Timna ; but notliingcan be built on this statement, save that possibly some Amalekite clan was incorporated with Edom. All references serve to show that the Amalekites were an ancient nomad tribe, constantly changing their abode, and passing through many vicissitudes, and to countenance the Arab tradition that they came from the Per- sian Gulf, and were pushed westward by the growth al the power of Bab>Ionia and .Assyria. .■\fter the Exodus the Amalekites appear as the earliest enemies of Israel, who defeated them under Joshua at Rephidim, in the Sinaitic pen- insula, or in the extreme S. of Palestine, ac- cording to the route the Israelites actually took, which is still in dispute. Perpetual war was vowed against .Amalek by Moses (Ex. 17. 8-16). (See also I)eut.25. 1 7, 1 8, where Amalek is said to have harassed Israel in the rear.) The spies found the Amalekites in the neptebh (Num.13. 29), and when the people, against the divine command, tried to enter the promised land, " the Amalekitescanu' down, and the Canaanites which dwelt in tiiat hill, and discomfited them, even unto Horinah." Duriiiij the times of the Judges the .Amalekites assisted in two great invasions of Palestine, that of I-'glon, king of Moab (Judg.3.13), anil the more famous incur- sion of tlie Midianites (Jiidg.6.3). In tiie time of Saul, when Israel was strong and united, a holy war, with all its terrible accompaniments, was declared against Amalek. Saul smote them from "Havilah until thou comcst toShur, that is over against I'2gypt," and devoted all to destruction, sparing no one but .Agag their king, whose name (Num.24. 7) probably was an here- ditary title. For this violation of the ban against Amalek, Saul was solemnly cursed by Samuel, and the kingdom rent from him (iSam. 15). The .Amalekites, however, survi\ed the expedition of Saul, aiul were still formidable in amam his latter years. David, as a Philistine vassal, used constantly to invade their territory from Ziklag (iSam.27.8), and in revenge, when he marched N. to assist the Philistines against Saul, they plundered and burnt his city. David on his return pursued them, and rescued the spoil and his two wives (iSam.30). In the ac- count of Saul's death on mount Gilboa, we read (iSam.31) that he fell on his own sword, but an Amalekite (aSam.l), hoping for a reward from David, claimed to have been requested to put him to death. [Samuel, Books of.] Nothing more is told us of the Amalekites in the Bible, save in iChr.4.42,43, where a record is preserved of how 500 Simeonites, in the days of Hezekiah, smote the remnant of the Amalekites in mount Seir, in the territory of Edom. In Ps.83.7 Amalekis mentioned as one of the confederates against Israel; but the date of the Psalm is uncertain, and probably late, and the employ- ment of the name may be an archaism. The well-known story of the book of Esther relates the rivalry between the pious Mordecai, the de- scendant of Kish, and of Haman the Agagite, in whom J osephus ( g ^ m^ vi. 5 ) and the Targum recognize a descendant of Agag. [f.j.f.-j.] Amam', a city in the S. of Judah, named with Shema and Moladah in Jos. 15. 26. Aman' = HAMAN(Tob.l4.io;Esth.l0.7,etc.). Amana' (Can. 4. 8), a mountain mentioned with Lebanon and Hermon. Possibly the Amanus range N. of Antioch might be intended. This was known to the Akkadian prince Gudea (about 2800 B.C.) as a mountain of cedars, and to the Assyrians from the 12th cent. b.c. In the Mishna {Hallah iv. 8 ; Shebiith vi. i ) it is the N. boundary of Syria. [Abana.] [c.r.c] Amapi'ah. — 1. " Father " (but cf. aEsd. 1.2, where several generations intervene) of Ahitub and son (iChr.6.7,52) or grandson (Ezr.7.3) of Meraioth, in the line of the high- priests. — 2. The high-priest in the reign of Jehoshaphat (2Chr.i9.11). He was the son of Azariah, and the fifth high -priest who succeeded Zadok (iChr.6.ii). — 3. The head of a Levitical house of the Kohathites in the time of David (23.19,24.23).— 4. The head of one of the 24 courses of priests, which was named after him, in the times of David, of Hezekiah, and of Nehemiah (1Chr.24.r4, E.Y. Immer; aChr.Sl. 15 ; Ne. 10.3, 12.2, 13). [Immer, i.] — 5. A son of Bani,who had marrieda foreign wife(Ezr.lO. 42). — 6. A descendant of Pharez, the son of Judah (Ne.11.4), probably the same as Imri in iChr. 9.4. — 7- An ancestor of Zephaniah (Zeph.l.i). Amapi'as, an ancestor of Ezra (lEsd. 8.2 ; 2Esd.l.2) ; sse Amariah, i. Amasa'. — 1. Son of Ithra or J ether, by Abigail, David's sister (2Sam.i7.25). He joined Absalom's rebelUon, and was by him appointed commander-in-chief in place of Joab, by whom he was totally defeated in the wood of Ephraim (18.6). David, when dis- pleased with Joab for kiUing Absalom, forgave Amasa's treason, recognized him as his nephew, and appointed him Joab's successor (19. 1 3). Afterwards Joab, when both were in pursuit of the rebel Sheba, pretending to salute Amasa, stabbed him with his sword (20.9-12), which he held concealed in his left hand. — 2. A prince of Ephraim, son of Hadlai, in the reign of Ahaz (2Chr.28.12). AMBES, 33 Amasa'i.— 1. A Kohathite, father of Mahath, and ancestor of Samuel and Heman the singer (iChr.6.25,35). — 2. Chief of the captains of Judah and Benjamin, who deserted to David while an outlaw at Ziklag (I2.18). Whether the same as Amasa, i, is uncertain. — 3. One of the priests who blew trumpets before the ark, when David brought it from the house of Obed-edom (15.24).^ 4. Another Kohathite, father of another Ma- hath, in the reign of Hezekiah (2Chr.29.12), unless the name is that of a family. Amasha'i, son of Azareel, a priest in the time of Nehemiah (Ne.ll.13), apparently = Maasiai (iChr.9.12). Amasi'ah, son of Zichri, and captain of 200,000 warriors of Judah in Jehoshaphat's reign (2Chr.i7.16). Amath. [Hamath.] Ama'theis (iEsd.9.29). [Athlai.] Am'athis, The land of, a district to the N. of Palestine (1Mac.i2.25). From the context it is evidently Ham.\th. Amaziah'. — 1. Son of Joash, and eighth king of Judah. On his accession (c. 795 b.c.) he slew his father's murderers, but permitted their children to live (2K. 14.1-6 ; cf. Deut.24. 16). He made war on the Edomites, who had revolted from Judah during the reign of Jehoram (8.20-22), defeated them in the valley of Salt, and took their capital Petra or Sela (I4.7; 2Chr.25.11, 12), to which he gave the name of Joktheel (i.e. God-subdued). He car- ried back with him the gods of Seir and set them up as objects of worship (2Chr.25.i4-i6). Elated by success, Amaziah challenged Jeho- ash, king of Israel, to battle (2K.I4.8), who replied bv the contemptuous parable of the thistle and the cedar {vv. 9,10). The king of Judah, however, refused to listen to the king of Israel's well-meant advice, and, at the battle of Beth-shemesh, Judah was defeated and Amaziah himself taken prisoner and carried by Jehoash to Jerusalem, which opened its gates to the conqueror. A portion of the wall of Jerusalem was broken down, and treasures and hostages were carried off to Samaria. How long Amaziah survived this disaster is uncer- tain, the statement in 14. 17 being perhaps open to doubt. [Chronology.] He was assassin- ated at Lachish, whither he had retired for safety from Jerusalem (2Chr.25.27). [h.c.b.] Ambassadors. [Alliances.] Amtaep (Heb. hashmal ; Ezk.l. 4,27,8. 2 only) is usually supposed to denote a metal, and not the fossil resin called amber. The LXX. and Vulg. afford no certain clue, for the word electron was used by the Greeks to express both amber and an alloy of gold and silver, which was rather similar in colour and was highly esteemed by the ancients. The latter sense of the word, however, seems the less ordinary, and amber was undoubtedly well known in ancient times. It is probably mentioned by Homer, and was found by Schliemann in tombs at Mycenae and Tiryns. It is men- tioned by Herodotus, and Pliny gives a long account of it (Hist. Nat. xxxvii. 11, 12). It is found in many countries — for instance, occa- sionally on the coast of Norfolk ; but the best and clearest coloured varieties are obtained in the parts of Prussia adjacent to the Baltic. The 34 AMEN amber there found probably made its way southward across Europe by ancient trade- routes from very early times. [t.g.b.] Amen. This Aramaic word is identical with the Heb. verb jON , " he was firm," and, throughout, it indicates a confirmation, (i) It is used for the purpose of adopting a remark of another as one's own, and chiefly in a religious sense as an expression of the faith of individuals in divine promise or revelation. Hence in Deut. 27. 15-26 it is used by the people as sanctioning the curses on mount Ebal. [Oath.] From this comes its liturgical use in the services of the synagogue (Ps.4i.13 ; Ne. 8.6), from which, at a very early period, it was introduced into Christian worship (iCor.l4.i6). From this its use by individuals to emphasize their own prayers is natural ; see R0.I.25, 9.5,15.33; Gal.6.i8; Rev.l.7, etc. (2) A special application is found in our Lord's lan- guage. He employs the word, not at the end, but invariably at the beginning, of a sentence ; His object being not to emphasize His own faith in the statements, but to make a special appeal for faith on the part of His hearers. This word, translated " verily," appears about 50 times in the Synoptic Gospels, and of these passages 30 are m St. Matthew. The double use of the word is confined to St. John, where it occurs 25 times. (3) The word is found in a few passages as an ordinary noun. In aCor.l. 20 it is used in contrast with " yea," where " yea " stands for the promise and " amen" for the fulfilment. In Is. 65. 16 God is, by a Hebrew idiom, twice called " the God of amen" (E.V. "God of truth"); in Rev. 3. 14 Christ is Himself called the Amen. [t..\.m.] Amethyst (Heb. ahldmd). This name is given to the third stone in the third row of the high-priest's breastplate in E.x.28.i9,39.i2. In Rev. 21. 20 it denotes the twelfth stone in the foundations of the wall of the heavenly Jerusalem. Commentators generally are agreed that the Heb. word denotes the ordinary amethyst, as the Gk. afi^dvaroi in Rev. certainly does. This a transparent purple variety of quartz (crystallized silica) which is found in many countries, and has been used for orna- ments and carved objects of art from very early times. The name is derived from the Gk. a (privative) and ixidvar-q^, " a drunkard," because wine drunk from cups of it was sup- posed to lose its intoxicating properties. With the Heb. name we may compare a stone called hilima mentioned in 15th cent. B.C. in the Amarna tablets (Berlin 26). The modern Oriental amethyst is a choice variety of corun- dum, very similar to the above in colour. [Adamant.] [t.g.b.] Ami', one of " Solomon's servants" (Ezr.2. 57); = Amon (Ne.7.59)and ALL0M(iEsd.5.34). Amlnadata'(Mt.l.4 ; Lu.3.33). [Ammi.va- DAB, I.] Amit'tai, father of the prophet Jonah (2K.I4.25 ; Jon.t.i). Ammah', Hill of (2Sam.2.24). The Heb. may be read : " To Gibeah Ammah facing the fountain on the Gibeon-desert road." These sites are unknown. [c.r.c] Amml', i.e., as explained in A.V. marg. (Ho. 2.1), "my people," a figurative name AMMON, AMMONITES applied to the kingdom of Israel in token of God's reconciliation with them, in contrast with the negative name Lo-ammi given by the prophet Hosea to his second son (H0.I.9, 10). Similarly, Ruhamah (having obtained mercy) contrasts with Lo-ruhamah. Am'midoi (iEsd.5.2o only; R.V. Ammi- dioi), named among those who came up from Babylon with Zerubbabel. Ammiel'. — 1. The spy selected bj' Moses from the tribe of Dan (Num.13. 12). — 2. Father of Machir of Lodebar (2Sam.9.4,5,17. 27). — 3. Father (iChr.3.5) of Bathshua ( = Bathsheba) ; called Eliam in 2Sam.ll.3. He was the son of Ahithophel, David's prime minister. — 4. A doorkeeper of the temple ; sixth son of Obed-edom (iChr.26.5). Ammihud'. — 1. An Ephraimite, father of Elishama, I (Num.1. 10, 2.18, 7. 48, 53, 10. 22), and ancestor of Joshua (iChr.'7.26). — 2. A Simeonite, father of Shemuel, i (Num. 34. 20). — 3. Father of Pedahel prince of Naphtali (34.28). — 4. Father of Talmai, king of Geshur (2Sam.i3.37). — 5. A descendant of Pharez, son of Judah (iChr.9.4). Amminadab' (my people is generous). — 1. Son of Ramor Aram(Ru.4.20 ; iChr.2.io), father of Nahshon, and father-in-law of Aaron (Ex. 6. 23). He was of the fourth genera- tion after Judah in the genealogy of Jesus Christ (Mt.1.4; Lu.3.33).— 2. The chief of the 112 sons of Uzziel, a junior Levitical house of the family of the Kohathites (Ex. 6.18) in the days of David, for whom that king sent, together with other chief fathers of Levitical houses, to bring the ark to Jerusalem (iChr.15. 10-12). — 3. IniChr.6.22 Izhar, son of Kohath and father of Korah, is called Amminadab, probably by a clerical error. Amminadib' (Can.6.12, A.V. and R.V. marg.; or "my willing people," A.V. marg. and R.V.). If a proper name, nothing else is known of him, nor is he elsewhere mentioned in the Bible. Ammishaddai' (people of the Almighty), the father of Ahiezer prince of Dan at the Exodus (Num. 1.12, 2.25, 7.66, 71, 10. 25). Ammizabad', son of Benaiah, apparently his father's lieutenant in the third division of David's armv, which was on duty for the third month (iChr.27.6). Ammon, Ammonites. The Ammonites were, with the Moabitcs, descendants of Lot, and consequently allied in blood and language to the Israelites. The story of their origin is one of drunkenness and lust (Gen.19.36-38) ; and it implies that the Israelites, whilst recognizing them as kindred, entertained a strong moral re- pugnance to these two nations. J ust before the entry into Canaan, Moses coinmanded the Am- monites and Moabites to be excluded from the congregation till the tenth generation, for hiring Balaam to curse Israel. Edomites and Egyptians bcingallowedtoenteriii thethird (Deut. 23. 3-8); and we find this association of Amnion and Moab throughout tlic O.T. The Moabite and Ammonite territories lay close together on the E. of the Jordan, Moab occupying the S. part on the shores of the Dead Sea, and Ammon the N.E. district, its border being, in the days of Sihon, when the Israelites invaded his territory, at the town Jaazer (see Num. 21. 24, where AMMON, AMMONITES for " strong " some MSS. of the LXX. read Jazer). Their chief city was Rabbath-am- mon, known in later times as Philadelphia. They are first mentioned as holding their terri- tory from Jehovah, together with the Moabites, and therefore not to be attacked by Israel. It is said that they had occupied the land of the Zamzummim, a race of Rephaim, like the Anakim or Emims, whom their Moabite Isrethren had dis- possessed (Deut.2.19-21). Eglon, the Moabite king, was assisted by the Ammonites in his inva- sion of W. Palestine (Judg.3. 13). At alatertime they passed the J ordan, " to fight against J udah and Benjamin and the house of Ephraim " till the election of the freebooter J ephthah as judge (Judg.lO.9,11). who, before attacking them, sent an embassy to settle the question of the disputed territory conquered by Israel from Sihon three centuries before. In the interesting statement of Israel's claims (J udg.l 1 . 1 5 -2 8 ), the identity of Ammon and Moab is so far assumed that both nations are said to worship Chemosh, whereas Milcom is elsewhere said to be the god of Ammon. The Ammonites were subdued by Jephthah (Judg.ll.33), but in the days of Saul their king Nahash threatened the cityof Jabesh- gilead. They were distinguished alike for craft and cruelty, and refused on this occasion to come to any terms with the inhabitants, un- less they would all submit to have their right eyes put out. The city was finally delivered by Saul, who thereby justified his election by Samuel (iSam.11,14.47). David seems to have been on good terms with 2mother Nahash, and on the latter's death sent an embassy to his son Hanun. The brutality of the Ammonites was shown in their treatment of the envoys of a friendly king, and David began against them one of his most formidable wars (aSam. 10). The Syrians were hired by the Ammonites, and until they were subdued nothing could be done. Then Joab drove the Ammonites into Rabbah, and captured the place after a long siege, in which Uriah the Hittite perished (2Sam.l2). The capture of this place, " the city of waters," as it was called, was possibly the chief tri- imiph of David's reign. The crown of its king was placed on his head (2Sam.i2.30). Per- haps the victory was marred by acts of excep- tional cruelty on the part of the Israelites, pro- voked by the conduct of the Ammonites before the war. 2Sam.i2.31, however, is capable of the interpretation that David merely reduced the Ammonites to servile labour. By Amos, who prophesied in the reign of J eroboam II., the Ammonites are denounced for their atrocious cruelty practised in Gilead, " that they might enlarge their border ' ' ; from which we may infer that in the days of Israel's distress, they had begun to occupy its trans-Jordanic territory (Am. 1.13). A cent, or more later we find the Ammonite king in possession of the territory of the tribe of Gad (Je.49.i ; see also Zeph.2.8- 11). In the days of the Babylonian invasion, the Ammonites seem to have been among the bitterest enemies of Israel (Ezk. 21. 28,25.1-7), and in Jehoiakim's reign they invaded J udah, at the instigation of Nebuchadnezzar (2K.24.2). Nevertheless, diuring the last siege of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans many Jews sought refuge with the Ammonites (Je.40.ii), and their king Baalis sent one of these, Ishmael, the son of AMON 35 Nethaniah of the seed royal, to slay Gedaliah, the Jewish governor of the unfortunate rem- nant (Je.40.12,41.2). When Nehemiah was governor, his bitterest enemies were Sanballat, perhaps of Horonaim in Moab, and Tobiah the Ammonite (Ne.4.3), who hindered his attempt to fortify Jerusalem. Tobiah, whose name would imply that he was a worshipper of Jehovah, was allied by marriage with some of the noble families in J erusalem. The Ammon- ites are alluded to as enemies of Israel in Ps.83. 7. IntheMaccabaean war Judas gained a vic- tory over the Ammonites, commanded by a cer- tain Timotheus, and the fugitives were destroyed in the temple at Carnaim or Carnion (iMac.5.6, 26,37-44 ; 2Mac.l2. 21-26). The Ammonites are also alluded to in Judith (5,6,7), and last men- tioned by Justin (Dial, cum Tryph. 119), who says (166 A.D.), " There are a number of Am- monites still." As J ustin was a native of Pales- tine, this statement deserves some credit. The Ammonites appear to have been a more barbar- ous race than the Moabites, and there are few traces of civilization or culture among them. They were known to the Ass>Tians, being men- tioned in the inscriptions of Shalmaneser II., Tiglath-pileser, Sennacherib, and Esar-haddon. They worshipped Milcom, or Molech, " the abomination of the children of Ammon." [ASHTEROTH KarNAIM.] [f.J.F.-J.] Ammoni'tess, a woman of Ammonite race. Such were Naamah, the mother of Reho- boam, one of Solomon's foreign wives (iK.14. 21,31 ; 2Chr.i2.13), and Shimeath, whose son Zabad or Jozachar was one of the murderers of Joash (2Chr.24.26). [Mixed Marriages.] Amnon'. — 1. Eldest son of David by Ahinoam the Jezreelitess, born in Hebron (iSam.3.2). He violated his half-sister Tamar, and was in consequence slain at the command of her brother (2Sara.i3.1-29). [Absalom.] — 2. Son of Shimon (iChr.4.2o). Amok', a priest whose family returned with Zerubbabel (Ne.12.7,20). Amon' (|iDN ; 'AfjL/xuv : the hidden one), an Egyptian god, the chief divinity of Thebes, whose worship spread over the whole land THE GOD AWON. (Wilkinson.) 36 AMON under the great Theban kings. Thebes is mentioned by Nahum (3.8, see R.V.) as No- amon the city of Ainon. The Egyptians called him Amon-Ra, identifying him with Ra (the sun). He is the head of the triad of Thebes : Amon the father, Mut the mother, and Khonsu the son, a lunar god. Amon is represented in human form, sitting or standing, and wearing two tall plumes. He is sometimes ram-headed. The Greeks likened him to Zeus and called him Ammon, whose oracle was in the oasis now called Sin-ah. [e.n.] Amon'. — 1. King of Judah, son and successor of Manasseh, reigned two years from 643 to 641 B.C. Following his father's ex- ample, Amon devoted himself wholly to serving false gods, and was killed in a con- spiracy. The people avenged him by putting all the conspirators to death, and secured the succession to his son Josiah (2K. 21. 18-26 ; 2Chr.33. 20-25). To Anion's reign we must refer the moral and religious declension of Jerusalem pictured by Zephaniah (1,3) and (a little later) by Jeremiah (2-6) ; idolatry sup- ported by priests and prophets, the poor ruth- lessly oppressed, and shameless indifference to evil. — 2. Prince or governor of Samaria in the reign of Ahab (iK. 22.26 ; 2Chr.l8.25). The precise nature of his office is not known. Per- haps the prophet Micaiah was entrusted to his custody as captain of the citadel. — 3. [.\mi.] Amopites. The name has been supposed to signify " a mountaineer," the Amorite being the highlander and the Canaanite the lowlander of Palestine. The Hebrews regarded the Amor- ites as the sons of Canaan (Gen. 10. 16 ; iChr.l. 14) ; but, according to the report of the spies (Num.13.29), distinguished them from the Canaanites. " The Hittite and the J ebusite and the Amorite dwell in the mountain, and the Canaanite dwells by the sea and by the side of Jordan." They were in Palestine from a very early period, and gave their name to the country. The Egyptians used the form Amur, and in the Bab. and Syr. te.xts the name is written Aniurra. It is probable that " the land of Martu " in the inscription of Sargina of Akkad (3800 b.c. [?]) and Gudea (2600 b.c.) is another form of "land of the Amurri" — .^m- orites (Sayce). In Gen. 14. 7 (the account of Chedorlaomer's expedition) the Amorites are at Hazezon-tamar, near Engedi, on the W. shores of the Dead Sea. Abraham's allies Aner, Eschol, and Mamre (Gen.i4.13) were Amorites. According to the Amarna tablets, the Aimirru or Amorites occupied N. Palestine ; but in the Bible they are generally mentioned in connexion with E. or S. Palestine, and in J udg. 1.35,36 the boundary of the .'\morites was from tiie pass of Akrabuim on the Dead Sea to Aijalon, etc. The first lands conquered by the Israelites were the Amorite kingdoms of Sihon and Og. Sihon had conquered the IMoabites, and forced them to take refuge beyond the deep valley of the Arnon ; and it is possible that Num. 21. 27-29 enshrines an ancient Amorite song of triumph over Moab. Sihon's refusal to allow Israel a passage through his territory led to an attack, which resulted in its capture by the Israelites, and the Moabite ]i(irtion of it was assigned to thetribcof Re>iben (Num. 21. 23-25 ; Dent. 2.36; Niim.32.33,37,38). The kingdom of Bashan, AUOS with its 60 cities, is described as Amorite, though Og himself was the last of the Rephaim or giant inhabitantsof E. Palestine (Deut. 3. 1-17). We have here an intimation that the mountain known as Hermon to the Hebrews was called by the Amorites Shenir, " the white mountain." The district conquered by the Israelites was perhaps known in a special sense as the " land of the Amorites," extending from the Arnon right to the foot of Hermon (Num. 21. 25-35 ; J OS. 12. 1 -6). The possession of the Moabite terri- tory conquered by Sihon, and occupied by the Israelites, was the subject of the dispute be- tween Jephthah and the king of Ammon. The Israelite judge in his embassy claims the land of Sihon by right of conquest, and pleads the silence of the Moabite king Balak at the time (Judg.ll.igff.). So much for the E. Amorites: those of the S. are apparently identified with the Hivites (c/. Gen. 34.2 ; Jos.9.2,11.19 with Gen. 48. 22; 2Sam.21.2), the Jebusites (c/. Jos. 15.63,18.28 ; Judg.l. 21, 19.11 ; 2Sara.5.6 with Jos. 10.5. 6), and the Hittites of Hebron (c/. Gen. 23 with 14. 13). In the Egyptian monu- ments, says Prof. Sayce, " the Amorites are depicted as a tall race, with fair skins, light (but also black) hair, and blue eyes. The same type, with profiles resembling those of the Amorites in the Egyptian monuments, is still met with in Palestine, especially in the extreme south." It is interesting to observe that Eze- kiel attributes an Amorite origin to Jerusalem : " Thy birth and thy nativity is of the land of Canaan ; thy father was an Amorite, and thy mother an Hittite " (Ezk.16.3). According to .\mos (2.9) the .A^morites were giants "whose height was like the height of cedars" — a proof that they had in the 8th cent. B.C. become a tra- dition of the past to the Israelites, [f.j.f.-j.] Amos. — 1. (Oioy, probably burden-bearer ; 'A/xiis)- The earliest, save for the doubtful ex- ception of Joel, of the writing prophets. He prophesied in the reigns of Uzziah of Judah and Jeroboam II. of Israel, at a somewhat earlier period than his contemporary Hosea. Amos does not name God's minister of ven- geance, Hosea repeatedly names the .Assyrian. In Amos the northern kingdom is still intact (6.14; c/. 2K. 14.25) ; in Hosea it is tottering to its fall. The mention of the earthquake (l.r ; cf. Zech.14.5) sheds no light on the date, but tends to show that the propiiccy was all de- livered at one time. Amos, perhaps alone among the prophets, was not a member of a prophetic guild, but a herdman of Tekoa, and a dresser of sycomorc fruit. Vet though he lacked the training of the " schools," there is nothing rude or uncultured in his style. His language has a simple beauty all its own, which is enhanced by the illustrations drawn from the outdoor life in which he was placed. We have the cart laden with sheaves (2.13), the lion attacking the flock (8.12), the view of the starlit skies, as he gazed on the Pleiades and Orion (5.8). the locusts spoiling tiie vineyards and olive>ards (6.0), the "shearings" [Mow- ing ] (7.1 ), the plowman, the reaper, the treader of grapes (9.13). The only Tkkoa known to us is the village 10 miles S. of Jerusalem, whose " wise woman " was suborned by Joab (2Sam. 14). It is indeed said that the bleak and AMOZ barren high ground of Tekoa would be unsuit- able for sycomores, and attempts have been made to assume a Tekoa in the N., but there is no real evidence for this, and the home of the sycomores may have been lower down in the valley. We thus have a Judaean declaring God's message to the northern kingdom. The prophecy naturally falls into three divisions, (i) 1.I-2.I6. Here we have dooms pro- nounced upon various neighbouring nations, Edom, Amnion, Moab, and others, culminating in Israel. (2) 3.1-6. 14. This consists of three discourses, each introduced by " Hear ye this word, "inveighing against idolatry, luxury, and oppression. (3) 7.1-9. 20. Here are five visions, displaying a symbolism (grasshoppers, the plumb-line, and the like) which may have a greater effect than more direct appeals. In- serted amid these is the account of the visit of Amos to Bethel to protest against the doings of Jeroboam, as an earlier prophet had gone thither in the time of Jeroboam I. (iK.13). Yet whether it be direct appeal or symbolism, the unity of aim throughout is plain — God's judgment on sinful Israel. Then from amid the gloom the Messianic hope shines forth (9. 1 if.) that God will build up again the ruined tabernacle of David. The message of Amos is allied in time and in aim with that of Hosea, but the treatment of the message is very differ- ent. Amos writes filled with burning zeal, while Hosea is shaken with strong emotion. The literary style of Amos, from its finish and polish, plainly presupposes a long line of prophets before him. A certain amount of acquaintance with the Pentateuch is clearly shown. See, for one marked case. Am. 2. 8, and cf. Ex. 22. 26, 27. There is a striking parallel between the picture presented by Amos and the social evils of the present day, more glaring even than those of the France of Louis XIV. — a selfish, grasping plutocracy, keen for pleasure and luxury, regardless of the great masses of the poor, whom they directly or indirectly oppress. See especially 4, 6. The text of Amos is in a very pure state, though the meaning of 4.3 is doubtful, and may mark a corruption. Someextreme critics have urged that 2.4f.,4.i3, 5.8f.,9.5f., are interpolations, either because they break the thread of thought, or because the ideas contained in them are indicative of a later period. We believe that the objections are purely subjective and fanciful. Amos is twice quoted in the N.T. — 5.25-27 by St. Stephen (Ac.7.42,43), nearly in accordance with the LXX. ; and 9.ii,i2 by St. James (Ac.l5. 16,17), freely from the LXX. Ewald's Die Propheten des Alien Biindes (or Eng. trans.) ; G. Bavir, Der Prophet Amos erkldr ; Pusey in Minor Prophets ; G. A. Smith in Book of the Twelve Prophets, vol. i. ; Driver in the Camb. Bible for Schools and Colleges ; and for a recent " critical " view, Harper, " Amos," in Intern. Crit. Comm. — 2. Son of Naum, in our Lord's genealogy (Lu.3.25). [R-S.] Amoz', father of the prophet Isaiah (2K. 19.2,20,20.1 ; 2Chr.26.22,32.20,32 ; Is.l.i, etc.). Amphip'olis, a city of Macedonia, through which SS. Paul and Silas passed on their way from Philippi to Thessalonica (Ac.17.1). It was distant 33 Roman miles ffoiR Philippi, and called Amphipolis, because AMRAPHEL 37 the river Str3mion flowed almost round the town. It stood upon an eminence on the left or E. bank of tliis river, just below its egress from the lake Cercinitis, and about 3 miles from the sea. It was a colony of the Athenians, and in the Peloponnesian war the battle was fought under its walls, in which Brasidas and Cleon were killed. Its site is now occupied by a village called Neochori, in Turkish Yeni- Keui, or " New Town." Am'plias, a Christian at Rome, possibly of Caesar's household (see Speaker's Comm., ad loc; Ro.16.8). Ampam'. — 1. A Levite of the family of the Kohathites, and father of Moses, Aaron, and Miriam (Ex. 6. 18, 20 ; Num.3. 19 ; iChr.6. 2,3,18). He is called the " son " of Kohath, but it is evident that in the genealogy several generations must have been omitted ; for from Joseph to Joshua ten generations are recorded, while from Levi to Moses there are but three. Again, the Kohathites in the time of Moses mustered 8,600 males, from a month old and upward (Num. 3. 28), a number to which they could not have attained in two generations from Kohath. The chief difficulty then remaining is that Jochebed, wife and aunt of Amram, is described as a daughter of Levi, born to him in Egypt (26.59) ; but it disappears if by " Levi " the tribe and not the individual is intended. His descendants, the Ampamites, are men- tioned in Num.3. 27 ; iChr.26.23. — 2. A son of Dishon and descendant of Seir (iChr.l.41) ; R.V. reads " Hamran " = Hemdan in Gen. 36.26. — 3. A son of Bani who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.34). Ampaphel', a king of Shinar (Babylonia) who took part in the expedition of the Elamite Chedorlaomer against Sodom, Gomorrah, and the cities of the plain (Gen. 14). The identi- fication of this king with the well-known Babj'lonian ruler Hammurabi (Hamurabi, Ammurapi) is generally admitted, "the final 1, which is the main difficulty, being probably due to a scribal error. Otherwise the two forms agree, and the date assigned to Hammurabi (2000 B.C. or later) is satisfactory. Though belonging to " the dynasty of Babylon," he was not of Babylonian origin, but descended from a royal stock supposed by some to have originated in an Arab tribe. In his reign of 43 or 55 years (the documents vary) he did much to promote the prosperity of his country, principally by digging irriga- tion-canals, as was the custom of the time. He took part in many warlike expeditions, the most noteworthy being that referred to in Gen. 14, and one against Rim-Sin of Larsa in the 31st year of his reign. As yet the account of his relations with Chedorlaomer have not been discovered, but the existence of late inscriptions which apparently refer to Chedor- laomer, Tidal, and Arioch make it probable that more light will be thrown on his reign. Many contracts of his time exist, as well as chronological lists and other inscriptions. Bas- reliefs representing him are preserved in the British Museum and in the Louvre, the latter on the celebrated Code of Laws bearing his name ; for an account of which see Law in O.T. See The O.T. in the Light of the Reports 38 AMULETS ANANIAS (S.P.C.K.), pp- 209 ff. ; Sayce in P>-oc. Soc.Bibl. Arch., 1906, pp. 193-200, 241-251; 1907, PP- 7- 17. Also Syria and Chronology in this Diet., in which other dates are advocated, [t.c.p.1 Amulets were worn as safeguards against evil spirits, and against the " evil eye " ; the latter could belong to man, woman, or beast. Anything that tended to attract this away from the eye of a person was held to be effi- cacious. The belief in the ubiquity of demons was strongly held, and therefore prophylactic means to counteract their evil machinations were deemed indispensable ; the " evil eye " (strictly speaking, the " envious eye ") was the springs referred to are probably some near the Dead Sea. [Nahaliel.] [b.f.s.] Anahapath', a place within the border of Issachar, named with Shihon and Rabbith (Jos. 19. 19). Now the village en N'aiirah, in the valley of Jezreel. [c.r.c] Anai ah. — 1. One of those who stood on Ezra's right hand as he read the law to the people (Ne.8.4); called Ananias in iEsd.9. 43. — 2. One of " the heads of the people " who signed the covenant (Ne.lO.22). Anak, Anakim. [Giants.] Anamim' (plur. form). Mizraim (Egypt) is said to have begotten Ludim, Anamim, and »■"" 7 EGYPTIAN AMULETS. (Brit. Mus.) I. Two fingers sigfnifying bttssiiie. 2. Builder's square {rectitude]. 3. The ankh (li/>), sometimes called "the girdle of Isis." 4. Tree-trunk (»), a symbol of stability ur strength. 5. Head-rest (rc/ojci. 6. A deity, perhaps the niunnny Osiris (/OTirr or /loliness). 7. The eye of Ka {/li'''''). 8. The heart (/(>zr). 9. Doubtful, jo. Scent-bottle (i7f«/H^jj). result of a co-operation with a demon. Amu- lets of the most varied kinds existed, and still do e.xist, for in the East the ancient superstitions regarding evil spirits have altered very little ; bones of hares, metal discs, knotted cords (called " fringes " in Num. 15. 38), scrolls, and ornaments of various descriptions are among the most popular. Amzi'. — 1. A Merarite Levite, ancestor of Ethan the minstrel (iChr.6.46). — 2. A priest, whose descendants served the temple in the time of Nehemiah (Ne.ll.12). Anab', a town in the mountains of Judah (Jos.i5.50), named, with Debir and Hebron, as once belonging to the Anakim (Jos. 11. 21). Fixed by Robinson at 'Andb, a ruin 2 J miles S.W. of Debir. [c.r.c] An'ael, brother of Tobit (Tob.l.21). Anah'. Both A.V. and R. V. use this name in one chapter of O.T. as if of three different I)eopIe. (i) The parent of l-^sau's wife, and daughter ("son," LXX.) of Ziljeon the Hivite ((ien.36.2,14). (2) Son (or descendant) of Seir the Horite (36. 20). (3) The son of Zibeon, who found the ycmim (86.24). As all the occurrences of the name arc in a list dealing with the dukes of lulom and descendants of Esau, it seems probable that there has been some con- fusion ; that Horite should be read in ver. 2, and that all three represent the same person. yemim is translated "hot springs" by H.V. and Vulg. ; A.V. "mules" is only a guess from the context. If the former is correct, the hot other tribes, including the Casluhim (out of whom came Philistim) and the Caphtorim (Gen. 10.13; iChr.l.ii). Ebers thinks they are the A'amu (or cowherds), a people of Semitic race represented at the grave of the Pharaoh Seti I., father of Ramses II. [f.j.f.-j.] Anamme'lech (2 K. 17. 31, "^^^V)- [Ad- ram melech.] ■ ■ '•' Anan'. — 1. One of " the heads of the people" who signed the covenant with Nehe- miah (Ne.10.26). — 2. (iEsd.5.30) = Hanan, 4. Anani', the 7th son of Elioenai, descended from the royal line of Judah (iChr.3.24). Ananiah', probably a priest, and an- cestor of Azariah, who assisted in rebuilding the city wall under Nehemiah (Ne.3.22,23). Ananiah', a place, named between Nob and Hazor, in which the Benjamites lived after the Captivity (Ne. 11. 32). Now Beit Han'ina, a village 2 miles S.E. of Gibeon. [c.r.c] Ansinl'as. — 1. Sons of Ananias, numbering loi, returned with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.i6 only).— 2. (9.21.) [Hanani. 3.1—3. (9.29.) [Hananiah, 9.] — ^. (9.43.) [.\naiau, I.] — 5. (9.48.) [Hanan, 5.] — 6. Father of Azarias, whose name was assumed by the angel Raphael (ToI).5.i2,i3). — 7. Ancestor of Judith (Jth.8.1). — 8. SiiAOKACH (Song 3 Chil. 66; iMar.2.59)- [Hananiah, 7.] Anani as. — 1. A liigli-priest in Ac. 23. 2-5, 2\.\. He was the son of Nedebaeus, suc- ceeded Jiise|)h sen of Camyithos, and preceded Ismael son of Phabi. He was uomiuated to ANANIEIi the office by Herod king of Chalcis in 48 a.d. ; and in 52 a.d. sent to Rome by the prefect Ummidius Quadratus to answer before the emperor Claudius a charge brought by the Samaritans. He appears, however, to have resumed his office on his return. He was deposed shortly before Felix left the province ; but still had great power, which he used violently and lawlessly. At the outbreak of the last revolt he was murdered by the sicarii as being a leader of the Roman party — a terrible fulfilment of the prophecy of St. Paul (Ac.23.3). — 2. Husband of Sapphira. The second and fuller account of the common fund of the Christians of Jerusalem is followed by two instances of contributions to it, one in good faith by Barnabas (Ac.4.36,37), and the other fraudulent by Ananias and his wife (5.I-II). On St. Peter's denunciation of the fraud Ananias fell down and died. In the case of Sapphira the sentence of death was more explicitly pronounced. The sin was an attempt to deceive the Holy Ghost. Rever- ence for the Holy Ghost was the principle in danger, and its vindication was necessary at a time when the presence and work of the Spirit were so near and manifest. Cf. our Lord's teaching on sin against the Holy Ghost (Mt. 12.31) and St. Peter's words to Simon Magus (Ac.8.22). — 3. A Christian Jew of Damascus. As in the case of Peter and Cornelius, so here two visions prepared Ananias and Saul for the interview which Ananias at first unwillingly imdertook. The imposition of his hands on Saul was followed by recovery of sight and by baptism. In St. Paul's account to the Jews of the circum- stances of his conversion he conciliates them by mentioning that Ananias, his first human in- structor in the faith, was a devout man accord- ing to the law, well reported by all the J ews that dwelt there (Damascus) (Ac.22.i2). [e.r.b.] Ananiel', forefather of Tobit (Tob.l.i). Anath', father of Shamgar (Judg.3.3i,5.6). Ana'thema (lit. " a thing hung up " in a temple and so dedicated to the god) is the equivalent of Heb. herem — i.e. " a thing or person devoted" (see' R.V.). Any object so devoted to the Lord was irredeemable : if an inanimate object, it was to be given to the priests (Num.18. 14) ; if a living creature or even a man, it was to be slain (Lev. 27. 28, 29). Generally speaking, a vow of this description was taken only with respect to the idolatrous nations who were marked out for destruction by the special decree of Jehovah, as in Num. 21.2 ; J0S.6.17 ; but occasionally the vow was made indefinitely, and involved the death of the innocent, as in the cases of Jephthah's daughter (Judg.ll.31), and Jonathan (iSam. 14.24), who was only saved by the interposition of the people. The breach of such a vow was punished with death (Jos. 7. 25). The word " anathema " frequently occurs in St. Paul's writings, and is generally translated accursed, and regarded by many as a technical term for judicial excommunication. That the word was so used in the early Church there can be no doubt, but an examination of its occurrences in N.T. shows that it bears the more general sense of accursed as expressive either of strong feeling (Ro.9.3) or of dislike ANDR0NICT7S 39 and condemnation (iCor.12.3,16.22 ; Gal.l.g). [Curse ; Crimes ; Vow.] Anathoth'. — 1. Son of Becher son of Benjamin (iChr.7.8). — 2. One of "the heads of the people " who signed the covenant (Ne. 10.19) ; unless, as is not unlikely, the name stands for "the men of Anathoth" (7.27). Anathoth', a priests' city, in the lot of Benjamin, with " suburbs " (Jos. 21. 18 ; iChr. 6.60). Hither Abiathar was banished by Solomon to his " fields " after the failure of his attempt to put Adonijah on the throne (iK.2.26). It was the native place of Abiezer, one of David's 30 captains (2Sam.23.27 ; iChr.ll.28,27.12), and of Jehu, another of the mighty men (iChr.12.3) ; and here, " of the priests that were in Anathoth," Jeremiah was born (Je.l. 1,11.21,23, 29.27,32.7-9). The " men " of Anathoth returned from the Cap- tivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.23 ; Ne.7.27 ; iEsd.5.18). Anathoth was N. of Jerusalem (Is. 10. 30), and is placed by Eusebius (Onomas- ticon) 3 miles from the city. It was discovered by Robinson at 'Andta, on a ridge 2 miles N.E. of Jerusalem. [c.r.c] Anchop. [Ship.] Andrew, a disciple of the Baptist, who with another was thefirst to follow Christ (Jn.l.40). He was brother of Simon, and brought him to the Lord. Hence his name and day have been specially associated with missionary effort. When the disciples were summoned to a closer allegiance, Andrew and Simon were the first two called (Mk.l.i6). He is a link between the ist and 2nd of the 3 sets of 4 in which the names of the apostles are arranged. He is included in the first quaternion, and is among them when they ask the solemn question about " the end " (Mk.13.3). On the other hand, he is closely connected with the second quaternion through Philip, who is always placed at its head, and thus immediately follows Andrew in two of the lists. Both were of Bethsaida and both have Gk. names, though this must not be held to imply Gk. origin. In the miracle of the feeding of the 5,000, and in the intro- duction of the Greeks to Jesus, these two disciples are closely associated. In Acts, Andrew, like the majority of his colleagues, is only mentioned in the list in 1.3. The scene of his labours is variously stated, but traditions agree in assigning Patrae in Achaia as the place of his martjrrdom. [e.r.b.] Andponi'cus. — 1. An officer left as vice- roy in Antioch by Antiochus Epiphanes during his absence (171 e.g.). At the instiga- tion of Menelaus, Andronicus put to death the high-priest Onias. This murder excited general indignation ; and on the return of Antiochus, Andronicus was publicly degraded and executed (2Mac.4.3i-38). — 2. Another offi- cer of Antiochus Epiphanes, left by him on Gerizim (5.23), probably in occupation of the temple there. — 3. A Christian at Rome, saluted by St. Paul (R0.I6.7), together with Junia (R.V. Juntas). The two are described by St. Paul (i) his " kinsmen," probably as being Jews ; (2) " fellow prisoners," either as having shared his imprisonment on some unre- corded occasion, or as being, like himself, spiri- tual captives of Christ ; (3) " of note among 40 ANEM 'apostles,'" i.e. among the delegates of the churches eraployed on special missions, as was Epaphroditus {your messenger, Gk. apostle. Ph. 2.25); (4) "in Christ before mc." [e.r.b.] Anem', a city of Issachar, belonging to the Gershonites {iChr.6.73). Probably 'Anin, 9 miles N.W. of Jenin, or En-gannim, which is named instead in Jos. 21. 29. [c.r.c] Anep', one of the three Amorite chiefs who aided Abraham in the pursuit after the four invading kings (Gen. 14. 13, 24). Aner', a city of Manasseh W. of Jordan, given to the Kohathites (iChr.6.70). Possibly 'Elldr, 8 miles N.W. of Samaria. [c.r.c] Aneth'othite (2Sam.23.27), Anet'othite {iChr.27.i2), and An'tothite (1Chr.ll.28, 12.3), inhabitants of Anathoth. Angel (Gk. angelos, " messenger " = Heb. maVdkh; both frequently of men, e.g. Hag.l. 13; 'abbir, "mighty," Ps.78.25 only). Other terms used of angels are " sons of God " (¥nd 'elohim). Gen. 6. 2, Job 1.6,38.7 : sons of gods (b'-nS 'elim), Ps. 29.1,89.6 (.^.V. sows of the mighty); "holy ones," JobS.i, Ps.89.5.7, Dan. 8.13 (A.V. saints) ; " a watcher and a holy one," Dan. 4. 13, 23, cf. ver. 17; "spirits," Heb. 1. 14. The doctrine of angels existed in Babylon before the time of Abraham (the Sukalli being apparently inferior gods who were the mes- sengers from the higher gods to dwellers on earth) ; it was elaborated especially in the Per- sian empire, heir of much of the religion as well as of the power of Babylon ; and was modified in the Levant by Hellenism, which taught the need of intermediate beings between man and God. The Biblical doctrine shows traces of non- Israelite influence through all the periods. — I. O.T. Angels are mentioned in the " primi- tive strata" (even according to the alleged "sources" quoted below; for an account of which see Pentateuch) of Bible history, both directly and indirectly (cf. Lord of hosts, i.e. originally the heavenly hosts), (i) In the earliest histories the distinction between God and angels is not clearly expressed, (i) This is especially the case with the term " the Angel of the Lord " (J and Judg.), "the Angel of God" (E and Judg.^), "the Angel" (E, JE). This use of "angel" is not found in D or P. He speaks sometimes as messenger (Judg. 13. 16), but sometimes as God Himself (Judg. 13. 18 ; Ex. 3.2,6,14 ; Gen. 22. 15), and accepts worship (Judg. 13. 20-22). Cf. Is. 63. 9, " the angel of His presence," i.e. perhaps an angel who dwelt in God's immediate presence[cf. infra, II. (3)], but more probably the angel in whom God's presence was especially revealed ( Ex. 33. 2, 3 with 14,15; cf. Deut.4.37, R.V.); but probably not maVdkh habb'rith (Mal.3.i), which at that date naturally meant "messenger of the covenant." (ii) We find Theopuanies, where God is mani- fested as an angelic being in human form to Abraham (Gen. 18. 2, 22 ; cf. 19. i), to Jacob at Penuel (32.24,30; H0.I2.4), to Joshua at Gilgal (Jos. 5. 13-15). Christians naturally con- nect this identification of angelic beings and God with the Word Who reveals God and was afterwards incarnate (see a summary of pat- ristic views in Buel, Dogmatic Theology (1890), i. 105 ff. from Burton, Testimonies of Ante- Nicene Fathers (1829), pp. 38 ff.). (2) Generally tbe distinction is plain, (i) They have various ANGEL activities. Thev are " with God in theophanies (Gen. 28.12, 32.2' [JE]), praising Him (Ps.l03. 20,148.2) ; in His sight not without error (Job 4.18) ; charged with the care of the pious (Ps.91.li ; cf. Dan. 3. 25, 28, 6. 22) ; sent to a prophet (iK. 13. 18,19.5, 7 ; 2K.1.3,i5 ; Zech. l.y, and 18 times in 1-6; cf. Ezk.8.2ff.,9.2£f., 10.2ff.,40.3ff.); excellent, wise, powerful (iSam. 29.9; 2Sam. 14.17,20,19.27 ; Zech. 12.8) ; en- camping round about the faithful (Ps.34.7; cf. 2K.6.17, Ps.68.17) ; chasing His enemies (Ps.35.5,6); destroying by the Judgment of Yah- weh (2Sam.24.i6,i7 = iChr.21.12-30; 2K.I9. 35 = Is.37.36 = 2Chr.32.21) " (Oxford Heb. Lex.). There are hosts round God as king (Is. 6. 2-5 ; i K. 22.19 ; Dan. 7. 10), Who has a council of the holy ones (Ps.89.7). (ii) They are guardians. The germ of guardianship of a person is seen in Gen. 24. 7, 40. One has the guardianship of the nation of Israel (Ex. 23. 20,23, 32.34, 33. 2). He has Michael with him in this office (Dan. 10,20,21), and perhaps others who are called " watchmen " (Is. 62. 6). There are also guar- dians of Persia and of Greece (Dan. 10. 13, 20). Possiblv Is. 24.2 1 alludes to guardians of nations^ as the LXX. of Deut.32.8 (c/. 29.26) certainly does. (iii) Gradation in rank is implied in Dan. 10. 13 (" Michael, one of the chief princes ") ; see below, (iv) Names. Gabriel (8.16,9.21), Michael (10.13,21, 12.1) ; also " the Satan," i.e. the Adversary (Job 1,2; Zech. 3. 1, 2). — II. Apocrypha and Psettdepigrapha. These present so much of the popular religion current among the Jews in N.T. times that it is important to consider them here. The principles are the same as in O.T., but carried further. Only some par- ticulars can be mentioned, (i) They direct the elements (cf. Persian Fravashi). Cf. the O.T. reference of pestilence and other judg- ments to them [sw/jm, I. (2) (i)]. So repeatedly in Ethiopian Enoch (e.g. Ix. 15-22); the Slav- onic Enoch, xix. xx. i : Bk. Jubilees, ii. 2. (2) They become clearly guardians of indi- viduals, e.g. Tobit (Jub. xxxv. 17). For guardianship of nations, see Ecclus.i7.17, "For every nation he appointed a ruler ; and Israel is the Lord's portion"; but not over Israel (Jub. XV. 31, 32). (3) Their ranks are more defined. Seven archangels (Tob.i2.15 ; Eth. En. xc. 21, 22 [probably due ultimately to the seven Babylonian planets]) ; ten orders (Slav. En. XX. I, 3) ; four presences (Eth. En. xl. 2 ; cf. Ixi. 10) ; " the angels of the presence " (Jub. ii. 2) ; " the one . . . from the seventh heaven " (Asc. Isa. vi. 13). (4) They fight on behalf of Israel (Ass. Moses x. 2 ; Asc. Isa. vii. 9); cf. Michael. (5) They intercede for men (Eth. En. xl. 6, xlvii. 2, civ. i ; cf. xv. 2 ; Test. xii. Patr. Levi. v. 6). (6) Additional names in the Apocrvpha are Jeremiel (2Esd.4.36, K.V. ; Uriel. A.V.) ; Phai.tiel (2Esd.5.i6, R.V. ; Salathiel, A.V.); Raphael (Tob. passim; Eth. Enoch); Uriel (2Esd. 4.1, etc.: Eth. En. xx. 7. etc.).— III. N.T. (i) Rejecting the luibelief of the Sadducees (Ac. 23.8) and accepting the doctrine of the Phar- isees (ver. 9) and of the popular religion, the N.T. writers assume tlic existence of angels, and indeed regard them as almost numberless (Mt. 26.53 : Lu-2.i3 ; Hel).12.22 ; Rev.5.ii,12.7). (i) The forms of their activity are various, ANIAM representing the providence of God, e.g. to- wards Joseph (Mt.l.2o), Zacharias (Lu.l.ii), the Virgin Mary (I.26), St. Peter and St. John (Ac.5.19), Cornelius (IO.3), St. Peter (12-7), St. Paul (27.23), also at the beginning (Mk.l. 13) and end (Lu.22.43) and perhaps during (Jn.1.51) the three years of our Lord's public life. Also the law is said to have been given through them (Ac.7.53 ; Gal.3.19 ; Heb.2.2 ; cf. Jub. i. 27, " And He said to the angel of the presence, Write for Moses," etc. ; also cf. LXX. of Deut.33.2). Thev govern elements — fire (Rev.l4.i8), waters (16.5 [cf- Te.xt. Rec. Jn.5.4]; cf. Rev.9.iiff.), winds (7.i). So also a common interpretation of cTOLxeicL in Gal. 4. 3,9, Col. 2. 8, 20. [Elements.] (ii) They are guardians of persons (Mt.18.io [probably] ; cf. Ac. 12.15) and, probably, of local churches (Rev. 1.20,2.1, etc.; cf. "the angel of the Christian Church," Asc. Isa. iii. 15). Apparently they are present in church assemblies (iCor.ll.io). They are deeply interested in the salvation of men (Lu. 2. 9-14, 15. 10 ; iPe.l.12). (iii) Some fell(Ju.6; 2Pe.2.4). The cause is not stated, but perhaps was pride (iTim.3.6, etc.) or lust {cf. Gen. 6. 2, and Eth. En. xii. 4, .\v. 3 ff.). [Satan.] The dragon and his angels fight Michael and his angels (Rev.12.7). (iv) They have many ranks (so probably Ro.8.38; Col. 1.16; Eph.l.2i) and an archangel (iTh.4.i6). (2) Yet N.T. guards against certain wrong tendencies and points out that (i) Christ, though man, is not inferior to angels but far above them (Heb.l. 4-2.9 ; Col.l. 16,2.15). (ii) Prayer to angels is wrong (Rev. 19. 10, 22. 8,9). So also Col. 2. 18, the Colossian Christians being incUned to identify the local gods with angels (doubtless especially Michael, as later history tells of his worship there). — IV. Their Nature and Form. Little is said in Scripture of this. They are termed " spirits " (Heb.l. 14), but it is not asserted that they are incorporeal. Our Lord seems to imply the contrary, for they that attain that Age and the resurrection from the dead do not marry because they cannot die, and they cannot die because they are equal to angels (Lu. 20.35, 36), or " as angels " (Mt. 22.30 ; Mk. 12.25). They appear always in human form (e.g. Gen. 18 ; Ac.l.io), but often glorious (Dan. 10. 6 ; Lu.24.4). In Jacob's dream they ascend and descend by a ladder, i.e. they apparently are wingless (Gen. 28. 12). Else- where they " fly " (Dan. 9.2 1 [Gabriel]; Rev. 14.6 [cf. Text. Rec. 8.13]) ; and the Seraphim of Is. 6. 2 are depicted with wings. [Sera- phim ; Cherubim.] Everling, Die paulinische Angelogie «. Ddmonologie (1888); Lueken, Michael (1898); Jew. Encyc, art. " Angel- ology"; J. M. Fuller, "Introduction to Tobit," excursus ii., in Speaker's Comm. ; J. T. Marshall in Diet, of Christ and the Gospels (especially valuable for the relation of modern thought to a belief in angels). [a.l.w.] Aniam', a Manassite, son of Shemidah (iChr.7.19). Anim', a city in the mountains of Judah, named with Eshtemoh (es Semil'a) (Jos. 15. 50). Eusebius and Jerome mention a place called Anea in Daroma, 9 miles S. of Hebron (Onomasticon), now el Ghuwein, 2 piiles S. of Eshtemoh. It is the Aina of the ANNAS 41 list of Thothmes III. (No. 95), immediately preceding Carmel of J udah. [c.r.c] Anise (Gk. anethon) occurs only in Mt. 23.23. It is by no means certain whether the anise (Pimpinella anisum, Lin.) or the dill (An- ethum graveolens) is here intended, though the COMMO.N DILL {Anetlium sraredeiis) latter is more probable. Both belong to the natural order Umhelliferae, and are much alike in external character ; and the seeds of both are, and have long been, employed as condi- ments and carminatives. Anethum is more especially a genus of Eastern cultivation than the other plant, according to Dr. Royle. Anise and dill were confounded by the Greeks under the one name &v7]aov or durjOoy. When distin- guished, the variant spellings in Latin (anisum and anethum) were used for that purpose. Anklet. This word does not occur in A.V., but is referred to in Is.3.i6,i8,2o, where the prophet speaks of " the tinkling ornaments " about the feet of the daughters of Zion, and of the " ornaments of the legs." Anklets were as common as bracelets and armlets, and made of much the same materials ; the pleasant jingling and tinkling which they made as they knocked against each other was no doubt one of the reasons why they were admired. They are still worn in the East, and Lane quotes from a song, in allusion to the pleasure caused by their sound, " the ringing of thine anklets has deprived me of reason." Hence Mo- hammed forbade them in public ; " let them not make a noise with their feet, that their ornaments which they hide may [thereby] be discovered " (Koran xxiv. 31). An'na.— 1. The wife of Tobit (Tob.l.gff.). — 2. An aged " prophetess " of the tribe of Asher in Jerusalem at the time of our Lord's presentation in the temple (Lu.2.36-38). Anna'as (iEsd.5.23) = Senaah. Annas, — 1. (iEsd.9.32) = Harim, 4. — §• 42 ANNUUS Son of Scth, appointed high-priest by Quirinus, imperial governor of Syria, A.n. 7, deposed by Valerius dratus the procurator in a.d. 15. He lost office, but not power, for five of his sons held the office of high-priest as well as his son- in-law Joseph, who assumed the name Caiaphas (In. 18. 13). Thesonsof Annas monopolized the sale of all the materials for sacrifice, and so made the temple " a den of robbers " (Mk.ll. 17; cf. Edersheim; Life and Times of Jesus, vol. i. pp. 371-375)- The title high-priest was retained by, and accorded to, one who had held the office, hence the usage in Ac. 4. 6 ; that in Lu.3.2 is unparalleled. The chief interest in Annas centres in the correction made by St. John of the confusion in the first two gospels between the stages of our Lord's trial (Mt.26. 57,27.1 ; Mk. 14.53, 15.1). St. Luke avoids their mistake of transferring the morning meeting of the Sanhcdrin to the previous night, and leaves room for such an informal inquiry as that of Annas really was (Lu. 22.54). St. John shows how Annas' inquiry could but have one issue, and that it was as a condemned prisoner that Jesus was sent to Caiaphas (Jn. 18. 19-24 ; cf. Mk. 14.64). The Sanhedrin met at this time in the headquarters of the Annas faction, and it may have been when passing through the court from the apartments of Annas to the council-chamber that " the Lord turned and looked upon Peter " (Lu.22.6i ; cf. Westcotton Jn.l8.25). [C.R.D.B.] Annu'us (iEsd.8.48). Possibly a corrup- tion of the Heb. word rendered " with him " (cf. Ezr.S.ig). Anointingr- I- The hot climate of Eastern countries gave rise to the use of un- guents for purposes of the toilet. The ap- plication of Oil to the exposed parts of the skin, scorched by the sun, had a soothing effect, and was in daily use among the Jews for this purpose (Mt.6.17). Indeed, to such an extent was this use of oil regarded as a necessity of life that the failure of the olive harvest, from which the oil was chiefly ob- tained, is taken as typical of national calamity (Mi. 6. 15), and is especially regarded as a mark of God's anger (Deut.28.40). The more expensive oils were prepared with great care, and their use was a mark of luxury (Am. 6. 6). From this entirely natural use of anointing, various ceremonial and symbolical customs arose, (i) Social Significance. Anointing was practised preparatory to a visit of ceremony, as when Kuth anointed herself before visiting Boaz (Ru.3.3); and, on the other hand, the laws of hospitality required that the host should anoint his guest. It was by failure to perform this act of ceremony that Simon showed discourtesy to our Lord (Lu.7.46). (2) Official Significance. An important use of anointing was its employment as symbolic of admission to office ; and here we find the introduction of a religious idea. The act of anointing represents a consecration, being the admission to an office wliich involves a special religious obligation, (i) /Vo/j/(f/i' are anointed to their office. Iilijah is bidden to anoint Elisha (iK. 19.16). Prophets are regarded as being in a special sense the Lord's " anointed ones" (Ps.lO5.15. K.V.). [ii) Priests. The consecration of Aaron is described in detail, ANOINTING as being a typical example of the high-priestly consecration. It included a two-fold anointing, first after the robing and again after the sacrifice of consecration (Lev. 8. 12,30). For this purpose a special oil was to be prepared which might be put to no other use (Ex.3O.32). The ordinary priests, of whom Aaron's sons are taken as typical, were anointed once only, and that by sprinkling (Lev.8.30). (iii) Kings. Under special circumstances a man might be designated for the office of king by the ceremony of anointing, as in the case of Saul (iSam.lO.i) and of David (1Sam.l6.13), and might be anointed a second time on his actual accession to the kingship (2Sam.2.4). A conspicuous example of the act of anointing, as a public ceremony, is to be found in the anointing of Joash by Jehoiada (2K.II.12). The custom was a widespread one, being found in other nations, as is recognized in Jothani's parable (Judg.9.8), and it has passed into the usage of Christian countries. An extension of this xise of oil for the purpose of consecration to office is to be found in the consecration of inanimate objects to sacred purposes. Jacob consecrated the stone of his pillow at Bethel (Gen.28.i8). The taber- nacle and its furniture were consecrated by the oil specially compounded for the purpose (Ex. 30. 26). From this ceremonial use, the idea of anointing comes to be used meta- phorically to express the setting apart of persons for some special relationship to God. The prophets look forward to the coming of one Who in a unique sense shall be " the anointed one " (Dan. 9. 25, R.V.), and Whose anointing shall be from God Himself (Ps.45.7). These prophecies are fulfilled in Jesus of Nazareth (Heb.l.9), Who, unlike any of His types, was " anointed " to all three offices. Christians, as having received the gift of the Holy Ghost, are similarly spoken of as God's anointed (2Cor.l. 21 ; ijn.2.20,27). [Laving ON OF Hands.] — -11. Oil was widely recognized in the ancient world as having a remedial value. It was prescribed for use in diseases of the skin, and for the healing of wounds. Thus it was used by the Good Samaritan (Lu. 10.34). So, too, it was used as a remedy by the Twelve on their mission to the cities (Mk.6.13). Here, however, a fresh element is introduced in the fact that special powers of healing were bestowed upon the apostles. In conjunction with their exercise of these powers, they employed the natural remedy with which men were familiar. After the Ascension the disciples seem, in part at least, to have changed their method. They laid their hands upon the sick for the purpose of healing them (Mk.l6.i8 ; Ac.28.8), following in this the example of the Lord Himself. But the use of anointing still survived, at least among the Jewish Christians (J as. 5. 14). In this practice the fact that oil possesses qualities as a natural remedy is still tlie under- lying idea ; but tlie power of faith is recog- nized as quickening its beneficial effect. In- cidentally this use of oil is connected by St. James with the forgiveness of sins. Sickness was regarded as being frequently the result of some definite sin (1Cor.ll.30). In such a case the act of faith, by which the remedial ANOS ANTIOCH 43 application of the oil is accompanied, will win the forgiveness of the sin and so make the bodily healing possible (Jas.5.15). In later times the bodily healing, which is the purpose of the act of anointing as described by St. James, in some cases passed out of sight ; and so sprang up the doctrine of extreme unction, which has obscured and prejudiced the right and Scriptural use of unction. [j.c.v.d.] Anos' (iEsd.9.34) = Vaniah. Ant (Heb. wmald). This insect is men- tioned twice in O.T. : in Pr.6.6 the dili- gence of this insect is quoted as an example worthy of imitation ; in Pr.3O.25 the ant's wisdom is pointed out. The ancients be- lieved that ants stored up food in summer for winter consumption ; and although this is incorrect, there is considerable justification for the idea, owing to their habit of carrying many kinds of objects (not to mention their own pupae) to and from their nests. Euro- pean ants become dormant in winter, and consequently require no food. The words of Solomon do not necessarily teach that ants store up food for future use, although they seem to imply that such was the case. If this was the general opinion, it is no matter for surprise that the wise man should select the ant as an instance on which to ground a lesson of prudence and forethought. Numer- ous species of ants inhabit Palestine, some of which are referable to the typical genus Formica and others to Myrmica. [r.l.] Antichpist, a word first used in the Chris- tian Church by Christian prophets, rather than made by St. J ohn (as Grimm wrongly supposes ; see ijn.2.i8, "as ye heard "), means properly "counter-Christ," one over against the Christ. It adds to the idea of antagonism or impiety the idea of deceptive substitution [cf. " evil men and impostors," 2Tim.3.i3, R.V.). St. John says there were many already. The idea belongs to the Christian age, called empha- tically " the last time," because, though the thing is old (as old as anything Messianic : Gen. 3.15 ; Dan.7.11 ; cf. Auberlen, Gunkel), its chief development is as opposed to the historic Jesus. To make it a piece of Christian folklore is shallow exegesis and shallow thought. It is the last development of an ancient war with subtler deception. All that Bousset's interest- ing researches in the later pseudo- apocalyptic literature have proved is that it is a point of Christian doctrine, which by its mysterious appeal to unchastened curiosity has ever lent it- self, with additions from elsewhere, to heretical perversion and Christian mistake. The terrific images of Rev.13,17 have their roots deep iA history and experience. We have seen the resurrection of the old world-power as opposed to God, the subtle thought and wonder that incites its worship, and the false, adulterous, religious sanction and sentiment that courts and guides it (see Auberlen, Kliefoth; Arch- bishop Benson, Apocalypse, p. 45). If the N.T. had nothing to say of these things, we should be without chart or compass. That the presence and word of Christ destroys, and will destroy them, is bound up with our belief in goodness. The chief references to this subject in N.T. are Mt.24, Mk.l3, Lu.21 (our Lord's eschato- iogical discourse); iTh.5.i-n ; 3Th.2.i-i4 ; iTim.4.i-5 ; 2Tim.3.i-io ; Rev.13,17. In the midst of much diversity of presentation, there is a singular unity in thought. The marks of Antichrist's reign will be : (i) A general decay in Christian life (Mt.24.ii-i3 ; 2Th.2.3 ; iTim. 4.1; 2Tim.3.5; Rev.l3.8,i7). (2) A false con- tentment and the exaltation of man, even above all that has been called or thought divine (Mt. 24.38 ; Lu.17.27,28 ; iTh.5.2,3 ; 2Th.2.4,9 ; Rev. 13. 6,7). (3) The consequent weakening of moral and spiritual obligations (Mt.24.io; iTim.4.2 ; 2Tim.3.i-6). (4) Great increase of subtlety " to deceive, if it were possible, even the elect " with false wonders, evidently such as are fitted to their age (Mt. 24.24 ; Mk.13.22 ; 2Th. 2.9,10; Rev.i3.13, 14). (5) The gathering of these characteristics into a type (Mt. 24.23 ; Mk.i3.22 ; Jn.5.43 ; 2Th.2.3 ; Rev.l3.i8). (6) The continuous vic- tory of suffering truth (Mt. 24.13, 14 ; iTh.5.4, 5 ; Rev.l4.i,15.2) ; and finally (7) the abrupt termination of all these oppositions, associated with the presence and word of Christ Himself (Mt.24.30,31 ; Mk.13.26,27; Lu.21. 27 ; iTh. 5.3 ; 2Th.2.8 ; 2Tim.3.9 ; Rev.20.io). St. Paul's earliest letters embody the idea of An- tichrist in a person, " the lawless one." The early Church followed him. In his last letters he speaks only of principles. The idea of Anti- christ has been embodied in men — e.g. Nero, Bar-cochab and his false prophet Akiba, Mohammed, Napoleon. Whether, in its most deceptive phase, it is to be finally and com- pletely so embodied, is, we believe, intention- ally left uncertain. But the destruction of all sense of revelation, the deification of human faculty and invention (Strauss), and the substitution of a false philanthropy, would leave the world clear for it (2Th.2.6). The idea of Antichrist is necessary for those who hold the real progress of the world and yet would not be misled by its false lights. There is an important sermon on this subject by Bishop Harold Browne, Church Congress Report, 1883 ; see also Swete, Milligan, and Hunting- ford on places in Rev. ; Alford ; Wohlenberg (in Zahn's Kommentar) on 2Th. ; Bousset's Der Antichrist (Gottingen), with criticism of Gun- kel ; Gunkel's Schopfung und Chaos in Urzeit und Endzeit (Gottingen) ; Bishop Martensen's Christian Ethics (T. & T. Clark, or Berlin), suggestive on this subject throughout, last chapter on Antichrist ; Bishop Gibson's War- biirtonian Lectures, 1903-1907, suggestive as to Christ's eschatological discourse; and see art. in this Diet, on Thessalonians II. [f.e.s.] Antilibanus (Jth.1.7). [Lebanon. 1 An'tioch. — 1. The Greek capital of Syria, built by Seleucus in 300 e.g. (iMac.3.37,4.35, 11.13 ; 2Mac.4.33,5.2i,8.35,11.36,13.23,), men- tioned as near Daphne. Now the small town of Antdkia on the S. bank of the Orontes, with ruins of mediaeval walls and buildings, extending S. up the steep slopes of mount Sil- pius. Only a few fragments of Gk. texts have laeen found, with one of greater importance (Waddington 2713 a) at Daphne dating from 189 B.C., and fixing the site of the famous temple of Apollo, which the emperor Julian found neglected when visiting Antioch. The city lay on the main trade route from Assyria, and had a port [Sei-eucja] at the river mouth. 44 ANTIOCHIA It was made a free city by Pompey (65 b.c). and a pillared street was built by Herod the Great (i Wars xxi. 11). Seleiicus had made the Jews citizens of his capital (12 Ant. iii. i). The Roman emperors added amphitheatres, baths, and aqueducts. The city remained the capital of Syria down to 1268 a. d., when it was destroyed by the Egyptian sultan Bibars. "GATU UF Sr. I'AUL," ANTIOCIl. Nicholas of Antioch was one of the first deacons of the Christian Church (Ac. 6. 5), and a mission to the Jews of Antioch began after the death of St. Stephen (11.19,27), before the conversion of St. Paul (13. i), who returned to the city after his first journey (14.26), when the dis- pute concerning Jewish rites there took place (15.1,2) on St. Peter's arrival (Gal. 2. 11). In Antioch the " Christians " first received that name (Ac. 11. 26). St. Paul revisited the city in 56 a.d. (18. 22). — 2. Antioch in PisiDiA (Ac.l3. 14, 14.19,21 ; 2Tim.3.ii), on the borders of Phrygia (now Yalowatch), was also founded by Seleucus I., and was a Roman colonia ; also called Caesarea. [c.R.c] Antiochi'a (iMac. 4.35, 6.63 ; 2Mac.4.33, 5.21). [.\ntiocii, I.] Antlochi'ans, partizans in Jerusalem of Antiochus Epiphaues, organized by Jason, 4 (2Mac.4.9,i9). Anti'ochis, concubine of Antiochus Epi- phanes (2Mac.4.3o). Anti'ochus, father of Numenius (iMac. 12.16,14.22). Anti'ochus II., lTe to the quinquennial games in honour of Hercules. [Hellenist.] In 172 Joshua (who adopted the Gk. name of Jason) was de- posed in favour of Menelaus, who had offered the king a larger bribe. Antiochus marched against Ptolemy VI. (Pkilometor), king of Egypt, in 171 b.c, and took him prisoner in 170 B.C. Antiochus then endeavoured to con- quer the whole country. He unsuccessfully laid siege to Alexandria in 169 b.c. Another campaign in 168 gave, however, every prospect of entire success, until prevented by the ar- rival of " ships of Kittim " — i.e. the Romans sent Popilius to command Antiochus, under penalty of being declared an enemy of the Roman people, to withdraw from Egypt. On his return homewards through Palestine he found that Jason had attacked Jerusalem and deposed Menelaus. This gave Antiochus an opportunity of satisfying his arm}-, disap- pointed in their hope of plundering Egypt. He sent Apollonius with a large force to take possession of the holy city and punish the Jews for their unruliness. Two years before they had received a severe lesson, when An- tiochus had plundered the temple and " made a great massacre" (iMac.l.24); but now the king resolved to put down the law of God and compel the Jews to conform to the religion and practices of the rest of his dominions. He issued an edict " that all should be one people " (1.4iff.). All copies of the Law which could be found were destroyed, while burnt-offerings and sacrifices in the temple were forbidden. An altar in honour of Jupiter Olympius, pro- bably " the Abomination of Desolation " (Dan. 11. 31 ; iMac.l.54), was set up on the altar of God on Kislev 15, and on the 25th sacrifice to the heathen deity was offered thereon. But the cause of religious freedom was nobly upheld, at first by Mattathias, and, after his death, by his son J udas Maccabaeus, who rose in arms against the tyrant. In the battle of Beth-horon (167 B.c.) Judas utterly defeated the Syrian host under the command of Seron (and Apollonius ?), and overthrew an army of 47,000 men under Gorgias near Emmaus later in the same year. In 166 Lysias' army of 65,000 men was defeated at Beth-sura (Beth-zur), after which Judas captured Jeru- salem and cleansed and re-dedicated the temple. Meanwhile Antiochus had crossed the Euphrates at the head of an army and marched into Elymais. There he attempted to plunder a temple dedicated to Anaitis or Nanea, but was repulsed. He retired to Babylon, and marched thence into Persia, where in 164 he died, having failed in every one of his leading projects. He left the throne to his young son Antiochus Eupator. [Mac- cabees, The.] Winer, Bibl. Realworterbuch (of. Dan.ll. 21-45). [w.st.c.t.] Anti'ochus V. (Eupator, 164-162 b.c), son and successor of Antiochus Epiphanes, was only 9 (others say 13^) years of age when he ascended the throne. His father had on 46 ANTIOCHUS VI. his death-bed named Philip his foster-brother regent and guardian of the young king (iMac. 6.i4f.,55). But Lysias, governor of the whole region between the Euphrates and Egypt, had been previously entrusted with the care of the prince's person (3.32f.,6.i7), and now made himself regent. For the struggle between Philip and Lysias for the possession of the young king, and for the war waged by Lysias against the Jews, see Philip, 3, Lysias. Finally, Lysias overthrew Philip, but mean- while Demetrius, cousin of the young king, had escaped from his captivity as a hostage in Rome and landed at Tripolis. His claim to the throne obtained popular support, and he captured and put to death both Antiochus and Lysias in 162 b.c. (iMac.7.2-4; 2Mac.l4.i,2 ; Jos. 12 Anl. X. 1 ; Polyb. xxxi. 19). [w.st.c.t.] Anti'ochus VI. (1Mac.ll.54), king of Syria (145-143 B.C.), surnamed Geos, was son of Alexander Balasbyhiswife Cleopatra, daughter of Ptolemy Philometor. Brought forward by COIN OF AMIOCIIUS VI. Tryphon (Diodoius) as a rival to Demetrius IL, Antiochus was put to death by the ambitious general in 143 while still very young (I3.31 ; cf. 12.39). [Demetrius II.] [w.st.c.t.] Anti'ochus VII. (iMac.15), king of Syria (137-128 B.C.), surnamed Sidetes from having been brought up at Side in Pamphylia, was the and son of Demetrius I. (Soter), and is sometimes styled EvepytTrjs {Benefactor) and sometimes Ei)(re/377S (the Pious). After the capture of his brother [Demetrius II. ] by the Parthians, Antiochus made a treaty with Simon the Hasmonaean, granting him many privileges, among others the right to coin money. He then marched against the usurper Tryphon, who with a small force took refuge in " Dora, which lieth by the seaside " (iMac.15.ii), most of his troops having joined Antiochus. The latter besieged the town by land and sea, and, when Trypho escaped, pursued and overthrew him, recovering the revolted cities which had owned his sway (137 b.c). Antiochus had mean- while broken his agreement with the Jews, and demanded the payment of tribute and the sur- render of the tower in Jerusalem, which had been in Simon's possession since 141, from which year the Jews dated their freedom from the Syrian yoke. To enforce these demands he sent an army under Cendebaeus to invade Judaea. After some slight successes, the Syrians were entirely defeated at Jamnia by Judas and John, sons of the aged Simon. The latter with his sons Mattathias and Judas was APAltl! soon after (135 b.c.) treacherously murdered by a traitor, Ptolemy, son of Abubus, who then sent to invite Antiochus to invade the country. Having nothing further to fear from Tryphon, Antiochus marched against John H>Tcanus, 2nd son of Simon and his successor in the high- priesthood. Besieging him for a year in Jeru- salem, he compelled him to surrender and become tributary (133 e.g.), but, fearing Roman interference, granted him favourable terms. .\ntiochus then turned his arms against the Parthians, JohnHyrcanus and a body of Jew- ish troops accompanying him. The Syrians gained three battles and occupied Babylonia. This induced many provinces of the Parthian empire to revolt and join the invaders. But in 128 Antiochus fell in battle and his army was destroyed. His body was placed in a silver cof&n and sent by Phraates to be buried in Syria. Antiochus' defeat and death enabled Hyrcanus and the Jews to recover their liberty. [w.st.c.t.] An'tipas. — 1. Mart>T at Pergamos (Rev. 2.13), according to tradition bishop of that place, and martyred under Domitian (Menol. Gr.i'n. 51). — 2. [Herod.] Anti patep, son of Jason and Jewish ambassador to the Lacedaemonians (i Mac. 12. 16,14.22). Anti'patris (Ac.23.31), a town between Jerusalem and Caesarea, no doubt on the Roman road to the latter seaport. It was built by Herod the Great, in the plain of Caphar-Saba (16 Ant. v. 2), at a place with "rivers and trees" (i Wars xxi. 9), which does not apply to Kefr Sdba, though one passage — perhaps corrupt — seems to identify the two (13 Ant. xv. i). In the Talmud they are distinct, for Antipatris was on N.W. boundary of Judaea (Tal. Bab. Gittin 76a; Sanhed. 94 b), while Caphar-Saba was in Samaria (Tal. Jer. Demoi ii. 2). The true site appears to be at Rds el 'A in, the source of the river 'A iijeh, at the foot of the hills, on the Roman road to Caesarea, as the following distances indicate : Jerusalem Itinerary. Lydda (Ludd) to Antipatris, 10 miles (11 J). Bether (Tireh) „ „ 10 „ (9J). Antonine Itinerary. Caesarea to Antipatris, 28 miles (30J). Onomasticon. Galgula to Antipatris, 6 miles (6J). The actual distances (in brackets) are as close as could be expected. Fine springs here gush out under the ruins of the Crusader's castle, Mirabel. The ditch dug from Antipa- tris to the sea, by Alexander Jannaeus (i Wars iv. 7), probably canalized the 'Aujeh, and Antipatris is here placed " near the moun- tains," which does not fit Caphar-Saba (Surv. W. Pal. ii. p. 258). [c.r.c] Antothljah', a Benjamite of the sons of Shashak (iChr.8.24). An'tothite. [Anethothite.] Anub', son of Coz and descendant of Judah through Ashur the "father" of Tekoa (iChr.4.8). Anus' (il sd.9.48) = Bani, 7. Ap'ame, concubine of Darius, and daughter of " the admirable Bartacus " (i£sd.4.29 ; cf. Josephus, 11 Ant. iii. 5). APELLES APdLLOS 47 Apelles (Ro.16.io), honoured by St. Paul with the designation " approved in Christ." Horace (i Sat. v. loo) takes Apella as a representative Jewish name. See Lightfoot, Philipp-, note on Caesar's household, [e.r.b.] Apes (Heb. qophim) are mentioned in iK. 10.22, " Once in three years came the navy of Tharshish, bringing gold, and silver, ivory, smd apes, and peacocks," and in the parallel pas- sage of 2Chr.9.2i. Since peafowl are re- stricted to the Indo-Malay countries, where elephants and apes (if the latter term be taken to include the species commonly designated monkeys) are also found, there is a strong presumption that " Tharshish " refers to some part of India or Ceylon, unless indeed it be a general term for those countries. This is supported by Sir E. Tennent's statement that the Tamil names for monkey, elephant, and peacock are identical with their Hebrew titles. On the other hand, as African ivory is now carried from Zanzibar to Bombay and thence re-exported, so anciently peacocks may have been transported from Ceylon or India to the Zanzibar coast, and thence reshipped by Solomon's merchantmen with African ivory and apes or monkeys. A totally different in- terpretation is given, however, by Paul Haupt (John Hopkins Univ. Circular, No. 163, p. 51, and Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc. xlvi. p. 151, 1907), who claims that Tharshish (or Tarshish) is a Phoenician word, originally signifying the dressing of ores, but referring in this instance to the mining district of southern Spain. " Stones of Tharshish," he urges, are crystals of cinnabar from the Spanish mines. Ships sailing from the S. of Spain might obtain apes and ivory from the African coast ; but peacocks in this connexion present an ap- parently insuperable difficulty; but see also Tarshish for yet another explanation, [r.l.] Aphapsathcliites, Apharsites, Aphapsachites, names formed from cities or districts from which colonies had been settled in Samaria by the AssNTian ruler Asnapper (Ezr.4.9,5.6). The first and last have been regarded as the same, but none have as yet been identified. Asnapper has been identified with the Ass\Tian king Assur-bani-pal, but his records contain no names which can be compared with these. [t.g.p.] Aphek' {strong), Aphekah' (Jos.i5.53), Aphik' (brook), Judg.l.31. — 1. A roi'al city in Lower Galilee (Jos.l2.i8), perhaps N. of Jezreel (iSam.29.i). — 2. A town of Asher from which the Canaanites were not driven out (Jos.19.30 ; Judg.1.31). — 3. Noticed with Gebal, now Afqa, the source of the Adonis River (J0S.I3.4). — 4. A Philistine camp perhaps near Ebenezer (iSam.4.i). — 5. A city of the mishor o^ plateau of Bashan, now Fiq, E. of the sea of Galilee (iK. 20.25,26, 30 ; 2K.13.17). — 6. Aphekah in the mountains S.W. of Hebron (Jos.i5.53). [c.r.c] Aphepema (1Mac.ll.34), capital of a district added to Judaea about 146 b.c. It is noticed with Lvdda and Ramathem ; and is probably the town Ephraim. [c.r.c] Aphep pa, one of the sons of the servants of Solomon whose descendants returned with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.34 only). Aphi'ah, a forefather of Saul (iSam.9.i). Aphik'. [Aphek.] Aphpah', The house of (Mi.l.io), pos- sibly a temple at Gath. [c.r.c] Aphses', chief of the iSth of the 24 courses in the service of the temple (iChr.24.i5). Apocalypse. [Revelation of St. John.] Apoe'pypha, the collection of 14 books reckoned non-canonical by the English Church, which " the Church doth read for ex- ample of life and instruction of manners ; but vet it doth not apply them to establish any doctrine " (.Art. VI.). The primary meaning of Apocrypha is " hidden, secret," i.e. eso- teric ; but, much later, the word came to mean " of doubtful authority " or authen- ticity, and the books would more correctly be described as " Deutero-canonical " or " Ec- clesiastical." For the several books, see under their titles. For their relation to the canonical books of O.T., see Canon. [Versions.] Apollo'nia, a city of Macedonia, through which SS. Paul and Silas passed on their way from Philippi and Amphipolis to Thessalonica (Ac.17.1). According to the Antonine Itiner- ary, it was 30 Roman miles from Amphipolis, and 37 from Thessalonica. Now Pollina. Apollo'nius. — 1. Son of Thrasaeas, and governor of Coelosyria and Phoenice, under Seleucus IV. (Philopaior), i87ff. b.c (2Mac. 4.4). He convej-ed to the king the presenta- tions of Simon, governor of the temple, which induced him to make his unsuccessful attempt on the temple treasures (3.5ff.). — 2. A gover- nor of Samaria, sent by Antiochus Epiphanes with a large force against Judas Maccabaeus, but defeated and slain, 166 b.c He is pro- bably identical with the " chief collector of tri- bute " (iMac.1.29) sent by Epiphanes to Jeru- salem, where this " detestable ringleader " took advantage of the sabbath to slay numbers of the unresisting inhabitants (2Mac.5. 24-26) and occupy a fortified position (iMac.l.3off.). — 3. Son of Menestheus ; an envoy commis- sioned (173 B.C.) by Antiochus Epiphanes to congratulate Ptolemy Philometor on his en- 1 thronement (2Mac.4.2i).^-4. Son of Gennaeus, a S^Tian general under Antioc'nus V. (Eupator), c. 163 B.C. (12.2 ). — 5. A governor of Coelo- syria under Alexander Balas, who embraced the cause of his rival Demetrius Nicator, raised a large force, and attacked Jonathan, the ally of Alexander, but was defeated (147 b.c) near .\zotus (iMac.lO.69-87). Apollo'phanes, a SjTian, killed by Judas Maccabaeus at Gazara (2Mac.lO.37). Apol'los, a Jew from Alexandria, eloquent (or, though less probably, learned) and mighty in the Scriptures. He had been instructed in " the way of the Lord," according to the teach- ing of St. John Baptist (Ac.l8.25), and after- wards at Ephesus was more fully taught by Aquila and Priscilla. After this he became a preacher of the gospel, first in Achaia and then in Corinth (18. 27, 19. i), where he watered that which St. Paul had planted (iCor.3.6). When St. Paul wrote iCor., Apollos was with or near him (1C0r.l6.12), probably at Ephesus in 57 A.D. : we hear that he was then unwilling to journey to Corinth, but would do so at a more convenient time. His reluctance to revisit Corinth at the moment probably arose from his loyalty to St. Paul. Despite his wish, he 48 APOLLYON had been made to figure as a party leader, in opposition to St. Paul, among the Corinthian Christians, and his reappearance in their city might have revived that spirit of faction so sternly rebuked in iCor. He is mentioned but once more in N.T., in Tit.3.13, where Titus is desired to " bring Zenas the lawyer and Apollos on their way diligently, that nothing may be wanting to them." After this nothing is known of him. Tradition makes him bishop of Caesarea. It has been supposed by Luther and others that .^polios was the author of the epistle to the Hebrews. Apollyon. [Abaddon.] Apostle. I. Meaning and usage of the word. Literally "envoy," derived from Gk. dTTOffTfWu, to send on a special mission (Jn. 17. 18). Christ Himself was the " apostle " of the Father (Heb.S.i). The word was already in use among the Jews for the delegates who collected the tribute for the temple service, and was applied in a similar sense to Chris- tians charged by St. Paul or the Churches with various commissions, as in 2Cor.8.23, Ph. 2. 25, and probably R0.I6.7. But the ordinary N.T. application is to the twelve disciples and to those subsequently added to their body — Paul, Barnabas, Silas (and perhaps James, the Lord's brother). Though the name was con- ferred on the Twelve by Christ Himself (Lu.6. 13), it seldom occurs in the Synoptists (once only in Mt. and Mk.), and never in the Fourth Gospel, where they are always called " the disciples." It did not obtain currency at first, because discipleship, not apostleship, was in Christ's lifetime the primary function of the Twelve. Late in the ist cent, the name was assumed by travelling evangelists, and traces of this begin to appear in 2C0r.ll.13, Rev. 2.2. — II. Call and Training. Restricting the title to the Twelve, we may distinguish in the special instances given us three stages in the associa- tion of the apostles with Christ, (i) Their individual acquaintance with Him (Jn.l. 35-51). (2) Definite call to follow Him (Mk. 1.16-20). (3) Selection of the Twelve from a larger body of followers (Lu.6. 13). We next observe the twofold purpose of the selection as given us by St. Mark — that they might be with Him, and that He might send them forth (airocTiWri) to preach (Mk.3.14). These two clauses summarize the training of the Apostles: (i) the personal influence of close association with Christ, in- cluding His teaching by word and act ; (2) the mission on which they were sent (Mt.ll.i), which could not have lasted long, and must be regarded chiefly as part of the training of their faith, discretion, and courage (10.7,16,31), and as conveying lessons for future endeavours. As the training by association and teaching includes the greater part of the gospel narra- tives, it is impossible to present a summary of it, but one or two aspects must be given. The wandering life to which they were called (8.19, 20) was necessary in order to detach them from the world. The method of teaching by parables was stimulating to their intellectual life on the spiritual side. The miracles taught them faith in Christ's Person and in His power to sustain them (Mk. 4.37-40). Their Master's insight into their thoughts and His calm re- proofs dealt with wrong tendencies as they APOSTLB arose (9.33,34) On the side of belief they had begun by acknowledging Jesus as the Messiah, but the political conception of Messiahship which they held in common with the men of their time had to be transformed. St. Peter's confession (Mt.16.13-20) means that a real advance had been made. The last dis- courses (Jn. 14-16) assume a still greater ad* vance ; but the lesson was not completed till they looked back on all that they had heard and seen in the light of the Resurrection. It would be a mistake to regard the training of the Twelve as exclusively the training of missionaries or of rulers of the Church. The apostolic band is rather to be regarded as the nucleus of the Churcli, to which was to be committed a true conception of the Person, character, will, and work of the Saviour. — III. The Work of the Apostolate. Neither the gift of the Spirit by the risen Lord (Jn.2O.22) nor that from the ascended Lord (Ac. 2.1-4) can be regarded as confined to the Apostolic College. But the lead at once taken by it in the ad- ministration of the Church needs no proof in detail. More than twenty times in the first half of Acts the apostles are spoken of in the plural as acting in a body, and the new con- verts are described as continuing in " the apostles' doctrine" (2.42) as the norm of Christian faith and practice. The point which causes surprise is the slowness with which the extension of the apostolic mission beyond Judaism was apprehended, although defi- nitely authorized and enjoined by Christ (Mt. 28.19; Lu.24.47 ; Ac.1.8). TMs point is dealt with elsewhere [Paul], but it leads on to the necessary enlargement of the Apostolic College by the addition of men whose ante- cedents had prepared them for the work which remained to be done. St. Paul's energetic assertion of his apostolate in iCor.9, 2Cor.l2, Gal. 1,2, need not be dwelt on, and indeed it is from him rather than from any of the Twelve that the ordinary conception of the apostolic office is derived, though there is little proba- bility that the work of the Twelve at all re- senabled that to which he devoted himself. It is to be noticed that as time goes on the apostles associate with tliemselves presbyters and the body of the Church as depositaries of authority (Ac. 15), and are presided over by one who had not been an original member of the Twelve. [James.] The traditions as to the missionary activity of the apostles of the cir- cumcision are for the most part late and un- trustworthy.— IV. Qualification and Privileges. The one essential qualification was to have been a witness of the Resurrection (.^0.1.21) ; and, comparing iCor.9.i with iCor.15.8, this evidently means to have seen the Lord after He had risen. Their function was first of all that of witnesses (Lu. 24.48, and so repeatedly in Acts). In this qualification of first-hand witnesses the apostles could have no successors. Other marks of an apostle were the power to communicate the gift of the Spirit (Ac. 8.17,19. 6); to i)priorm miracles (2Cor. 12.12) ; and to found Churches (iCor.9.1.2). Ciiurches so founded were called " apostolic," and in the 2nd cent, were held to have a certain prestige or nobility (generositas). St. Paul exercised strong disciplinary authority directly, or by APOTHECARY delegates, such as SS. Timothy and Titus, over the Churches he had founded. When he claims this authority, he puts forward his apostleship (Gal.l.i) ; and a similar claim may be re- cognized in the epistles of St. Peter and St. John. The apostolate as the foimdation of the Church is emphasized in Eph.2.20 and Rev.2i.14 — passages which look back to the Lord's words to Peter {Mt.l6.i8). Sustenta- tion by the Church was an established privilege of apostles (iCor.9.4-7), though this is extended at a later date to the elders {iTim.5. 17.18). On the name and office of an apostle reference should be made to Lightfoot's Galatians, de- tached note on Gal.l ; on the training of the apostles to Latham's Pastor Pastorum, especi- ally ch. viii., ix., x. ; and to Bruce's Train- ing of the Twelve. For the relation of the apostles to the Church, Hort's Christian Ecclesia should be studied, especially lect. ii. [Bishop ; Church.] [e r.b.] Apothecary. The Heb. root (rdqah) means " to mix ointments or spices " ; " per- fumer " would therefore be a more correct rendering, which agrees with the context in Ex. 30.25, 35 and the four other passages in which the word occurs. [w.o.e.o.] Appa'im, younger son and successor of Nadab, in the line of Jerahmeel of the tribe of Judah (iChr.2.30,31). Appeal. For this subject in O.T. see Judge. Heb. law made no provision for appeal to a higher tribunal for the rehearing of a cause which had been decided by an in- ferior one. In N.T. times, when a local Heb. court failed to come to a finding, the cause could be taken before the two Lesser Sanhedrin in Jerusalem, and thence if necessary to the Great Sanhedrin, whose decision was final (Mishna, Sank. xi. 2). [Sanhedrin.] But this did not constitute appeal in the true sense. St. Paul exercised his privilege as a Roman citizen (Ac. 22. 25-29) when he appealed from the provincial to the supreme Roman tribunal — Caesar himself (25.ii). The magistrate could use his discretion as to whether the cir- cumstances justified an appeal (25.12,25), but he refused the claim at his peril (Suetonius, Galba, 9). [h.h.] Apphi'a, a Christian woman (Ph.2) whose name occurs between those of Philemon and Archippus, probably wife of the former and mother of the latter. Lightfoot has shown that it is a Phrygian name, and, so far, a testi- mony to the genuineness of the epistle, as her home, Colossae, was a Phrygian city, [e.r.b.] Ap'phus, "the Dissembler," a surname of Jonathan the Hasmonaean (iMac.2.5), perhaps earned by his feat of iMac.9. 37-41. [c.d.] Ap'pii Fop'um, a well-known station on the Appian Way, the great road which led from Rome to the neighbourhood of the bay of Naples. St. Paul, having landed at Puteoli (Ac.28.13) on his arrival from Malta, pro- ceeded under the charge of the centurion along the Appian Way towards Rome, and found at Appii Forum a group of Christians who had gone to meet him (ver. 15). Its position is fixed by the ancient Itineraries as 43 miles from Rome. Horace describes it as full of taverns and boatmen. This arose from the circumstance that it was at the N. APPLE-TREE, APPLE 49 end of a canal which ran parallel with the road through a considerable part of the Pontine Marshes. There is no difficulty in identifying the site with some ruins near Treponti ; and in fact the 43rd milestone is preserved there. [Three Taverns.] Apple-tpee, Apple (Heb. tappviah). The tree is mentioned in A.V., in Can.2.3,8.5 and JI.I.12, where it is named with the vine, fig, pomegranate, and palm-trees, as withering un- der the attacks of the locust, palmer-worm, etc. The fruit is mentioned in Pr.25.ii; Can.2.5 and 7.8. It is difficult to say what tree is denoted by the Heb. tappuah. The quince, citron, and apricot have been supported by modern writers. The fragrance of the quince was held in high esteem by the ancients. " Its scent," says an Arabic author, " cheers my soul, renews my strength, and restores my breath." The quince was sacred to Venus. Dr. Royle says, " The rich colour, fragrant odour, and handsome appearance of the citron, whether in flower or in fruit, are particularly suited to the passages of Scripture mentioned above." But neither the quince, citron, nor apple appears to satisfy all the scriptural allusions. The tap- puah must be some tree the fruit of which is sweet, and possessing fragrant and restorative properties. Neither the quince nor the citron is sweet. As to the apple-tree (Arab, tuff ah), tra- vellers assert that its fruit is generally of inferior qualitv. Moreover, the apple would hardly merit the character for excellent fragrance which the tappuah is said to have possessed. On the whole, Canon Tristram decides in favour of the apricot. The citron yields no shade, and the fruit is hard and indigestible. Oranges were unknown sufficiently early, and our apple will not meet the requirements — a term more- 50 APRON over which was used with the widest latitude. The apricot, a native of Armenia, was probably introduced as early as the vine. The Neapoli- tan name for it, crisuommolo, is identical with Pliny's chrysomela, a kind of quince, or golden apple. The apricot is one of the most abundant fruits in Palestine, and like the quince is made into excellent marmalade. There need be little hesitation in accepting it as the " apple," or tappilah, a word whose root signifies scent. " There can scarcely be a more deliciously per- fumed fruit than the apricot, and what can better fit the epithet of Solomon (Pr.25.ii)?" (Tristram, Land of Israel). It is right to mention, however, that one competent autho- rity at least (Post) still believes it to be the true apple. Col. Conder also, in our Palestine article, says that El Muqaddasi speaks of " excellent apples " from Jerusalem (985 a.d.). [For " apples of Sodom," see Vine of Sodom.] The expression ''apple of the eye" occurs in Deut.32.io; Ps.17.8 ; Pr.7.2 ; Lam.2.i8 ; Zech.2.8. The Eng. word here represents the Heb. 'ishon, "little man" — the exact equiva- lent of Eng. pupil, Lat. piipillus. [h.c.h.] Appon. [Handkerchief.] Aquila, a Jew of the province of Pontus (Ac. 18. 2), who had left Rome when the Jews were expelled by Claudius. St. Paul found him and his wife Priscilla at Corinth, and joined them at once, which implies that they were already Christians. St. Paul worked with them at their trade, the manufacture of tents from the rough Cilician haircloth, a product of St. Paul's native city of Tarsus. When he left Corinth, they accompanied him to Ephesus, where they remained till his return. For their share in the in- struction of ApoUos, see Apollos. Ac. 18. 26 confirms the impression given by R0.I6.4, that both at Ephesus and elsewhere the Gentile church owed much to Aquila and Priscilla. Moreover, they had rendered some personal service to St. Paul at the risk of their own lives (R0.I6.4). Hence their names are honoured with the first place in the salutations to the Christians at Rome, to which city they had returned at the date of that epistle. Later we find them again at Ephesus (2Tim.4.i9). Both at Ephesus and Rome, their house was a centre of Chris- tian worship (see Lightfoot, Col. 4. 15 note). Prisca (this form is used by St. Paul, and Priscilla, its diminutive, by St. Luke) pre- cedes her husband Aquila in four of the six passages, in which they are mentioned to- gether. This has been explained as implying, either that she was more active in Christian work, or that she was of higher social rank. Her importance in Roman tradition seems to point to the latter view (Ramsay, Paul the Traveller, p. 268). The jiromiuence given to Priscilla accords with the marked recognition of the ministry of women by St. Luke both in his Gosiiel and in Acts. [Damaris.] [e.r.b.] Ap, or Ap of Moab, one of the chief places of Moab (ls.15.1 ; Num. 21. 28). In later times the place was supposed to be Areopolis or Rabbatii-moab, i.e. the great city of Moab, a site still called Rabba, half- way between Kerak and the Arnon, lo or 11 miles from each, the Roman road passing ABABIA through it. The remains are not important. See Deut.2.9,18,29 ; and also Num.21. 15. Apa', son of Jether, an Asherite(iChr.7.38). Apab', a city of Judah in the mountainous district of Hebron, mentioned only in Jos. 15. 52. Probably the ruin er Rabiyeh, 8 miles S.W. of Hebron. [Aruboth.] [c.r.c] Apabah'. Although this word appears in A.V. in its original shape only in Jos. 18. 18, in the Heb. text it is of frequent occurrence. It is used generally to indicate a barren district, but " the Arabah" indicates more particularly the valley extending from the slopes of Hermon to the Elanitic Gulf (gulf of \4qabah) of the Red Sea. [Edgm.] S. of the Dead Sea the valley retains its old name as Wddy el-' Arabah. In Deut. 1.1,2.8 (.\.V. plain in both cases) the allusion is to the southern portion. In Deut. 3.17,4.49 ; Jos.3.i6,11.2,12.3 ; and 2 K. 14.25, both the Dead Sea and the sea of Cinneroth (Gennesaret) are named in close connexion with the Arabah. The allusions in Deut. 11. 30 ; Jos.8.i4,12.i,18.i8 ; 2Sam.2.29, 4.7 ; 2K.25.4 ; Je. 39. 4, 52. 7, become at once intelligible when the meaning of the Arabah is known. In Jos. 11. 16 and 12.8 the Arabah takes its place with " the mountain," " the lowland," " the south," and " the valley " of Coelosyria, as one of the great natural divi- sions of the conquered country. In all these cases R.V. reads Arabah. [c.r.c] Apabat'tine (iMac.5.3). [Akrabbim.] Apa'bia. The great peninsula stretching S.E. of Palestine, between the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, to a length of 1,500 miles, with a width of 700 in the N. and 1,200 in the S., and including the peninsula of Sinai, S. of Beer-sheba. The Arabia of St. Paul (Gal. 1. 17) is, however, the desert S. of Damascus, which, after 105 a.d., became the Roman province of Arabia Prima, with its capital at Bostra, E. of Bashan. This region had an Arab popula- tion yet earlier. The classic division of Arabia included the three regions Arabia Felix, or the Yemen (the south), in the S.W. part of the peninsula; Arabia Deserta, or the main plateau ; and Arabia Petraea, or the deserts of Petra and Sinai. The main provinces are now called the Hijdz, or the W. shores and hills, including the trading towns of Mekkah and Medinah ; the Nejed, or central plateau ; the Yemen, with its towns of Aden and .Mocha and its capital at San'aa {the tank, origin- ally called Auzal) ; Hadramaut [Hazar- maveth], the desolate region, inland of the S. shores, between the Yemen and Oman near the mouth of the Persian Gulf ; N. of the last two is the desert region of Yemdma. The great Nejed plateau is mainly a bare expanse of red gravel ; but Arabia is not destitute of rain, and includes oases and pastoral regions. It has always had a considerable settled popu- lation, called 'Arab el Hadr, or "Arabs of the enclosures," as contrasted witli the nomads ('Arab el liedtt, or "Arabs of the waste"). The trading route from the \'cmen [Sheba], passing N. to Eloth and Petra, appears to have been very ancient ; and the traders not only brought myrrh and other products of Arabia, but gold, probably sometimes from Abyssinia, over the straits at Aden. Arabia is first mentioned by name in the time ARABIA of Solomon, to whom the " kings of Arabia " brought presents, and whom the queen of Sheba visited, bringing gold, spices, and precious wood (iK. 10. 2, 10,15 ; 2Chr.9.i,9,io, 14 ; Ps.72.i5). The gold came from Ophir, in Arabia itself {Gen.lO.29 ; iK.9.28 ; Is.l3.i2) ; and Diodorus, shortly before the Christian era, also speaks of gold dug from the ground in S. Arabia (ii. 4). These riches were brought on " camels," no doubt along the Hijdz trade route. But Arab sea trade brought also " sweet cane from a far country," as well as incense from Sheba (Je.6.20) ; and Herodotus (iii. Ill) also says that the cinnamon in which the Arabs traded came (in 5th cent, b.c.) from some far land — apparently India. Isaiah (21.13) speaks of the thickets of Arabia, and of its " travelling companies," referring (see ver. 11) to the N.W. near Dumah. Jeremiah, again, mentions the " kings of Arabia " (25.23,24), also in the N.W. near Dedan, Tema, and Buz. In a later chapter of Isaiah (60.6-7) the gold and incense of Sheba are mentioned with the camels of Midian, and the flocks of Kedar and Nebaioth. In Ezekiel we find the Tyrian trade, about 600 B.C., to have included the sheep and goats of Arabia, and of the "princes of Kedar" (27. 21). Arab " nomads " fought as allies of the Greeks, according to a late account (2Mac.i2.11), against Judas Maccabaeus, and gave tribute of cattle. In most of these notices the region immediately S.E. of Edom seems to be in- dicated. St. Paul includes Sinai in Arabia (Gal. 4. 25), like the classical writers. Herodo- tus, in the 5th cent. B.C., speaks of the bowmen and camels of Arabia (vii. 69, 86), and gives an account of the riches brought by Arab -traders to the Phoenicians, who carried them to the Greeks, specifying frankincense, myrrh, cassia, cinnamon (from India probably), and ladanum, or gum-cistus. His account agrees therefore with earher O.T. notices (iii. 107-113). — Inhabitants. [Arabians.] The earliest in- habitants were Cushites (Gen.lO.7), apparently of the same race with the non-Semitic Akka- dians of Chaldea, and probably settling on the W. shores of the Persian Gulf. [Cush.] The Semitic inhabitants came from the same region (IO.26), and the name Joktan (the Qahtan of Arab tradition) signifies the " lesser " or younger branch of the Semitic race of Babylonia. The known regions men- tioned as inhabited by these immigrants include Uzal, Sheba, and Hazar-maveth, representing a dispersion over the S. and S.W. of the peninsula. The Ishmaelites (closely akin by race to Hebrews and Egyptians) appear, on the other hand, to have been tribes of the N.W., mentioned according to their "towns and forts" (Gen. 25. 13-16), for the known names in this list include Nebaioth, Kedar, Dumah, and Tema, with Kedemah or the " eastern " region. Arameans also, from Aram, spread S. to the same region, ac- cording to the Assyrian localization of Huz and Buz (Gen.22.2i) ; and other descendants of Abraham are noticed in Sheba and Dedan among the sons of Keturah, who also dwelt in some cases in Midian (Gen. 25.2-4). The little that we know of Arabia from monuments confirms this account, as the Arab and Baby- ARABIA M Ionian languages are akin, while the Aramaic of N.W. Arabia is nearer to the Hebrew. [Semitic Languages.] Accounts of the stepped pyramid of Ghumdan and the worship of the gods Istar, Sin, and Nebo in Hadramaut also indicate an early Babylonian influence. — History. At Zirgul (now Tell Loh), in Chaldea, the statues erected by prince Gudea (about 2800 e.g.) are of granite similar to that of Sinai ; and the inscriptions inform us that the stone was brought by ship from Md-gan (ship-port), which is the name given by the later Assyrians to the Sinaitic peninsula, or to some port in the gulf of Suez. These data, taken together, seem to indicate that, at this very early period, the Akkadians of Chaldea had cir- cumnavigated the peninsula of Arabia to reach Md-gan, and in order (as the same inscriptions state) to bring gold dust from Melukhkha, or Upper Egypt — probably Abys- sinian gold. The history of Arabia, from sources other than the Bible, does not, however, begin before the time of Tiglath-pileser III., who invaded it from Edom in 734 b.c A picture, accompanying his account, represents an Arab on his camel pursued by an Assyrian horseman, and might serve for a representa- tion of a modern Bedawi. The Assyrians, however, penetrated only into the N.W. of Arabia, on the borders of Edom. They attacked Samsi, successor of Zabibeh — each called " queen of the Arabs " — capturing 30,000 camels and 20,000 oxen, with the queen, and defeating Sabeans and other tribes. A certain Hazael from the same region was subject to Esar-haddon, and recovered from Nineveh the images of Arab gods which Sennacherib had captured. Esar-haddon (after 680 b.c) marched 900 miles from Nineveh into N. Arabia, to the region of Hazu and Bazu (Huz and Buz), which would thus have been not more than 200 miles S. of Elath. He defeated eight local rulers, including Akbar of Nebaioth, Mansaku of Marabanu (perhaps jM'arib), Yapah "queen" of Dedan, and B'ailu "queen" of Idilu (perhaps Uzal, Aiizdl, though this seems too far S.) ; and he afterwards received tribute from Yautah, the son of Hazael, including an additional fine of 10 manehs of gold, 50 camels, gems, etc. The frequent notice of queens besides kings in Arabia, in this age, agrees with O.T. notices of the queen of Sheba and of the kings of Arabia. In the next reign, when Assur-bani-pal was confronted (about 650 B.C.) by the revolt of Babylon, Yautah and his queen Adiya, joined by the king of Kedar, invaded Edom, Gilead, and Moab, but was defeated by Assyrian generals in Zobah, and deserted by the Nabathean king Nathan. He and his queen were taken as prisoners to Nineveh. Other Arabs had marched to Baby- lon to aid Samas-sum-ukin, the revolting bro- ther of Assur-bani-pal, and perished (in 648 B.C.) in the siege, by famine after a vain sally. Yautah II., nephew of the former Yautah, joined by Nathan the Nabathean, raided the Assyrian borders a little later ; and Assur- bani-pal marched 700 miles from Nineveh to the desert to confront them, but this measure- ment only brings us to the Nabathean country 62 Arabia ARAltf near Edom. The Assyrians suffered from thirst, but took many captives back to Damascus. After these events we hear nothing of Arabia — excepting the deserts E. of Edom and Gilead — until the Roman age, when Aelius Gallius (in 24 b.c.) con- ducted an unsuccessful attack on the Sabeans. The Arab sea-trade had prospered under the Ptolemies, and the Sabeans were celebrated for their wealth (see Horace, Odes i. 29 ; ii. 12 ; iii. 24) ; their power extended not only over the Yemen, but also into the low- lands of Abyssinia. They became the great carriers of the East in our 2nd cent., trading with India, and with Africa down to the Zambesi. The power of the Himyarites, or Sabeans, continued till about 522 a.d., when they became subject to the Arab kings of Axum in Abyssinia. Arabia was included in the Persian empire of Chosroes I. (about 541 a.d), and Mekka was unsuccessfully at- tacked by an Ab^'ssinian army with elephants in 570 A.D. Arabia became finally a free country under Muhammad in 630 a.d., though afterwards owing allegiance to Egypt and to the Turks. — Antiquities. The study of ancient Arab inscriptions began with the discoveries of Seetzen in 1810, Halevy in i860, and Doughty in 1875. Glaser aidded 1,000 texts, from M'arib and elsewhere, twenty years later. [Writing.] But none of these records appear to be of very high an- tiquity. The Assyrian and Greek influences are visible in the rock-cut tombs and buildings of the N.W. ; and Doughty's texts, from M'adn and farther S., are in an Aramean alphabet probably not older than 500 B.C. The coins and texts of the Sabeans, as far as they can be dated, belong to the 3rd rent. B.C., and those discovered by Glaser in Hadramaut and at M'ain are possibly quite as late. The Sabeans were ruled, it appears, by kings, who called themselves by the title maqriib (sup- plicant) on votive monuments, and " kings of Saba " ; as late as the 6th cent. a.d. they were still styled " Kings of Saba, Dhu-Raidan, Hadramaut, and Vamnat." The Sabeans and the Mincans (of M'ain, or of M'aan in the N.) fought one another; and one interest- ing text refers to a Minean king, Abiyad'a, as having a governor in Musran (Egypt). A king so named was set up by Assur-bani-pal about 648 B.C., and even Tiglath-pileser III. made an Arab chief a governor in N. Egypt. The wars between Yamnat and Shaniat [the south and the north), and the hosts of " Saba and Khawiliin " [Havii.ah], are noticed in a votive text in honour of 'Athtar (Istar), set up by Ma'an traders (Halevy, 535 and 378), who led caravans from Egypt to Assyria and the regions " beyond the rivers." This record has been sujiposed to be as late as 525 B.C. In others a trade with Egypt in incense is said to have taken the route to Gaza. — Religion. The Arabs worshiiiped many gods, symbolized by rough stones. Tiie chief deity was Aumo, the god of " heat," whose name is found not only in S. Arabia and among Salicans of Abyssinia, but even in Gk. texts of Bashan set up by (ihassan Aralis there settled. Samsi, " the sun," was female, the 'Athtar (Istar), " the moon," was male in Arabia. In Hadramaut the latter was adored with Nebo and Sin (Babylonian gods). The Assyrian texts speak of Adar-Samain as a supreme Arab deity, and among others were Nisr (Eagle), Al-makah, and Dhat-Asran (a goddess). In the Koran many Arab idols are named, and others by Herodotus, the chief goddess being Allat or Lat, who is mentioned in S. Arabian texts. [c.r.c] Apa'bians, the nomadic tribes inhabiting the country to the E. and S. of Palestine. Their roving pastoral life in the desert is alluded to in Is.l3.2o; Je.3.2 ; 2Mac.i2.11. [Arabia.] During the prosperous reign of Jehoshaphat, the Arabians, in conjunction with the Philistines, were tributary to Judah (2Chr.i7.11), but in the reign of his successor they revolted, ravaged Judah, plundered the royal palace, slew all the king's sons with the exception of the youngest, and carried off the king's wives (2Chr.21.i6,i7,22.i). The Arabians of Gur-baal (Mehunims from M'adn in Edom) were again subdued by Uzziah (2Chr.26.7). They were among the foremost in hindering Nehemiah in his work of restora- tion, and plotted with the Ammonites and others (Ne.4.7). Geshem, or Gashmu, one of the leaders of the opposition, was of this race (Ne. 2. 19, 6.1). In later times the Arabians served under Timotheus in his struggle with Judas Maccabaeus, but were defeated (iMac.5. 39 ; 2Mac. 12.10, 11). The Zabadeans, an Arab tribe in Syria, were routed by Jonathan, the brother and successor of Judas (1Mac.i2.31). Zabdiel, the assassin of Alexander Balas (1Mac.ll.17), and Simalcue, who brought up Antiochus, the young son of Alexander (iMac.11.39), afterwards Antiochus VI., were both Arabians. Apad', a Benjamite, son of Beriah, 3 (iChr.8.15). Apad' (Jos.i2.14), a royal city of the Canaanites, in the negebh region (Judg.l.i6). In Num.21. 1,33.40 " the Canaanite king of Arad " (see R.V.) is noticed. It is mentioned in the Onomasticon as 4 miles from Malatha, and 20 from Hebron. Now Tell 'Ardd, a ruined town 17 miles S. of Hebron, and 7 miles N.E. of cl Mill; or Malatha. [c.r.c] Ap'adus (1Mac.i5.23) = Arvad. Apah'. — 1. An Asherite, of the sons of Ulla (iChr.7.30). — 2. The sons of .^rah re- turned with Zerubbabel (I';zr.2.5 ; Ne.T.io). His descendant Shechaniah was father-in- law of Tobiah tlie .-Xmniouite (Nc.6.iS). Apaiti' (highland). Gen. 10. 22. The name in Heb. of the high regions of Lebanon and the Taurus (Syria in A.V.) and of the hills in N. Mesojiotamia, called more especially Aram- naharaim (Gen. 24. 10, see K.V. marg.), or " higiiland of tiio two rivers " — the liuphrates and the Tigris. The Svrian Aram included petty kingdoms called: (i) ARAM-ZOBAH, or Zobah (1Sam.i4.47; 2Sain.8.3 ; iChr.18.5, 19.6; Ps.60, title), mentioned (as in Assyrian texts also) with namascus, and extending N. in the .\nti-Lel)anon aloii),' the trade route of Tadmor : (2) ARAM BETH-RFHOR. or Rehol) (2Sam.l0.6). noticed witli the jireced- ing . (3) ARAM-MAACHAH (iChr.19.6). or I Maachah (2Sam.l0.6), apparently including ARAMITESS Hermon ; (4) Geshur " in Aram," near the preceding (Deut. 3. 14; Jos.13.ii, 13) ; (5) Aram of Damascus (2Sam.8.5,6; iChr.18.5,6), all these " Syrian " principalities lying close to the land of Israel on the N.E. In the loth cent. B.C. they owed allegiance to Da- mascus (1K.2O.1), and were allied a century later to oppose the Assyrians. Even c. 1000 B.C. the king of Damascus ruled Aram (iK.11.25, see 15.18), for "the head of Aram is Damascus" (Is.7.8). The Assyrians are, however, also called Arameans (Je.35.ii), and their language Aramean (2 K. 18. 26 ; Is. 36. 11). The family of Laban (Gen. 25. 20) belonged to the Arameans of Padan-aram, " the tilled highland " in Haran (Gen.28.2) or "the East" (29.i,4; Deut. 26. 5). In early Egyptian accounts, and in the Amarna letters, Naharina is often mentioned, referring to Aram-naharaim, otherwise rendered Meso- potamia (Judg.3.io) in A.V. As a per- sonal name Aram occurs (iChr.7.34) for a son of Asher, and in N.T. (Mt.1.4 ; Lu.3.33) for Ram. But " the father of Aram " (Gen.22.2i) appears to mean the ancestor of the Aramean family ui Haran (Gen. 11. 31). [c.R.c] Apami'tess, a female inhabitant of Aram the mother of Machir (iChr.7.14). [Aram.] Apain'-nahapa'ini(Ps.60, title). [Aram.] Apam'-zobah' (Ps.60, title). [Aram.] Apan', a Horite, son of Dishan (Gen. 36. 28 ; iChr.1.42). Apapat, a mountainous district in Asia, mentioned as the resting-place of the ark after the Deluge (Gen. 8. 4) ; as the refuge of the sons of Sennacherib (2K.19.37 ; Is.37.38; A.V. Ar- menia) ; and politically as the ally of Minni and Ashkenaz. The name is exceedingly an- cient, the Assyro-Babylonian syllabaries giving it as Urtu, and the later Assyrian inscriptions as Urartu. In the Alarodians of Herodotus (iii. 94) the first ;' has become /. Moses of Cho- rene gives the name of Araratia to the central province, but in O.T. it stands for the Arme- nian highlands in general — the lofty plateau overlooking the plain of the Araxes on N. and Mesopotamia on S. This district has an ele- vation of 6,000 or 7,000 ft. above sea-level. From its extensive plains spring other lofty mountain-ranges, having a generally parallel direction from E. to W., and connected by transverse ridges of moderate height. Both plains and mountains give signs of volcanic ARARAT 53 agency. As Armenia has the peculiarity of expanding into plains or steppes, separated by graduated subordinate ranges, it is far more accessible, both from without and within its own limits, than other districts of similar ele- vation. The Araxes, which flows into the Caspian, rises W. of either branch of the Eu- phrates, and at first runs N. ; t'le Euphrates, which flows S., rises N. of the Araxes, and takes a westerly direction, indicating that the fall of the ground in the centre of the plateau is not decided in any direction. The winter (Oct. to May) is severe, and is succeeded by a brief spring and a hot summer. Pasture is abundant, and wheat, barley, and grapes ripen at high altitudes, the vine being indigenous in the country. There are various statements as to the spot where the ark rested. Berosus the Chaldean sets it in the mountains of the Cor- dyaeans or Kurds (Josephus, i Ant. iii. 6), and Nicolaus Damascenus states that a mountain named Baris, beyond Minyas [Minni), was the spot (ib.). Baris is given more correctly as Lubar in the book of Jubilees, and was the boundary between Armenia and Kurdistan. In the Babylonian Flood-story the mountain of the ark is Nisir or Nizir, E. of Assyria. It is natural that the scene of such an interesting event should be transferred to the loftiest and most imposing mountain in the district. J ose- phus (i Ant. iii. 5) states that Noah's landing- place was called " the place of descent " (Apo- baterion), the site of which has been seen in Nakhitchevan, on the banks of the Araxes. The Armenians have so closely connected Noah with the district of Ararat, that Europeans have applied that name exclusively to the mountain, which, however, is called Massis by the Armenians, Agri-dagh (painful mountain, so Redhouse ; or snowy mountain, so Conder) by the Turks, and Koh-i-Nith (Noah's moun- tain) by the Persians. Rising out of the plain of the Araxes, it terminates in two conical peaks, named the Great and the Less Ararat, about 7 miles apart. The former reaches a height of 17,260 ft. above sea-level, and about 14,000 above the plain of the Araxes, whilst the latter is 4,000 ft. lower. The summit of the higher is covered by eternal snow for about 3,000 ft., and is of volcanic origin. Regarded as inaccessible, it was first ascended by the German Prof. Parrot in 1829 from N.W. He described a secondary summit about 400 yds. VIEW OF ARARAT, 54 ARARATH from the highest, and surmises that tlie ark rested on the gentle depression which connects the two. Below the snow-line there is a bar- ren and lifeless region. Argiiri, the only vil- lage known to have been built on its slopes, is the traditional spot of Noah's vineyard ; Nak- hitchevan, his reputed burial-place, is lower down, on the plain of the Araxes — History of the Tract. According to Sayce, the introduc- tion of the cuneiform syllabary into Armenia was due to the northern campaigns of ASsur- nasir-apli and his son Shalmaneser II. in the 9th cent. B.C. In 860 B.C. the latter attacked Aranie, king of Ararat, and captured the city Sugunia, and in 556 b.c. defeated him again at Arsasku, his royal city, which was destroyed. Pictures of the campaigns of Shal- maneser II. in Ararat are given on the bronze gate-coverings discovered by Mr. Rassam at Balawat (see The Bronze Ornaments of the Palace-gates of Balawat, strips A, B, G). In 833 B.C. Shalmaneser sent his general against Seduri (Sarduris I.), who, as he calls himself the son of Lutipris, seems to have been the founder of a new dynasty. He was succeeded by Ispu- inis, who associated his son Menuas with him on the throne. This last, who was a great conqueror and builder, claims to have fought with and defeated the Hittites. Argistis I., his son, followed in his footsteps, and states that he fought with the Minni and defeated the Assyrians. His son, Sarduris II., followed him, and continued the conquests of his pre- decessors ; but Tiglath-pileser III., seeing in him a dangerous enemy, invaded his country and penetrated to the gates of Turuspa (Tus- pas or Van). Ursa (Rusas I.) tried to make headway against the Assyrians, but killed himself in despair after Sargon captured Musa- sir, whose ruler, Urzana, had trusted to Ursa for protection. His successor was Argistis II., under whom the country prospered, as also in the time of Erimenas, to whose court the sons of Sennacherib fled after assassinating their father. His son was Rusas II., who built a great palace at Van adorned with various works of art. Sarduris II. made alliance with AS4ur-bani-aiili c. 645 B.C. The invasions of the Cimmerians and Scyths probably brought about the fall of the old dominion, and led to the rise of the Aryan Armenians, who, accord- ing to Herodotus (vii. 73), were Phrygian settlers. The district of Ararat was conquered by Cyrus in 546 b.c, after which there is no history in the true sense of the word. A prince named Tigranes (?) ruled in the time of the Parthian dynasty in Babylonia. See Sayce, .s.T'.. in Hastings, D.B. (vol. i. 1898). [t.g.p.] Ara'path (Tob.l.21) = Arakat. Apau'nah, a Jebusite who sold his thresh- ing-floor on mount Moriah to David as a site for an altar to Jehovah, together with his o.xen (2Sani. 24. 18-24 : 1Chr.2i.25). His name, written Oman in 1Chr.2i.15ff., 2Chr.3.i, has even more variants in the Heb. [Tkmple.] Apba' (Jos.i4.15, 15. 13, 21. 11), Apbah' ((;en.35.27 ; R.V. Kirialh-arba). [Hebron ; KlKJATM-AkllA.] Ap'bathlte, The, probably a native of till' XiiAiiAM. Abialbou (— Abiel ; 1Chr.ll.32) tlie Arbatliitc was one of David's mightv men (2Sam.23.31). ARCHITECTURE Apbat'tis, a district of Palestine (iMac.5. 23 only), perhaps a corruption of Acrabattine, the district or toparchy S.E. of Shecliem near the present village 'Aqrabeh. [c.r.c] Apbe'la, mentioned in i Mac. 9. 2 only, as defining the situation of Masaloth, a place taken by Bacchides. According to Josephus (12 Ant. xi. I), this was Arbela of Galilee, a place remarkable for impregnable caves, the resort of robbers and insurgents (14 Ant. xv. 5). The topographical data are fully met by the existing Irbid, a site with a ruined syna- gogue W. of Mejdel, S. of Wddy Hamdm, in a small plain at the foot of the hill of Qurn Ha((rn. The caverns arc in the opposite face of the ravine, and are called Qul'at Ibn Man. [Beth-arbel.] [c.r.c] Ap'bite, The. Paarai the Arbite was one of David's guard (2Sam.23.35). The word signifies a native of Arab. Apbona'i, River of (Jth.2.24). The Vat. MS. reads Abrona ; apparently the Khabur river [Habor] is meant. [c.r.c] Apchangel- [Angel ; Michael.] Apchelaus, son of Herod the Great by Mal- thake, brought up at Rome with his younger brother Antipas. His father's third and last will gave him the largest and most valuable share of the Herodian dominions, including Ju- daea, Idmnaea, and Samaria, with the title of king. The ratification of the will was depen- dent on the decision of Augustus, to obtain which Archelaus went to Rome. A Jewish em- bassy followed, praying the emperor to deliver them from such rulers as the Herods, and to annex J udaea to the province of S^yTia. Doubt- less the journey of Archelaus, and the embassy sent after him, suggested the similar features in the parable of the pounds (Lu.l9.i2flf.). Au- gustus confirmed the will, but gave Archelaus the title of ethnarch only. The words " did reign" (Mt.2.22) are usedloosely, and need cause no difficulty, for Josei^hus also speaks of him as king. His reign lasted till 6 a.d., when another deputation from Judaea and Samaria went to Rome to complain of his cruelties. The em- peror condemned him, and sentenced him to banishment at Vicnnc, where he died, [e.r.b.] Apchep. [Arms.] Ap'chevltes, evidently inhabitants of Erech who had been placed as colonists in Samaria (Ezr.4.9). ApchI' (J0S.I6.2), whence Hushai, David's friend, was called " the Archite" (2Sam.i5.32, 17.5,14 ; iChr.27.33). The " border of Ha- Archi" lay between Bethel and Bcth-horon. The name survives at 'A in 'Arik, 2 miles N.E. of the latter, though the Heb. aleph (as in the case of Ashkelon, etc) becomes a guttural 'ayin. [c.r.c] Apchip'pus, a Christian teacher in Colos- sac (Col. 4. 17), called by St. Paul his " fellow- soldier " (Ph. 2). As this last-quoted epistle is addressed to him jointly with Philemon and Apphia, it seems probable that he was a member of Philemon's family. There is a legend that he was one of the Seventy, and suffered martyrdom at Chonae, near Laodicea, but it li.'is no historic, weight. Apchlte. [Archi.] Apchltectupe. The fust notice of building style in O.T. (Gen. 11.3-9) refers to a tower of ARCHITECTURE burned brick set in bitumen [Babel, Tower of], describing one of the ziqqurat towers of Babylonia. The Phoenicians aided as masons and carpenters (iK.5.6,i8) in building Solo- mon's Temple and Palace, and the descrip- tion of these buildings (iK.6,7) shows that they resembled in style the contemporary architecture of the Phoenicians, Hittites, and Babylonians, being constructed of large squared stones, with roofs and pillars of cedar, and adorned with precious metals and with bas-reliefs, representing symbolic winged animals flanking palm-trees. Ivory seems also to have been often used in decoration (iK. 10.18,22.39 ; Am.3.15) ; lions and oxen were represented as well as the Cherubim (iK.6. 23-36), just as they are in Phoenicia and Baby- lonia. The ordinary Hebrew architecture [Cities; Gezer; Lachish; Palace ; Palestine] presents few special features of style ; houses and town walls being of rudely squared stones of no great size, or of sun-dried bricks [House]. The bronze pillars of the temple had, however, capitals as elaborate as those of Egyptian or Assyrian shrines. [Chapiter.] Stone struc- tures already existed when Israel conquered Palestine (Lev.14.34,35 ; Deut.6.ii). Many kings of Judah and of Israel were builders (iK.15.17,23,16.24,32, 22.39 ; 2K.12.ii,i2,20. 20,22.6; 2Chr.32.27-3o). After the Captivity the temple appears to have been restored in its original style, and on its original site (Ezr. 3.7,5.8 ; Ne.2.8). [Temple.] But after c. 200 B.C. the Gk. influence in Palestine led to a gradual adoption of Gk. style. The palace of Hyrcanus in Gilead built before 176 B.C. [Palestine] presents drafted stones 8ft. high and 20 ft. long ; it is adorned with carved lions : many details are, however, purely Gk. The tombs of this age throughout Pal- estine present rock pillars in their porches with Doric and Ionic capitals, triglyphs forming a frieze above, while vine bunches and other designs of native origin give a mixed character to this Jewish style. The art of the later Hasmonaean coins is, similarly, half Greek, half native. Herod the Great also adopted a similar architecture for his temples, the finely squared masonry being drafted after the Gk. fashion, and the stones being 3 to 6 ft. high, and sometimes 40 ft. in length (Mk.13.2 ; Lu. 21.5). He used the arch in building the great TjTopoeon bridge ; and at the Double Gate on S. side of the Jerusalem temple, the gate-house has four flat domes supported on two pillars 6 ft. each in diameter. Their capitals are of simple, semi-Egyptian design, and one dome is adorned with geometrical patterns in low relief, connected by a vine, such as also sur- rounded the Great Gateway of the temple both at Jerusalem and at SVa in Bashan. At the latter site the pillars are of semi-Corinthian style, like those of the royal cloister at Jeru- salem (Josephus, 15 Ant. xi. 5). The yet larger masonry at Ba'albek, Gerasa, and Rd- met el Khulil [Abraham' s tank) near Hebron, differs entirely — in the tooling of the stones, and in other details — from Herodian work, and in each case belongs to the great age of Roman architecture (2nd and 3rd cents, a.d.). The latest Jewish buildings— in Greco- Roman style^are the Galilean synagogues, which are ARETAS 55 also probably not older than 2nd cent. a.d. The Ba'albek masonry is marked with Gk. letters, while that of Herod has Hebrew ma- sons' marks. The Herodian style is best il- lustrated by tbe plates of de Vogiie's Temple de J erusalem, and by those giving the details of the SVa temple by the same authority, [c.r.c] Apctu'pus. The Heb. words 'ash and 'ayish, rendered " Arcturus " in A.V. of Job 9.9,38.32, as in the Vulg. of the former passage, are now generally believed to be identical, and to represent the constellation Ursa Major, known commonly as the Great Bear, or Charles's Wain. Niebuhr {Desc. de I Arab. p. loi) relates that he met with a Jew at San'aa, who identified the Heb. 'ash with the constellation known to the Arabs by the name Umm en-n'ash, or N'ash simply, as a Jew of Bagdad informed him. The four stars in the body of the Bear are named En- n'ash in the tables of Ulugh Bev, those in the tail being called el Bendt, " the daughters " (cf. Job 38.32). The ancient versions differ greatly in their renderings. The LXX. render 'ash by the "Pleiades" in Job 9.9 (unless the text which they had before them had the words in a different order), and 'ayish by "Hesperus," the evening star, in Job 38.32. In the former they are followed or supported by the Aram., in the latter by the Vulg. R. David Kimchi and the Talmudists under- stood by 'ash the tail of the Ram or the head of the Bull, by which they are supposed to indicate the bright star Aldebaran in the Bull's eye. But the greatest difficulty exists in the rendering of the Syriac translators, who give as the equivalent of both 'ash and 'ayish the word lyyiilha, which is inter- preted to signify the bright star Capella in the constellation Auriga, and is so rendered in the Arabic translation of Job. On this point, however, great difference of opinion exists. Bar 'Ali conjectured that lyyiltha was either Capella or the constellation Orion ; while Bar Bahlul hesitated between Capella, Aldebaran, and a cluster of three stars in the face of Orion. Following the rendering of the Arabic, Hyde was induced to consider 'ash and 'ayish distinct ; the former being the Great Bear, and the latter Capella, the brightest star, a, in the constellation Auriga. Apd, a son (Gen. 46. 21) or grandson (Num. 26.40) of Benjamin. In iChr.8.3 he is called Addar (LXX. Ared). Apdath (the field called Ardath : 2Esd.9. 26). Unknown, but suggested to be a cor- ruption of 'Arbath, " desert," indicating the condition of the land (cf. 10.21,22). [t.g.p.] Apd'ites, descendants of Ard (Num.26.40). Apdon', a son of Caleb ben Hezron by his wife Azubah (iChr.2.i8). Apeli', a son of Gad (Gea.46.i6). His de- scendants are called Apelites (Num. 26. 17). Apeo'pagite, a member of the court of Apeopag-us. The title is given to Dionysius (Ac.17.34). [M\rs' Hill.] A'pes (iEsd.5.10) = Arah, 2. A'petas, the name (Harith) of several kings of the Nabatean Arabs. — 1. A contem- porary of AntiochusEpiphanes (2Mac.5.8). — 2- "Aretas the king" (2Cor.ll.32),whoseethnarch (governor), at the instance of the Jews (Ac.9. 56 ARETJS I. ARISTOBULTJS 23-24), was on the watch to arrest St. Paul if he attempted to leave Damascus. This notice is of importance for the date of St. Paul's conversion. The evidence of coins shows that Damasci's was a part of the province of S>Tia till at least 34 a.d., and again in 54 a.d. But thn absence of Damas- cene imperial coins between these dates suggests that it may for a time have come into the hands of Aretas, probably by grant from Tiberius or Caligula. The city had five times changed hands since 85 b.c. The history of Herod the Great shows the Arabs ever on the watch for opportunities of en- croachment along the vv'hole eastern border of Palestine. Herod Antipas married the daughter of this Aretas, and divorced her to make room for Herodias. [e.r.b.] Ape'us I., king of Sparta 309-265 b.c, wrote, at some date between 309 and 300 b.c, to Onias I., high-priest 323-300 B.C., a letter which is quoted in the letter sent by Jonathan Maccabaeus to Sparta c. 144 b.c (iMac.12.7, 20-23). [Sparta.] Apgob', a tract of country E. of Jordan, in Bashan, containing 60 great and fortified cities. Argob was allotted to the half-tribe of Manasseh, and was taken possession of by Jair, a chief man in that tribe. It after- wards formed one of Solomon's districts, under the charge of an officer whose residence was at Ramoth-gilead (Deut.3.4,13,14 ; iK.4. 13). Argob means "stone heaps." In later times it was called Trachonitis, or " basalt region " ; and it is now called the Lejah, from a local word for " basalt." It is a very remarkable district, S. of Damascus, about 22 miles from N. to S. by 14 from W. to E., and of a regular, almost oval, shape, de- scribed as an ocean of basaltic rocks and boulders, tossed about in the wildest con- fusion, with fissures and crevices in every direction. But this forbidding region has many deserted villages, solidly built and of considerable antiquity. More than 100 Gk. te.xts have been copied here. [c.r.c] Apgob' (2K.t5.25). Probably a place. [Arieh.] Jarchi regards both words as local. Perhaps Riljib, a village 2 miles S.E. of Shechem. [c.r.c] Ariadi', ninth son of Haman (Esth.9.9). Ariapa'thes V. (Philopator), king of Cap- padocia 163-130 b.c For his obedience to Rome he was expelled by Demetrius Soter, 158 B.C., but he was presently restored. Letters were addressed to him from Rome in favour of the Jews, 139 b.c (1Mac.i5.22). Apidatha', sixth son of Haman (Esth.9.8). Apleh' (Heb. ^aayiV/;= " the lion " ; 2K.15. 25). The L.\X., in here describing the murder of Pekahiah by Pekah, reads yufrd tov before both Argou and Arieh, which suggests the translation "they slew him in Samaria, at a castle — a king's house — near Argob, and near the lion [monument]." [c.r.c] Aplel'. The etymology of the word is un- certain.— 1. The name of one of the chief men among the returning exiles (I';zr.8.i6). — 2. " The two sons of Ariel of Moab " (K.V.) whom Benaiah smote (2Sam.23.20; 1Chr.ll.22; see LX.X. In A.V. "lion-like men " ; see Moah). — 3. Applied to Jerusajein /Js.29.i,2,7). The I city, which has been designated Ariel (ver. i), is then rcinpared to Ariel (ver. 2), perhaps with reference to the blood that would be shed in the coming siege. In this respect the city would be as — 4. The Ariel of the Altar (Ezk.43.r5,i6, see R.V. marg.), the altar hearth on which the sacrifices were consumed by fire. Hence some translate No. 2 as " the altar hearths of Moab." It has also been suggested that the Ariels were altar-pillars on which sacred fire was fed by the fat of sacrifices. In the Mesha inscription, line 12, the Aral is something movable. Fire hearths on the top of monoliths have been found in Abyssinia (Theodore Bent, Sacred City of Ethiopians, 180 If.). In the first dynasty of Egypt the serpent, an object of popular wor- ship, appears as a fender around the hearth (Petrie, Relig. of Anc. Egypt, 21, 26). The derivation " lion [lioness] of God " has been suggested. See also Smith, Relig. of Semites, i. 469 ; Toy, Ezckiel in Sacred Books of O.T. 191 ; Sayce, Higher Crit. and Mon. 349, 376. [u.h.] Apimathae'a, "a city of the Jews" (Lu.23.51). the home of Joseph, "a counsel- lor " (see Mt. 27.57 ; Mk.i5.43 ; Jn.i9.38) who had a tomb just outside Jerusalem. The site of this city is uncertain. It might be the same as Ramathem (1Mac.ll.34) or Ramah of Benjamin ; but, according to Eusebius and Jerome (Onomasticon), Armathem lay N. of Lydda. They refer either to Rantieh, a village 6 miles N. of Lydda, or to Rentis {Onomast. Remphis probably for Remthis), 8 miles N.E. of Lydda, which " many said " was Arimathaea. [c.r.c] Apioch'. — 1. King of Ellasar, one of the four kings who invaded Palestine in the time of Abraham (Gen.l4. i). In the Babylonian monuments the name Eri-aku, king of Larsa (identified with Senqereh in Lower Babylonia) and contemporary of Hammurabi, frequently occurs. — 2. Captain of Nebuchadnezzar's body- guard (Dan. 2. 14). — 3. King of the Elvmaeans or Elam (Jth.1.6). ' [j-R-] Apisai', eighth son of Haman (Esth.9.9). Apistapchus, a Jew (cf. Col. 4. 10 with 4.11) of Thcssalonicu (.\c.20.4,27.2), first men- tioned at Ephesus as a travelling-companion of St. Paul, and as being dragged into the theatre by the rioters (I9.29). He accom- panied St. Paul on his departure from Mace- donia for Jerusalem, at the close of the third missionary journey (20. 4), probably going as delegate for the church of Thessalonica in charge of their share of the contribution to the poor at Jerusalem. He seems to have remained in Judaea during St. Paul's imprison- ment, and may have been one of those who were suffered to minister to him (24.23). He embarked with the apostle on his voyage to Rome, and was with him there when St. Paul wrote to the Colossians and to Philemon (Col. 4. 10; Ph. 24). For a discussion of "fellow pri- soner," sec I,iglitf(ii>t. Colossians, I.e. [e.r.b.] Apistobu'lus. — 1. (2Mac.l.io.) AJewof priestly descent, " teacher " of Ptolemy Philomctor (180-145 b.c); identified by CMement of Alexandria and Eusebius with the Hellenistic philosopher of that name. Aristobulus wrote anaccount of the Pentateuch, in which he contended that the Gk. philo- sophers derived their teaching from Moses. — 2- ARK, NOAH'S (Ro.16.io.) St. Paul salutes "them which are of the household of Aristobulus " {tovs (k tQv ' ApL(XTopov\ov). Lightioot( Philip plans, p. 175) surmises that this Aristobulus was the grandson of Herod the Great, and friend of Claudius. Assuming that Aristobulus died shortly before the epistle was written, it would be usual that his household, which would contain many J ews, should on passing to the emperor retain their former master's name. See also Sanday and Headlam, Romans, p. 425. Aristobulus is said to have been one of the Seventy, and is mentioned as bishop in Britain. [j.a.d.] Apk, Noah's. [Noah.] Ark of the Covenant {Ex.25. 10-15, 37. 1-5). (i) Names. The ark ; the holy ark (2 Chr.35.3) ; ark of the Lord ; of God ; of the Testimony ; of the covenant ; of the coven- ant of the Lord. (2) Structure. A chest 2J cubits long by i^ broad and deep ; of acacia wood, overlaid inside and out with pure gold ; a moulding of gold round the top ; four gold rings, one at each " foot " or corner, through which were passed two staves of acacia wood overlaid with gold, used in carrying it. These staves were not to be removed (but cf. Num.4. 6), and in the temple of Solomon were seen from the Holy Place, but not from the entrance to the Tabernacle (iK.8.8), probably when the veil was drawn aside for the high-priest to enter the Holy of Holies. The ark was made by Bezaleel (Ex.37. i), after the pattern shown to Moses in the mount (25.9). According to Deut.10.3 Moses made an ark of acacia wood before ascending the mount to receive the second copy of the Decalogue. It was consecrated with the holy anointing oil (Ex. 30.26), and stood within the Holy of Holies (40.3). When the tabernacle was taken down, Aaron and his sons covered the ark with the veil of the screen, then a covering of sealskin (R.V.), and over all a cloth of blue (Num.4. 5,6). The carrying of the ark devolved on the Kohathites (4.4). It was a complete coffer, on the top of which was placed a plate or slab of gold of the same length and width as the ark. The thickness is not specified (Ex. 25. 17-21, 37.6-9). The Heb. term for this covering is rendered " mercy-seat " in E.V. ; R.V. marg. ARK OF THE COVENANT 57 EGYPTIAN ARK OR SHRINE. " covering " ; " propitiatory " is better. (Ham- burger, Realencyc. des Judentums, i. igg, " Siihndeckel "). LXX. VKaar-qpiov, occurs also in Heb. 9.5, R.V, marg., Gk. " the propitia- tory." On the Day of Atonement the high- priest sprinkled the blood of the bullock and of the goat on the Mercy-seat (Lev.l6.14, 15). On this golden slab were fixed two Cherubim, one at each end (Ex.25. 18-20,37.7-9). They were of solid gold, of beaten work, and faced each other, their wings meeting above. This was the throne from which Jehovah would speak with Moses (Num.7.8g). (3) Historical Notices. At the river Jordan (Jos. 4.7) and the siege of Jericho (6.4ff.). In the midst of the congrega- tion when the Law was read at Ebal and Geri- zim (8.33 ; tabernacle set up at Shiloh, 18. i). In Bethel at the time of the battle between Israel and Benjamin at Gibeah (Judg.2O.27). In Shiloh (iSam.3.3) ; taken into the battle with the Philistines at Ebenezer (4.5) ; cap- tured (4.n), and set up in the house of Dagon at Ashdod (5.2) ; sent to Gath (5.8) and Ekron (5. 10) ; in the land of the Philistines 7 months. Returned by the Philistines, on a cart, with a coffer containing presents of golden mice and tumours (6.8). Men of Beth-shemesh smitten for "looking into the ark" (6.19); 20 years in the house of Abinadab at Kirjath-jearim (7.1,2). With Israel at Gibeah during the war with the Philistines (14. 18, 19, where LXX. has "ephod" for "ark" ; cf. iChr. 13.3, " We sought not unto it [i.e. the ark] in the days of Saul"). David had it taken thence in a new cart ; LTzzah was smitten by God for touching the ark (2Sam.6.6,7). Three months in the house of Obed-edom the Gittite (vii. 10,11). Carried by Levites (iChr. 15.2) into the city of David (2Sam.6.i2), and put in the tent prepared for it (ver. 17). With the army at the siege of Rabbah (11. 11). David would not permit the ark to be carried with him when he fled before Absalom (15. 24-29). Solomon had it placed in the Holy of Holies in the temple (iK.6.19,8.6 ; 2Chr.5.7). It was probably removed by Manasseh when he set up the idol {2Chr.33.7) ; restored by Josiah (35.3). Its ultimate fate is not known, but it probably perished when the temple was destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar (2K.25.9). There is a legend that Jeremiah hid the ark with the tabernacle and altar of incense in a cave on mount Horeb (2Mac.2.4-io). Men- tioned Je.3.i6 ; Ps.78.6i, 132.8; c/. Rev. 11. 19. There was no ark in the second temple (Jose- phus, 5 Wars v. 5). (4) Purpose. It was the receptacle for the two tables of the law (Ex. 25.21,40.20; Deut.10.2 ; c/. iK.8.9) ; and in a special sense the dwelling-place of Jehovah (Ex.25.8 ; iSam.4.4 ; 2Sam.6.2 ; iK.8.12,13). Hence it was more than a symbol of the pre- sence of Jehovah ; He was personally present in it. " Let us fetch the ark . . . that it may come among us and save us out of the hand of our enemies" (iSam.4.3). It was consulted by the Israelites after their defeat by Benja- min at Gibeah (Judg.2O.27) ; Saul was too impatient to consult it before engaging in battle with the Philistines (rSam.l4. 18,19 ; cf. iChr.13.3). Joshua lamented before it after the defeat at Ai (Jos. 7. 6-9) ; and Solomon worshipped before it (1K.3.15). In form it resembled the movable shrines in which the Egyptians, Babylonians, etc., carried their idols about. According to Heb. 9. 4, the ark contained, besides the two tables, Aaron's rod PLATE I 1 ^' USE OF BATTERING-RAM L\ SIEGE. (From a monument in the Ximrud GaUery, Brit. Mus.) ■586] PORTION OF BATTLE-PIECE. (From a monument of Assnr-bani-pal in Brit. Mns., showing shields, spears, etc.) ARMS, ARMOUK meaning of the Heb. (ndphaf), " to shatter," sufficiently explains its use. (2) Next in age would be the SZing(Judg.20.i6; 1Sam.i7.40; 2 Chr.26.14). Besides being a weapon for war, it was used by shepherds, as well as hunters. Its use was fairly universal, as Assyrians, Egyptians, Persians, and Greeks employed it in war- fare. It was made of the sinews of animals, or of leather, sometimes also of the hair of animals plaited to- gether, and was some five feet in length. In the centre it was broader than at the ends. When about to be used, a stone was placed in the centre, and the slinger took hold of the two ends and swung it round over his head a few times, and then let go of one end. (3) Next in order of antiquity comes the Spear. There were two distinct kinds ; firstly, the hdnith. Another word for spear is romah (called "lancet " in I K. 18. 28, A. v., and " javelin " in Num. 25.7, A..W., while R.V. uses this latter term more suitably for the kidhon), but the difference between these two is unknown. That there was a difference is clear from iChr.12.8,24,34, according to which the men of Naphtali used the former, those of Judah and Gad the latter : the Arab, rumh is a lance 15 ft. long. The spear consisted of a wooden shaft (2Sam.2i.i9), with a bronze (later, iron) point fixed into it (rSam.i3.19). On account of the bright metal, when polished, it was called a " flame " and "lightning" (see iSam.17.7 ; Na.3.3, Heb.). The other kind of spear was shorter, and was used for throwing (Jos.8.18). This was called kidhon. Of similar character was the shelah, the root of which word shows that it was some- thing that was thrown ; but otherwise we know nothing of its use. It was probably only another name for the kidhon. (4) The Sword (herebh) was made of iron (iSam. 13.19 ; Is. 2. 4). It was straight, andsometimes two-edged (Judg.3. 16). It was apparently carried in a leathern sheath {cf. Ex. 15. 9 ; Ezk. 21. 28-30), and fastened to a girdle on the left-hand side (Ex. 32. 27), out- side the apparel (1Sam.i7.39). It was used for smiting (2Sam.l2.9) and for thrusting (iSam.31.4). In Jth.13.6 A.V. uses the word fauchion, probably a curved sword (Pers.). (5) The Bow (qesheth) and Arrows (hiccim), car- ried in a Quiver ('ashpah), formed with spear and sword the commonest offensive weapons. Bows were made of wood, and sometimes of copper or bronze (2Sam. 22.35 =Ps.l8.34 ; Job 20.24 ; see Steel). Those of wood were probably drawnwith thehand(2K.13.i6); for the "steel" ones the foot was used — hence the expression " tread" the bow. At Susa Dr. Morgan found a small model of a bow made of bronze. The string of the bow was made of animal gut, ox or camel ; the arrows of light wood, with iron tips — in early times the tips were of stone. The quiver was worn on the back, or left-hand side, or else on the outside of the chariot, according to whether the archer was a foot -soldier or charioteer. Arrows were sometimes poisoned (Job 6.4). At other times, during sieges, burning substances were attached to them (Ps.7.13 ; Is.50.ii). (6) Another offensive weapon, used ARMS, ARMOUR 59 only at sieges, was the Battering-ram (kar). The root means to " dig," the reference being to the breaches made in the walls of the beleaguered city (Ezk.21.22[27]). It ran on wheels, and, judging from Ass>Tian sculptures, archers (shielded by a wicker-work screen) stood on it (2Chr.26.15). The word here used (hishshdbhon) means simply " contriv- ance." It was undoubtedly borrowed from Assyria. In A.V. and R.V. this is called en- gine.— Defensive, (i) The earliest form of defen- sive armour was the Shield. Of the two kinds mentioned in the Bible, the mdghen (usually buckler in A.V.) was the smaller. It was round, and easily carried, and was usedbyarchers (2Chr. 14. 8[7], where R.V. renders wrongly "buckler" for cinnd, and "shield" for mdghen), as well as by the ordinary swordsman (iChr.5.i8). The larger one, cinnd (often target in E.V.), covered the whole bodv, and was accordingly of oblong shape. Another word for it is soherd (Ps.91.4 only). The shields were made, at first, of wicker-work (cf. the shields on the battering- rams referred to above), covered with leather, and could therefore be burned (Ezk. 39. 9). Metal shields were used later (1K.i4.26ff. ; 2Chr.i2.9ff. ; Na.2.3[4]), both for ornaments and for war ; and, judging from Job 15.26, were sometimes ornamented with bosses. They were smeared with oil, either for the pur- pose of polishing or against damp. But this " anointing " may, in early days, have had another meaning, according to which the oil made the shield a charm against wounds. The shield was worn on the left arm, to which it was attached by a strap, and for its better preservation it was kept covered (Is. 22.6) when not in actual use. In the metaphorical language of the Bible, the shield generally represents the protection of God [e.g. Ps.3.3,28.7) ; but in Ps.47.9 it is applied to earthly rulers, and in Eph.6.i6 to faith. The shield is the only piece of defensive armour of which the early Israelites knew. {2)The Breast-plate, ov Coat-of -mail (shir- yon), was, it is true, introduced in one or two rare cases — probably from foreign countries — but it was only worn by the king (1Sam.i7.38 ; iK.22.34, marg.; c/. iSam. 17. 5, where the Philis- tine giant, Goliath, is said to have worn one). A similar word (shiryd) occurs in Job 41-26, where it is rendered habergeon in A.V. The R.V. marg. has " coat-of-mail," but in the text "pointed shaft." In Je.46.4 it is rendered brigandine by A.V. (coat of Mail, R.V.). In later days, it is possible that, owing to Assyrian example, breast-plates, as well as (3) Greaves, were more widely used. Greaves are said to have been part of Goliath's armour (iSam.17.6). Thev covered the shin, while the s^'on (leather boot) served as a protection to the feet. Though this latter hardly comes under defensive armour, it may be here mentioned, as it was only worn by soldiers, and was common among the Assyrian soldiery (c/.Is. 9. 4). Thes<^'o» was ancient, being mentioned in the Amarna tab- lets. (4) Like the breast-plate, the Helmet (qoVa) was, in early days, worn only by those in high estate (1Sam.i7.38) — it was of bronze. Judging from the inscriptions, it is possible that the Israelite soldiers wore leathern or felt caps ; for the inscriptions present to us Hittite and Syrian, as well as Egyptian, soldiers with 60 ARMY a head-protection, which represents a cap of this kind still worn in Syria. [w.o.e.o.J ApiTiy. I. Hebrew Army. From the time the Israelites entered the land of Canaan until the establishment of the kingdom, little progress was made in military affairs : their wars resembled border forays. No general muster was made at this period ; but the combatants were summoned on the spur of the moment. With the kings arose the custom of maintaining a body-guard, which formed the nucleus of a standing army. Thus Saul had a band of 3,000 select warriors (iSam.13.2, 14.52,24.2). David further organized a na- tional militia, divided into twelve regiments under their respective officers, each of which was called out for one month in the year (iChr.27.i) ; in active service he appointed a commander-in-chief (1Sam.i4.50). Hither- to the army had consisted entirely of infantry (4.10,15.4), the use of horses being restrained by divine command (Deut.l7.i6) ; but as the foreign relations of the kingdoms extended, much importance was attaclied to them for use in chariots. David reserved a hundred chariots from the spoil of the Syrians (aSam. 8.4). It does not appear, however, that the system established by him was maintained by the kings of J udah ; but in Israel the proximity of the hostile kingdom of Syria necessitated the maintenance of a standing army. Occa- sional reference is made to war-chariots (2K. 8.21) ; but in Hezekiah's reign the Jews were obliged to seek the aid of Egypt for horses and chariots (18.23,24 ; Is.31.i). With regard to the arrangement and manoeuvring of the army in the field, we know but little. A division into three bodies is frequently men- tioned (Judg.7.16,9.43 ; iSam.ll.ii ; 2Sam.l8. 2). Jehoshaphat divided his army into live bodies, apparently retaining, however, the threefold principle of division, the heavy- armed troops of J udah being considered as the proper army, and the two divisions of light-armed of the tribe of Benjamin as an appendage (2Chr.l7. 14-18). The maintenance and equipment of the soldiers at the public expense dates from the establishment of a standing army. It is doubtful whether the soldier ever received pay even under the kings (the only mention of pay applies to mercenaries, 2Chr.25.6) ; but he was main- tained, while on active service, and provided with arms (iK. 4.27,10.16, 17 ; 2Chr.26.14). The numerical strength of the Hebrew army is doubtful, the numliers, as given in the text, being manifestly incorrect. — II. Roman Army. The Roman army was divided into legions, the number varying considerably, each under si.x tribuni ("chief cajitain," Ac. 21. 31), who commanded by turns. The legion was subdivided into ten cohorts ("band," AclO.i), the cohort into three maniples, and the maniple int(j two centuries, containing originally 100 men, as the name implies, but subso(nicntly fmni 50 to 100 men, accf)rding to the strength of the legion. There wen- thus 60 ceiituries in a legion, each imder the conunand of a centurion (.Ac. 10. 1, 22 ; Mt.8.5,27.54). In addition to the legionary cohorts, independent coiiurts of volunteers served under the Roman standards. One of ARPAD tliese cohorts was named the Italian (Ac.lO.i), as consisting of volunteers from Italy. The cohort named ".Augustus'" (.\c.27.i) may have consisted of volunteers from Sebaste. Others, however, think that it was a cohors Auf^usta, similar to the legio Augusta. The head-quarters of the Roman forces in Judaea were at Caesarea. Apna' (2Esd.l.2) occupies the place of Zerauiah, I, in the genealogy of Ezra. Annan'. In the received Heb. text "the sons of Arnan " are mentioned in the genealogy of Zerubbabel (iChr.3.2i). According to the LX.X.. .Arnan was apparently the son of kepliaiali. Arnon', the river or torrent which formed the boundary between Moab and the Amorites (Num. 21. 13, 14, 24, 26, 28), and afterwards be- tween Moab and Israel (I)eut.2.24,36,3.8,i2, 16,4.48; Jos.12.1,2,13.9,16; J udg.ll. 13,18,22, 26). There can be no doubt that Wddy el Mojeb is the Arnon. Its principal source is near Qatrdneh on the Hdj route. It flows W. in a deep gorge, on the N. bank of which is the ruin 'Ar'air. [.Aroer, i.] The width of the gorge is about 2 miles ; the descent on the S. side is extremely steep. The stream is some 40 yds. in width, with a few oleanders and willows on the margin, and grass in places. [c.R.c] Apod' ( - Apodi, Gen.46.i6), a son of Gad and ancestor of the Apodites (Num. 28. 17). Apoep' (bare). — 1. A city " by the brink," or " on the bank of," or " by " the torrent .Arnon, the southern point of the terri- tory of Sihon, king of the .Amorites, and after- wards of the tribe of Reuben (Deut.2.36,3.12, 4.48; Jos.l2.2,13.<),i6: Judg.11.26; 2K.IO. 33; iChr.5.8 ; Je.48.19). Burckhardt found ruins with the name 'Ar'air on the old Roman road, upon the very edge of the precipitous N. bank of Wddy el Mojeb. [.Arnon.] Mesha of Moab on his stone (at Dibon) says (in 9th cent. B.C.), " I built Aroer, and I made the steps at Arnon." It is probably intended in Num.32. 34. — 2. Aroer " facing Rabbah " (Rabbah of Amnion), a town of Gad (Jos. 13. 25: 2Sam.24.5). This is probably mentioned in J udg.ll. 33, now unknown. — 3. .Aroer, in Is.17.2, if a place at all (see E.X.X.), is probably '.'Ir'ar in Bashan, 9 miles S.E. of .Ashtaroth. It is noticed in the .Amarna letters (Brit. .Mus. 64) with the latter, in 15th cent. e.g. — 4. A town in J udah, named only in iSam.30.28. Robinson identified it at the ruin 'Ar'arah, 12 miles E. of Heer-sheba. [c.r.c] Apo'epite. Hotlian the Aroerite was the father of two of David's captains (iChr. 11. 44). [Aroer.] Apom'. Thirty-two " sons of .Arom " were among those who rcturiu'd with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.i6). I'rohaiily a mistake for Asom (iEsd.9.33 ; cf. Ezr. 10.33), and therefore re- presenting Hasmtm (I"zr.2.i9 ; Ne.7.22). Appad' or Apphad' (Is. 36.io. 37.13 ; Je.49.23), a city in Syria. It is named with Haniatii, as ccMiquorcd by .Assyrians (2K.I8. 34,19.13; Is.10.9). Now 7'W/ krfdd, 13 miles N.W. of Aleppo. It is nf)ticcd in an Amarna letter (Berlin 158) in 15th cent. B.C. It was attacked by Assyrians in 806 and 754 B.C., and fell in 740 u.c. [c.R.c] PLATE III wwm ^^ ^^ ASSYRIAN WAR-ENGINE. (From Botta, pi. i6o.) ASSYRIAN CHARIOT WITH QUIVERS. iff- ,COAT OF MAIL A "SHAYRETANA" OF THE GUARD. p. 60] BATTERING-RAM. ARPHAXAf) Apphaxad' ('arpakJishadh). — 1. Son of Shem and ancestor of Eber(Gen. 10.22, 24,11.10). Schrader has suggested that the word means "the coast of the Chaldeans," and Hommel at one time regarded it as being an Egyptianized form of Ur of the Chaldees (Ur-pa-Keshed). Ewald rendered it "the strongholdof the Chal- dees," and the name has also been compared with Arrapachitis [Arrapkha) in N. Assyria. — 2. A king " who reigned over the Medes in Ecbatana, and strengthened the city by vast fortifications" (Jth.l.iff.). He is often iden- tified with Deioces, the founder of Ecbatana (699-646 B.C.). Niebuhr has suggested As- tyages (584-549 b.c), which would suit much better. As, however, this king was captured by Cyrus, he could not have been put to death by Nebuchadnezzar. Both identifications are very uncertain. [t.g.p.] Appows. [Arms.] Apsa'ces VI., a Parthian king, better known as Mithridates I. He is called king of Persia and Media (iMac.14.2), the two chief provinces of his kingdom giving their name to the whole. His general defeated the army of De- metrius Nicator, 138 b.c, captured Demetrius, and brought him to Mithridates, who treated him well, but kept him a prisoner till his own death, 130 e.g. Arsaces was the name of the first Parthian king, but was assumed by all his successors. fc.D.J Apsapeth (2Esd.i3.45), explained by Schiller Szinessy as a corruption of 'erec 'a/zt-rf//!, " another land." C/. ver. 40. [t.g.p.] Aptaxepxes (Heb. Ariakhshashtd. Akh- aem. Pers. A rtahshatrd ; Ass. Inscr. A rtahshaar, Artahsassu, Artaksatsu ; fr. Akhaem. Pers. arta ^[Skt. fita"\, Avest. areta, ereta, " high," " true," and khshntram, " sovereignty "). There is only one king of this name mentioned in the Bible, Artaxerxes I. (465-424 b.c), yiaKpdxeip (Longimanus). Ezr. 4.6-23 inclusive is an early addition to the book, probably a marginal note (Lord A. Hervey, Expositor, July 1893), just as Ezr. 2 is extracted from Ne. 7.6-73. This removes the difficulty which led Josephus (11 Ant. ii. i, 2) wrongly to identify Artaxerxes in Ezr. 4 with Camtjyses. Heng- stenberg, Christologie, ii. 143, etc.; Schrader (Riehm's Handworterbuch, s.v.) ; Sayce, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther ; Oettli (Strack u. Zockler'sKgf.Komm). [Persians.] [w.st.ct.] Ap'temas, a companion of St. Paul (Tit. 3. 12). According to tradition he was bishop of Lystra. Apts. The Hebrews do not seem to have been naturally an artistic people. Most of their works of art were either imported, or made by foreign workmen. The stern spiritu- ality of the Heb. religion, however far the practice fell short, and the forbidding of "graven images" by lawgiver and prophet, contributed undoubtedly to repress a free development of art. Yet it must be remem- bered that the arts in themselves were recog- nized as a gift of the Spirit of God (Ex. 31. 1-6). The period of the judges was certainly not favourable to the growth of art. Although the architecture of the Egyptians and the Canaanites was known to the Israelites, no trace of build- ing on any scale of splendour is found before the period of the monarchy, and then it is AsA 61 obviously an imported art. The temple and other buildings of Solomon were Phoenician in design, and partly also in materials. The decorations — e.g. the gold and ivory plating, the hollow pillars of brass (" Jachin and Boaz ") — are characteristically Tyrian. At a later period the prophets allude with dis- approval to the growing splendour of domestic Architecture (Is. 5. 9 ; Je.22.i4 ; Am. 6. 4 ; Hag. 1.4). Engineering works are attributed to several of the kings, notably to Uzziah (2Chr. 26), Ahaz (Is.22), and Hezekiah (2K.2O.20). These were chiefly concerned with fortification, and the conveyance and storage of water. Sculpture was mostly of foreign importation — e.g. the lavers in Solomon's temple (iK.7.40) — though apparently native artists had fashioned the cherubim for the tabernacle, and Aaron at Sinai had shown a too-ready skill in making the golden calf. The prophets mention sculpture to denounce it as connected with idolatry. Its methods are graphically de- scribedin Is. 44. 12-17. Cf. the imitation of this passage in Wis. 13. 10-16. Painting is chiefly connected in O.T. with the service of idols or with female adornment (see 2 K. 9. 30; Ezk.8.10, 23.14). [Colours.] The contrast which the art and civilization of neighbouring nations must have presented to the simpler life of the Hebrews is well seen in such passages as the famous description of Tyre, Ezk.27. Camb. Companion to the Bible (1893), art. on "The Arts, Trade, and Commerce." [a.r.w.] Apuboth' (R.V. Arubboth), the third of Solomon's districts (1K.4.10). It in- cluded Sochoh, and Hepher in the Hebron mountains, and was probably a district named from Arab. [c.r.c] Apumah', a place apparently in the neighbourhood of Shechem, at which Abime- lech resided (Judg.9.41). Perhaps el "Ormeh, 6 miles S.E. of Shechem. [c.r.c] Apvad', Apa'dus, a town on a small rocky island off the coast of Phoenicia, 13 miles N.W. of the mouth of the river Eleu- THERus. The Apvadites were Canaanites (Gen. 10.18), and great sailors (Ezk.27. 8, 11), allied to the Tyrians. It is mentioned with Simyra as early as the i6th cent. B.C. as taken by Thothmes III. In the Amarna letters, a century later, the ships of Ardda are noticed ; they joined with the Amorites in attacking Tyre (Berlin 51, Brit. Mus. 28, 44) ; and c. 1130 b.c Tiglath-pileser I. em- barked on a ship of Arvad to hunt dolphins. The second (or third) monarch of this name, in 732, received tribute from Matab'al of Arvad, and Sennacherib, 30 years later, from another ruler of the island. Assur-bani-pal even married an Arvadite princess. The island is now called er Ruwdd. [c.r.c] Apza', prefect of the palace at Tirzah to Elah king of Israel, who was assassinated at a banquet in his house by Zimri (1K.I6.9). In theTargum of Jonathan the name is taken as that of an idol, and in the Arab, version in the London Polyglot the last clause is rendered " which belongs to the idol of Beth-arza." Asa' (? healer). — 1. Son of Abijah, and third king of Judah (c. 927-886 b.c), was con- spicuous for his earnestness in supporting the worshipof God. In his zeal against immor- fi2 ASADlAS &lity and idolatrous rites he did not spare his grandmother Maachah, vvlio occupied the special dignity of " king's mother," to which great importance was attached in the Jewish court. Asa burnt the symbol of her religion (rK.i5.13), threw its ashes into the brook Kidron, and then deposed Maachah from her dignity. He also placed in the temple certain gifts which his father had dedicated, and re- newed the great altar which the idolatrous priests apparently had desecrated (aChr.lS.S). Besides this, he fortified cities on his frontiers, and raised an army, amounting, according to 2Chr.l4.8, to 580,000 men, perhaps an error in figures. Thus Asa's reign marks the return of Judah to a consciousness of the high destiny to which God had called her. The good effects of this were visible in the enthusiastic resistance offered by the people to Zerah, an invader who is called a Cushite or Ethiopian. [Zerah.] At the head of an enormous host (" a thousand thousand," the expression pro- bably meaning only that the host was too great to number), he attacked Mareshah or Marissa in the S.W. of the country, near the later Eleutheropolis (2Chr.l4.9). There he was utterly defeated, and driven back with immense loss to Gerar. The peace which fol- lowed was broken by the attempt of Baasha of Israel to fortify Ramah as a frontier strong- hold (1K.I5.17). To stop this Asa purchased the help of Benhadad I., king of Damascus, by a large payment of treasure taken from the temple and palace, forced Baasha to abandon his purpose, and destroyed the works which he had begun at Ramah. The "pit" which he sunk at Mizpeh was famous in Jeremiah's time (41.9). The chronicler tells us that his alliance with Damascus was censured by the prophet Hanani, who seems even to have ex- cited some discontent in Jerusalem, for which he was imprisoned, and suffered other punish- ments (2Chr.l6.10). In his old age Asa suffered from gout, and " he sought not to the Lord, but to the physicians." He died greatly loved and honoured. — 2. Ancestor of Bere- chiah, a Levite who resided in one of the vil- lages of the Netophathites after the return from Babylon (iChr.9.i6). Asadi'as, an ancestor of Baruch (Ba.l. i). The name is probably the same as Hasadiah (iChr.3.20). Asaer, an ancestor of Tobit (Tob.l.i) ; per- haps the same as J aiizeel or J ahziel, one of the four sons of Naphtali (Gen. 46. 24 ; iChr.7.13). Asahel'. — 1. Nephewof David andyoungest son of his sister Zeruiah. He was celebrated for his swiftness of foot, a gift much valued in ancient times, and was one of David's 30 heroes (2Sam.23.24). When fighting under his brother Joab against Ishbosheth's army at (iibeon, he pursued Abner, who, after vainly warning him to desist, was obliged to kill him in self-defence (2Sam.2.i8ff.). [."XnNER.l — 2. One of the Levites in the reign of Jehoshaphat, who went throughout the cities of Judah to instruct the people in the knowledge of the law (2Chr.l7.8). — 3. A Levite in the reign of Heze- kiah, who had charge of the tithes and dedicated things in the temple imdcr Cononiah and Shimei (2Chr.3i.13). — 4. A priest, father of Jonathan in the time of Ezra (Ezr.lO.15). ASCENSION Asahi'ah, a servant of king Josiah, one of those sent by him to inquire of Jehovah re- specting the book of the law which Hilkiah found in the temple (2K. 22. 12, 14 ; Asaiah in 2Chr.34.20, as R.V. in both passages). Asai'ah. — 1. One of the Simeonite princes who drove out the Hamite shepherds from Gedor (iChr.4.36). — 2. A Merarite (iChr.6.30) who took part in bringing the ark from the house of Obed-edom to the citv of David (iChr.l5.6,ii).— 3. The firstborn of "the Shilonites," who with his family dwelt in Jerusalem after the return from Babylon (iChr.9.5). In Ne.11.5 he is called Maaseiah, and his descent is there traced from Shiloni, explained by theTargum of R. Joseph on iChr. as a patronymic from Shelah, son of Judah, by others as " the native or inhabitant of Shiloh." — 4. (2Chr.34.20.) [AsAHiAn.] Asana' (iEsd.5.31) = Asnah. Asaph'. — 1. A Levite (iChr.6.39.15.17), to whom are attributed Ps.50 and 73-83; one of those " whom David set over the service of song in the house of the Lord" (Ne.i2.46 ; cf. iChr.6.31), was known later as " a seer" (2Chr. 29.30). After him were named " the singers, the sons of .A.saph " (iChr.25.i ; 2Chr.2O.14 ; Ezr.2.4r; Ne.7.44). — 2. Recorder or chronicler to Hezekiah and father of Joah (2K. 18. 18, 37 ; Is. 36. 3, 22). — 3. The keeper of the king's forest whom Artaxerxes ordered to supply Nehemiah with timber (Ne.2.8). — 4. Ancestor of Mattaniah, the conductor of the temple choir after the return from Babylon (iChr.9. 15 ; Ne.ll.17. — 5. (iChr.26.i) = Abiasaph ; cf. A.V. marg. and 9.19. [c.r.p.b.] Asapeel', a son of Jehaleleel in the gene- alogies of Judah'(iChr.4.i6). Asape'lah,sonof Asaph, head of the seventh ward of the Levite musicians who were set apart by David to " prophesy with harps and with psalteries and with cymbals " (iChr.25. 2 ; = Jesharelah. ver. 14). Ascalon. [Ashkelon.] Ascension, (i) The position in the gospels of the Ascension is obscurer than might have been expected. Whether St. Mark's original ending contained it cannot be certainly affirmed or denied. St. Matthew's gospel " cannot be fairly said to omit the Ascension, for it does not carry the reader so far, stopping short with the meeting in Galilee" (Swete, Apostles' Creed, p. 65). St. Luke contains interpolations. When these have been re- moved, the text runs : " And it came to pass while He blessed them, He parted from them, and was carried up into heaven" (R.V.). Some uncertainty remains about the last six words. Even if they ought to be omitted, the apostles' return to Jerusalem " with great joy " seems to imply Ascension — a parting from them different in character from any previous experiences (cf. Plummor on 5. Luke). Westcott and Hort consider that the Ascension belongs rather to the history of the Church than to the gospel, and therefore begins the Acts (Notes on Select Readings, p. 73 ; but see Chase in Camh. Tlieol. [assays, 397, midSyrn- Latin Text 0/ Gospels, p. 130). On the other hand, the pre- sent ending of St. Mark, which " belongs at the latest to the earlier sub-apostolic age" (Swete, Apostles' Creed, p. 66; see Conyheare, Expositor, ASCENSION Ser. iv. vol. viii. for ascription to Aristion ; Nestle, Textual Crit. Gk. Test. 266), contains it in the plainest terms. The Fourth Gospel con- tains significant allusions (Jn. 6. 62, 20. 17). In the epistles see Eph.4.8-io ; iTim.3.i6 ; iPe.3. 21,22. The analogy of the Ep. to the Hebrews suggests visible entrance into the heavenly place. Except, however, in this epistle, the Ascension is not assigned great doctrinal pro- minence in N.T., being subordinated to, per- haps assumed as included in, the Resurrection, of which it is the sequel and consummation (but cf. Ac. 2. 34). " On the whole it may be said that while the epistles give great pro- minence to the thought of our Lord's exalta- tion, they subordinate the process by which that exaltation was achieved ; nevertheless, they express themselves precisely as they would do if the fact of the visible Ascension were tacitly assumed as known in the general first principles of Christian conviction" (Our Lord's Resurrection [Oxford Library], p. 193). (2) As to the evidential necessity of the Ascension, a distinction must be drawn between Christ's spiritual exaltation and the visible process of withdrawal from the earth, (i) The latter was not necessary for His sake, (ii) but for the disciples' sake it was very necessary indeed, as terminating the period of manifestation, as suggesting transcendence of earthly conditions and exaltation to heavenly glory. The visible Ascension was not created by belief in His exaltation, but conversely, belief in the latter was strengthened by sight of the former, (iii) It was not only necessary for apostolic faith, it is necessary still. " A gifted critic of our time says he can well imagine that many minds exist of such a type that for them, at any rate, a physical joturney up through clouds is a necessary medium for belief in the abstract idea. May we not fairly ask whether in this case it is not also conceiv- able that the Almighty, Who is well aware of this uncultivated multitude and their profoundly human needs, should not have provided that symbolic medium for the con- veyance of the idea which the critic himself acknowledges to be necessary for them ? " (3) The difficulties presented to modern thought by the physical Ascension are : (i) Its relation to the laws of Nature. How could a natural body defy the principle of gravitation ? But Christ's Resurrection Body was a Body Spirituahzed, of Whose capacities and hmita- tions we can know practically nothing. What the apostles saw was a temporary form of visible self-manifestation, (ii) Its locahzation of the spiritual world. But such locahzation is a necessity to our complex existence. While it is true that heaven is no more over our heads than under our feet, it is also true that our half-material state necessitates symbolical expressions ; nor is it completely adequate to say that heaven is a condition rather than a place. So long as language describes the dead as the departed it must be justifiable to re- present the exalted as the ascended. We are compelled by our constitution to utterances not necessarily conforming with metaphysical exactness. (4) The dogmatic value of the Ascension, as expressing Christ's exaltation and heavenly priesthood. This we owe ASHDOD 63 cliieily to the Ep. to the Hebrews. The priestly functions of Christ are discharged in the heavenly sphere (Heb. 9.24,10.12, 4.14 ; "passed through the heavens"). Christ, by His sacrificial death, obtains entrance into the Eternal Sanctuary ; that entrance being the consummation of His great redemptive act. It is an abidingpresence in the Eternal Sanctuary, and permanently efifective. Thus the Ascen- sion realizes what the symbolism of the Jewish sanctuary shadowed and suggested. For St. Luke's text, cf. Graefe in Studien nnd Kritiken for 1888 and 1896. For the Ascension, cf. B. Weiss, Life of Christ ; Swete, Appearances ; Liddon, sermon, Our Lord's Ascension the Church's Gain ; Milligan, Ascension and Heavenly Priesthood ; Lacey. The Historic Christ, pp. i3r-i49. [w.j.s.s.] Ase'as (iEsd.9.32) = Ishijah. Asebebi'a (iEsd.8.47), called Esebrias (ver. 54) = Sherebiah. Asebi'a (iEsd.8.48), called Assanias (ver. 54) = Hashabiah, 7. Asenath ('ds^'nath ; ' Xaivved, 'Aaevid), daughter of Poti-pherah, priest of On (Gen.41. 45,50), wife of Joseph and mother of his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim. No satisfactory explanation has been given of this Egyptian name. The last syllable has been connected with the name of the goddess Neith — " she who belongs to Neith " ; but Neith is not a divinity of On. Others have recognized there the name Senit, or the fem. form, Asenit, of the masc. Asen. [e.n.] A'sep. — 1. (Tob.1.2) ; probably = Haze r, 8. —2. (Lu.2.36 ; Rev.7.6) ; = Asher. A'sepep (iEsd.5.32) = Sisera, 2. Ash (Heb. 'oren) occurs only in Is. 44. 14, as one of the trees out of the wood of which idols were carved. It is impossible to determine what tree is denoted by 'or en. The LXX. and the Vulg. understand some species of pine. Ashan', a city in the low country of Judah (Jos.15.42). In Jos.19.7 and iChr.4. 32 it is given to Simeon, and in iChr.6.59 mentioned as a priests' city ; it stands for AiN in Jos.21.i6. The notice (Jos.19.7) with Remmon suggests the ruin 'Aseileh, 3^ miles from Remmon. [c."r.c.] Ashbe'a, House of, a proper name, but whether of a person or place is uncertain (iChr.4.2i). Possibly the Aramaic form for Sheba (Jos.19.2). The family made fine linen. [Sheba.] [c.r.c] Ashbel', second son of Benjamin and an- cestor of the Ashbelites (Gen. 46. 21 ; Num. 26.38 ; iChr.8.1). [Jediael, I.] Ashchenaz' (iChr.1.6 ; Je.51.27) = Ash- kenaz, as R.V. Ashdod' (fortified), one of the five cities of the Philistine princes. It is now the mud village Esdud, on S. slope of a great sand- dune, 2i miles from the sea-shore, and 8 miles N.E. of Ashkelon. On the S.W. a fine khan lies in ruins, near a marsh which is of con- siderable size in spring. Gardens siu-round the village. (Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 409, 422.) In later times it is called Azotus (iMac.5.68, 10.84; Ac.8.40). Though claimed by Judah (Jos.15.47), it remained a Philistine town (iSam.6.17), probably till the time of Solomon. The inhabitants spoke a peculiar dialect even 64 ASHt)ODlTES in Nehemiah's time (Ne.13.23,24). Isaiah notices its capture by a Tartau, or general, sent by Sargon (20.i), which happened in 711 B.C. A " remnant " of its old population remained in 607 b.c. (Je.25.2o), and in the early part of the 8th cent, it was a prosperous Philistine town (Am.l.8,3.9 ; see Zeph.2.4) as well as c 530 B.C. (Zech.9.6). Judas Macca- baeus destroyed its idols c. 162 b.c, and Simon his brother burned its temple of Dagon in 147 B.C. The monumental notices include the capture of Ashdod by Tiglath-pileser III. c. 734 B.C., the capture by Sargon in 711, and by Sennacherib in 702 b.c The latter mentions Mitinti as its king. Mitinti had been estab- lished after the defeat of Yavan, an usurper of the throne of Azuri and of his brother Ahimiti, established by Sargon, Yavan being betrayed by the Pharaoh to whom he fled. A Mitinti (in 734 B.C.) was also king of Ashkelon. In 680 B.C. Esar-haddon received tribute from Ahimelek, king of Ashdod. [c.r.c] Ash'dodites, the inhabitants of Ashdod (Ne.4.7) ; called Ashdothites in Jos.13.3. Ashdoth'-pisgrah' (//if streams of Pisgah ; Deut. 3.17,4.49 ; Jos.12.3,13.20), the stream immediately N. of the ridge of Nebo. There are two springs ('Ayiin iMiisa) noticed by St. Silvia in 380 a.d., and called " the baths of Moses " by Antoninus Martyr c. 570 a.d. One on N. flows to a precipice 30 ft. high, and forms a waterfall ; about 100 ft. farther W., on S. of this stream, a second spring forms a shallow pool 8 ft. across, with a pebbly bed, this stream joins the other, which accounts for the plur. in the Heb. (Surv. E. Pal. pp. 89-90.) ^ [c.R.c] Ashep' (in Apoc. and N.T., Aser), Jacob's eighth son, and the second of Zilpah, Leah's maid. He was named "happy" from Leah's exclamation at his birth (Gen.30.12,13). He is recorded to have had four sons and a daughter (46.17; iChr.7.30; cf. Num. 26. 44-47). In the wilderness, under I'agiel (Num. 2.27), the tribe marched on the N. flank. Its numbers in- creased (1.41,26.47), but it was not one of the strongest tribes. The surveyor selected from it was Ahihud (34.27), and the spy was Sethur (13. 13). In the blessing of Jacob we read, " Asher, his bread shall be fat " (Gen. 49.20, R.V. marg.) ; and the blessing of Moses, which refers to the meaning of the name, pre- dicts that Asher shall " dip his f(K)t in oil " (Deut. 33.24), no doubt in allusion to the olive groves on the low hills of the assigned lot. The tribe stood on Ebal to respond to the curses of the law (27.13). Asher did not join in Barak's revolt, but " sat still at the haven of the sea, and abode in his creeks " (K.V. Judg.5.17). The tribe was probably weak, and had not succeeded in conquering the Phoenician seaports of Accho, Zidon, etc. (1. 31). It, however, aided Ciideon (6.35,7.23). It formed Solomon's ninth district (iK.4.i6), but is omitted from the account of David's census (iChr. 27. 16-22), though the warriors of Asher are elsewhere noticed in his time (7.40,12.36). Some of the tribe came to Hezekiah's passover (2Chr.3O.11), and the name occurs in Lzckiel (48.2,3,34). 'n N.T. the projihetcss Anna is mentioned as a de- scendant of Aser (Lu. 2.36), and the name of ASHER the tribe appears last in Rev.7.6. The Tribal Lot included some 300 square miles of shore plains and low hills W. of Naphtali (Jos.l9. 34) and N. of Manasseh (17. 10,11), and this included fertile and well-watered corn lands, and hills fit for the olive, fig, and vine. The W. border was the sea " to Carmel west- wards " ( 19.26), including " the region of AcHziB " (R.V. ver. 29), but not the cities of .^ccho, Tyre, Hosah, and Sidon, held by the Canaanites. Carmel was apparently the S. boundary ; for though Dor belonged to Asher, it was held by iManasseh (17.ii), and Josephus (5 Aiil. i. 23) includes Dora in the latter tribe, and speaks of Asher as holding the " valley " over against Sidon. The N. border was pro- bably extended after David's conquests in Syria. The E. border marched with Naphtali and with Zebulun, running S. to Neiel, and thence W. to Bfth-dagon (19.27). Appar- ently the shore S. of Accho was claimed by .A.sher to the foot of the Carmel promontory, and it has been thought that the " haven " (Judg.5.17, R.V.) of Asher was the later town of Haifa (at S. end of the bay of Accho), which is mentioned in the Talmud (Tal. Bab. Sabbath 26 a). [c.r.c] Ashep' (Jos.17.7), a place on the border of Manasseh mentioned with Mich- METHAH. The description is not easily followed, as these ancient names have not survived. The LXX. (Vat. MS.) has quite another reading : " And the border of the sons of Manasseh was Delanath [Sr]\ai>dff\ which is opposite the sons of Anath, and placed on the border on lamin [Heb. right hand, or S.] and lassib, on the spring Taph- thoth " (Heb. En-tappuah). Anath may be connected with Anuath (Josephus, 3 Wars iii. 5), on the border of Samaria, placed by the Onomasttcon 15 Roman miles S. of Shechem ; now the spring 'Aina, near Borkeos (Berqit), with which it is noticed. The site of lassib (representing Heb. Yashubi, A.V. inhabitants) would thus be Ydsuf, a village 2 miles N.W. of Berqit. It has a fine spring, which may be the En-tappuah, or " spring of apples." This line agrees with the situation of the river Kanah, near Tappuah (Jos.16.8), for Wddy Qdnct rises at Yasuf. It also agrees with the supposition that Michmethah was the Mukhnah Plain. The name Asher does not occur anywhere near. [c.r.c] Ashepah', and plur. Ashepim' (three times Asheroth), the original word retained by R.V., which A. v., following LXX. and Vulg., translates " grove, groves." It is usually de- fined by the article, and in the great majority of the passages it evidently denotes a wooden stake or pole, erected in the vicinity of an altar, and often occurs in conjunction with a stone pillar or obelisk (niacfebhd). It was a feature of the Canaanite worship, which the Israelites were commanded to uproot (Ex.34. 13 ; Deut. 16.21 ; Judg.6.25), but to which they largely conformed (2K. 17.10 ; Is. 27. 9; Mi.5.14), even in connexion with the temple at Jerusalem (2K.23.6). What was its original intention is not clear, whether merely to indicate a sacred locaUty, or more probably to be a symbol of the deity that was worshipped, as, e.g., in Judg.6.25, where one is found beside an altar of Baal. Some have supposed that there was a Canaanite goddess Ashera, of which the post was the symbol ; and some countenance is given to this by the manner in which later writers, recognizing the idolatrous nature of the object, speak of it (2K.2I.7 ; cf. ver. 3,23.7) as of an idol. The inscriptions and monuments can scarcely be said to give conclusive evidence of the existence of a goddess so named. Ash- toreth is spelled differently. [j-R-] Ash'epites, descendants of Asher, and members of his tribe (Judg.l.32). Ashes. The ashes on the altar of burnt- offering were gathered into a cavity in its sur- face. On the days of the three solemn festi- vals they were not removed until the next morning, the priests casting lots for the office. The ashes of a red heifer burnt entire, accord- ing to regulations prescribed in Num.19, had the ceremonial efficacy of purifying the un- clean (Heb. 9.13), but of polluting the clean. [Sacrifice.] Ashes about the person, especi- ally on the head, were used as a sign of sorrow. [Mourning.] Ashima', a deity whose worship was in- troduced into Samaria by the Hamathite colonists whom the Assyrian king settled there (2 K. 17.30). Nothing further is known about the name. [a.h.s.] Ashkelon', Askelon', Ascalon', one of the five cities of the Philistine lords, now the ruined fortress 'Asqaldn on low cliffs with a small port, between Ashdod and Gaza ; inhabited by Eshkalonites (J0S.I3.3). It is not mentioned as belonging to Judah (see Jos.15.45-47) even in Judges (I.18), according ASHTEBOTH KAENAIM 65 to the LXX.^ reading^" took not," which agrees with ver. 19. It was a Philistine city in the time of Samson (Judg.i4.19), and of Samuel (iSam.6.17) and David (2Sam.l.2o). It still had a Philistine king in 6th^cent. b.c. (Je.25.2o; Am.1.8 : see Zeph. 2.4,7 ; Zech.9.5). It surrendered to Jonathan the Hasmonaean in 147 B.C. (iMac.l0.86,11.6o). The Jerusalem Talmud [Shebiith vi. i) places it just outside Judaea. Herod the Great adorned the city (i Wars xxi. 11), which continued to be famous down to 1192 a.d., when the walls, rebuilt by Richard Lionheart, were destroyed by Saladin. They still lie in ruins ; the interior is covered partly with sand, partly with gardens. The lake of the Philistine goddess Derceto (Diodorus Sic. ii. i) was probably at El Jurah (the hollow), just N. of the walls. Semitic rulers of Askaluna are noticed in the Amama tablets as subject to Egypt c. 1480 B.C., but the place was taken by the 'Abiri, or gave tribute (Berlin 103, 119, 121, 122, 129 ; Brit. Mus. 52, 53, 54, 74). It was recaptured about 150 years later by Ramses II. In 734 e.g. Mitinti of Ash- kelon rebelled against Tiglath-pileser III., but died, leaving a son, Rukibti, who sub- mitted to Assyria. In 702 e.g. Sermacherib took the city, and sent its king Zidka with his family prisoners to Assyria, establishing Sar- ludari, son of Rukibti, in his stead. A seal found near Ascalon represents a man-fish. The kings of the 15th cent. e.g. bore the names Dagon-takala, and Yamir-Dagon, showing the worship of this god by a Semitic race. [Dagon.] [g.r.c.] Ashkenaz', eldest son of Gomer (Gen. 10. 3). In Je.51.27 Ashchenaz is coupled with Axarat and Minni. Hence the name has been identified with that of the Asguza (identified by Wincklerwith the classical Scythians), who together with the Medes and Cimmerians (or Gomer) attacked Assyria in the reign of Esar- haddon. Others see in it the Askaeni of lake Ascanius in Asia Minor. [a.h.s.] Ashnah', the name of two cities, both in the sh'pheld of Judah : (i) named between Zoreah and Zanoah (Jos. 15. 33) ; and (2) between Jiphtah and Nezib (Jos. 15. 43). Neither of the two is known. [g.r.c] Ashpenaz', the master of the eunuchs of Nebuchadnezzar (Dan.1.3). Ashpiel', properly Asriel' (iChr.7.14). Ashtapoth. [Ashteroth Karnaim.] Ashte'pathite, an inhabitant of Ashta- roth. Uzzia the Ashterathite was one of David's mighty men (1Chr.ll.44). Ashtepoth' Kapna'lm {the horned Ash- toreths), one of the two capitals of Og, king of Bashan, a city of Rephaim (" giants ") in Abraham's time (Gen.14.5), otherwise Ashta- roth only (Deut. 1.4; Jos.9.io,12.4) ; given to Manasseh (Jos.i3.31), and to the Levites (iChr. 6.71). It is called later Carnaim, or Carnion (iMac.5.26; 2Mac.l2.2i,26), and was near a " brook," having a temple which J udas Macca- baeus destroyed (iMac.5.42-44). Eusebius {Onomasttcon) places it 6 Roman miles from Edrei, but the passage is corrupt in the Gk. — probably 16 is the proper reading. Now the ruined town, Tell 'Ashtarah, 16 miles W. of Edrei. The site stands 80 ft. above the ao ASHTORETH plain, and remains of fortifications are trace- able. It is well watered by a fine " brook," running S. on its W. (Schumacher, Across the Jordan, p. 209). It was evidently named from a temple of Ashtoreth (Atergatis, 2Mac.i2.26). In the Amarna tablets of 15th cent. B.C. it is called 'Astarti (Brit. Mus. 43, 64), and is con- nected with seven cities, all of which retain their names in the same district. It appears as 'Astaratu in the list of Thothmes III. (No. 28) a century earlier. [c.r.c] Ashtoreth, the chief female divinity of the Canaanites and the counterpart of Baal. As there were many forms of Baal, there were correspondingly many forms of Ashtoreth, collectively spoken of as Ashtaroth (Judg.lO. 6; iSam.7.4). Originally Ashtoreth had been derived from Babylonia, where she was called Istar and identified with the evening star. When the identity of the evening and morning stars became known, the morning star also was identified with her, and she was described as androgynous, both male and female. In Canaan, however, her male and female attri- butes were divided ; the female Istar was pro- vided with the feminine suffix (th) and in time identified with the moon (which was a male deity among the Babylonians), while the male Istar survived among the Moabites, 'Ashtar on the Moabite Stone being identified with the god Chemosh. In South Arabia, too, we find 'Athtar (for 'Ashtar) without the feminine suffix. In Babylonia and Assyria Istar was the virgin goddess of war and love, in whose honour prostitution was practised. Doves were sacred to her, and in later times the Syrians united her name with that of the god- dess 'Ati, whence the classical Atargatis. The Phoenician colonists in Cyprus carried the wor- ship of Ashtoreth to Cyprus, where a temple was erected to her at Paphos, and she was adored under the form of a conical stone. As Aphrodite her name and cult passed to the Greeks, who, however, in the classical age more correctly transcribed the name Astarte. Ash- toreth must be distinguished from Asherah, another Canaanite goddess of Babylonian origin. [See Plate XIV.] [a.h.s.] Ashup', the posthumous son of Hezron by his wife Al)iah ( iChr.2.24,4.5). He became " father " or founder of the town of Tekoa. Ashupites. In 2Sam.2.() Abner made Ishbosheth, the son of Saul, king over Gilead, the Ashuritcs, Jezrcel, Kphraini, Benjamin, and '■ over all Israel." For Ashiiriles the Svr. and \'ulg. read " Cieshurites." (ieshur was, however, an independent kingdom at this time (2Sam.3. 3,13.37). Perhaps the Targum of Jonathan is right in rendering the word '" the house of Asher." The Asherites would then include the inhabitants of the country W. of Jordan and N. iif ( armcl. [.Ashek.] [f-J-f--J-] Ashvath', one of the sons of Japhlet, of the tribe of Asher (iChr.7.33). Asia. The passages in N.T. where this word occurs, are: Ac. 2.9,6.0,16. 6, 19.10,22, 26, 27,20.4,16,18,21.27.27.2; iC()r.l6. 19; 2Cor.l.8; 2Tim.l.i5; iPe.l.i; Kcv.l.4,11. [Chief of Asia : see Asiarciiae.] In all these it may be confidently stated that the word is used, not for " the continent of Asia," nor for what we commonly understand by " Asia Minor," but ASNAPPER for a Roman province which embraced the W. of the peninsula of Asia Minor with Ephesus as its capital. This province originated in the bequest of Attains, king of Pergamus (or Asia), who left to the Roman Republic his hereditary dominions in the W. of the penin- sula (133 B.C.). In the division made by Augustus of senatorial and imperial provinces, it was placed in the former class, and was governed by a proconsul. It contained many important cities, including the seven churches of the Apocalypse, and was divided into assize districts for judicial business (Ac. 19. 38). It included the territory anciently subdivided into Aeolis, Ionia, and Doris, and afterwards into Mysia, Lydia, and Caria. The title " king of Asia " was used by the Seleucid monarchs of Antioch (1Mac.ll.13). Asiarchae(Ac.l9.3i ; chiefs of Asia). The Asiarch was the president of the confederation of the cities of the province of Asia (to koivov ttj^ Acrias). The duties included the superintend- ence of a great festival and games, defraying most of the expenses ; thus the office was limited to wealthy men. Past presidents retained the title. It was also assumed by the high-priests of the worship of Rome and of the emperor at Ephesus, and probably in other cities. The correctness of the use of the word in Acts is now confirmed by monumental evidence. Nicol, Recent Archaeol. of Bible, p. 313. [h.s.] Asibi as (iKsd.9.26) = Malchijah, 3. Asiel'. — 1. A Simconite whose descend- ant Jehu represented the family in the reign of Hezekiah (iChr.4.35). — 2. One of the five swift writers whom Ezra was commanded to take to re-write the law and the history of the world (2Esd.i4.24). As ipha (iEsd.5.29) = Hasupha. Askelon. [Ashkelon.] Asmodeus (R.V. Asmodaeiis; LXX. [A], 'Afffj-odaios; in Rabbinical Hcb. Ashmedai), in Rabbinical theology the king (as Lilith [Owl] is the queen) of that inferior order of demons which originated, according to one account, from the intercourse of fallen angels with Eve, or, according to another account, with " the daughters of men " of Gen. 6. These demons were supposed to be semi-corporeal, of both sexes, and, though long-lived, mortal. [De- mon.] In Tobit, Asmodeus appears as the demon lover of Sara, daughter of Raguel. He slays her seven successive husbands on their wedding-night, and is finally put to flight by Tobias with the assistance of the angel Raphael, who binds the demon in the uppermost parts of Egypt (Tob. 3. 8, 17, 6.7, 13- 17,7.11-8.15). Some identify Asmodeus with the Persian e\il angel .Aeshma Daeva. More probably the name is Heb., signifying " des- troyer," from shdmadh, " to destroy" (c/. " the destroyer," Wis. 18. 25, and Apollyon, Rev. 9. 11). [Abaddon.] [c.h.] Asnah'. The children of Asnah were Nethinim who returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.30). In the list of Ne.7..')2 the name is omitted, and in il{s(1.5.3i written Asana. Asnappep' (Ezr.4.io), described as " the great and noble." He has been variously identified with Shalmaneser, Sennacherib, and Esar-haddon. As, however, he is mentioned as the personage who settled the Dinaites, the ASOM Archevites (people of Erech), the Babylon- ians, the Susanchites (Susanians), the Dehav- ites, and the Elamites in Samaria, the general opinion now is that Assur-bani-apli (Assur- bani-pal), being the only ruler who could have moved the Babylonians and the Elamites to a distance at that period, is the prince intended. Assur-bani-apli was the eldest son of Esar- haddon, and ascended the throne of Assyria in 668 B.C., §amas-sum-ukin (Saosduchinos), his brother, assuming the sovereignty of Baby- lonia. His armies made two expeditions to Egypt, with varying success ; besieged Tyre, and brought it, with the neighbouring districts, into subjection. Lydia and the Vannites were also conquered. Later, he repulsed the in- vasion of Urtak, king of Elam, and afterwards carried the struggle into the enemy's country, routing the army of Te-umman, Urtak's suc- cessor, and placing Umman-igas on the throne. He also defeated the combined forces of the Babylonians, Elamites, and Arabians, and an- nexed Babylonia to Assyria, his " rebellious brother " setting fire to his palace, and perish- ing in the flames. Elam was again subjugated under king Umman-khaldas, who, having been captured, was brought to Nineveh and com- pelled, with other captive princes, to drag his chariot to the temple called E-masmas. Assur-bani-apli thus appears as a conqueroi in some of the districts where Asnapper would seem to have held sway, and his sculptures represent him as having a presence which could be described as noble. He was one of Assyria's greatest rulers, and probably also one of the most learned men of his time. The R.V. has Osnappar. but in view of the identi- fication, Asenapar is probably the pronuncia- tion intended (-4s = A ssur ; ena = bani ; par = pal, the late pronunciation for dpi or dpli). See G. Smith, History of A ssur -bant -pal (1871) ; S. A. Smith, KeilschrUtteste Assurbanipals (1887). [T.G.P.] Asom' (iEsd.9.33) = Hashum, i. Asp (pethen). The Heb. word occurs in six passages : Deut.32.33 ; Job 20.14,16 ; Ps.58. 5,91.13 ; Is.11.8. It is translated in Ps. adder ASS 67 THE EGYPTIAN COBRA (A in the text of A.V., and asp in the margin ; else- where the text of A.V. has asp as the equiva- lent of pethen. That some kind of venomous serpent is denoted is clear from the above pas- sages ; while from Ps.58. 5 we see that pethen was a snake upon which the serpent-charmers practised. The wicked are there compared to " the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear, which will not hearken to the voice of charmers, charm- ing never so wisely " ; and from Is.11.8, " the sucking child shall play on the hole of the asp," it would appear that the pethen dwelt in holes of walls, etc. The explanation of Ps.58. 5 is that there are certain serpents which defy all attempts of the charmer ; and in this sense may be termed deaf. [Snake-charming.] Since the cobra (Naia haie), which infests old buildings and ranges from Egypt to India, is the species upon which snake-charmers chiefly exercise their skill, it has the best claim to repre- sent the pethen. Cobras do not belong to the viper tribe (Viperidae), but to the Coliibridae, which includes the harmless British grass- snake, [r.l.] Aspal'athus, mentioned as some sweet per- fume in Ecclus.24.15. Theophrastus includes it with cinnamon, cassia, and many other articles as used for ointments. The Lignum rhodianum is by some supposed to be the substance indica- ted by the aspalathus. The plant which yields it is the Convolvulus scoparius of Linnaeus. Pliny says : " In the same tract [Egypt, Cyprus] groweth Aspalathus : a white thornie shrub it is of the bignesse of a small tree, and beareth a flower resembling a rose. The root of it is in request for the making of sweet perfumes and ointments . . . Some call it Erisisceptrum, and others Sceptrum. The good Aspalathus is red or rather of a fiery colour, massie and heavie in hand, with a smell of Castoreum. It is sold for fifteene deniers the pound." (Holland's translation, 1601, xii. 24.) [h.c.h.] Aspatha', third son of Haman (Esth.9.7). As'phap, the pool in the " wilderness of Thecoe " (iMac.9.33). There is a well called Z'aferdn 3 miles S. of Tekoa. [c.r.c] Aspha'pasus (iEsd.5.8) = Mispereth. Aspiel', son of Gilead and great-grandson of Manasseh (Num.26. 31 ; Jos. 17. 2); the founder of the family of the Aspielites. The name is erroneously written Ashriel in A.V. of iChr.7.14. According to the LXX., he was son of Manasseh by his Syrian concubine. Ass. Five Heb. names referring to various kinds of asses occur in O.T. (i) hdmor de- notes the male domesticated ass, though the word was no doubt used to express any ass. The ass is frequently mentioned in the Bible, and was used for burdens, for riding, plough- ing, and grinding at the mill. Jews of high rank rode on asses ; and in this manner our Lord made His entry into Jerusalem (Mt.21. 2), fulfilling the prophecy of Zech.9.g. He came " meek and lowly," but it is a mistake to suppose that the fact of His riding on an ass had aught to do with this meekness, although doubtless meant to show the peace- able nature of His kingdom, as horses were used for war purposes. White asses (see Judg. 5.10) are still used in Palestine and Egypt for riding, and Baghdad is famous for a much- esteemed breed. In Deut.22.io "plowing with an ox and an ass together " was for- bidden by Moses, probably because they could not pull evenly together ; perhaps also this prohibition may have some reference to the 6& ASSABIAS law given in Lev. 19. 19. The ass was not used for food, the Mosaic law considering it unclean, as " not dividing the hoof and chewing the cud." In extreme cases, how- ever, as in the famine of Samaria, when " an ass's head was sold for eighty pieces of silver " (2K.6.25), the flesh was eaten. The state- ment that it chews the cud is incorrect. (2) 'dthon, the domesticated she-ass. Balaam rode on a she-ass ; the asses of Kish which Saul sought were she-asses ; and the Shunam- mite (2 K. 4.22, 24) rode on one when she went to seek Elisha. She-asses formed the care of one of David's officers (iChr.27.30). (3) 'ir, the name of a young ass, which occurs Gen. 32. 15.49.11 ; Judg.10.4, 12.14; Job 11.12 ; Is.30.6, 24 ; Zech.9.9. Sometimes 'ir is used for asses old enough for riding, carrying burdens, and ploughing. {4) pere', a wild ass mentioned Gen.l2.i6; Ps.l04.ii; Job 6.5,11.12,24.5,39.5 ; Ho.8.9; Je.2.24,14.6; Is.32.14. Hosea com- pares Israel to a wild ass of the desert, and Job (39.5) gives a vivid description of this animal. (5) 'drodh occurs in Job 39.5 ; but in what respect the animal indicated differs from pere' is uncertain. Two entirely distinct types of wild ass were probably known to the ancient inhabitants of Palestine : first, the Nubian wild ass (Equiis asinus africaniis), a tall, long- eared, grey animal, which (or its near relative the Somali wild ass, E. a. somaliensis) is the ancestor of the domesticated breeds ; second, the Syrian onager {E. onager hemippus), a smaller, redder, and shorter-eared animal, connecting the African asses in some measure with the horse. Other races of the onager, or ghor-khar, are found in Persia and N.W. India. The wild ass of Scripture is doubtless the onager, which inhabits desert tracts in herds of considerable size, and is noted for its fleetness. [r.l.] Assabi'as (iEsd.l.9) — Hasiiabiah, 6. Assal imoth (iEsd.8.36) =Shelomith, 6. Assani'as (il-"s(1.8.54) = Hashariah, 8. ASSOS Asshup. [Assyria.] Asshupim' (plur. form), an Arab tribe des- cended from Abraham and Keturah ; the three "sons" of Dcdan, being Asshurim, Letushim, and Lcummim (Gen. 25. 3). [f.J.f.-j.] Asside'ans (K.V. Hasidaeans), i.e. the pious, a Jcwisii party, not identical (in spite of 2Mac.l4.6) with the followers of the Hasmo- I naeans, which arose in opposition to the efforts of Antiochus Epiphanes, 168 b.c, to Hellenize Judaism. Indifferent to national independence, the Assideans aimed solely at religious freedom and the preservation of the national faith. Thus they supported Mattathias, 168-166 B.C. (iMac.2.42). But when, 162 B.C., they had in Alcimus " apriest of theseed of Aaron " (7.13), they acquiesced in the Syrian domination. ' As the Macrabaean struggle became political rather than religious, the Assideans fell into the background, to reappear under John Hyr- [ canus (135-104 B.C.) as the Pharisees, [c.d.] Assip'. — 1. Son of Korah (Ex. 6. 24 ; iChr. 6.22). — 2. Son of Ebiasaph (iChr.6.23,37)."^ 3. Son of Jeconiah (iChr.3.17), unless " Je- coniah the captive " (R.V.) be correct. I As'sos or As'sus, a seaport of the Roman [ province of Asia, in the district anciently called Mysia. It was situated on the N. shore of the gulf of Adramvttium, and was only i about 7 miles from the opposite coast of Lesbos, near Methymna. A good Roman road, connecting the towns of the central parts of the province with Alexandria Troas [Troas] passed through Assos, the distance between the two latter places being about 20 miles. These points illustrate St. Paul's rapid passage through the town (Ac. 20. 13, 14). I The ship in which he was to voyage from Troas to Caesarea vsent round Cape Lectum, ! while he took the much shorter journey by ' land. Thus he was able to join the ship 1 without difficulty, and in sufficient time to j anchor off Mitylene at the close of the day on which he had left Troas. ASSTTERUS Assue'pus (Tob.l't.15) = Ahasuerus. Assup'.— 1. (Ezr.4.2 ; Ps.83.8 ; 2Esd.2. 8; Judg.2.14, etc.) — Assyria. — 2. (iEsd.5. 31) = Harhur. Assurance. The words " assurance " and " full assurance," which occur in A.V. as a translation of Tr\r]polace, thr)ugh only one seems to be referred to. In 7t>3 h.c Sennacherib fought with the pretenders, one of ASSYRIA, ASSHUR them being Merodach-baladan, who had arisen in Babylonia. Later he attacked the Elam- ites, who had carried off his son, Assur-nadin- §um, king of Babylonia ; and Berosus and Herodotus say that he made an expedition to Egypt. He was killed by his sons (the Baby- lonian Chronicle says " a son ") in 680 b.c. Esar-haddon, who succeeded him, tried to pacify the Babylonians, whom Sennacherib's severity had aroused. His first act was to make an expedition to Armenia, where his brothers, after the naurder, had taken refuge. Later, he put down a revolt in Babylonia headed by the son of Merodach-baladan. In 673 B.C. the king of Sidon was beheaded by his orders, and he then assembled all the kings of Hatti and the sea-coast. It was possibly on this occasion that he " took Manasseh with hooks" or "chains" (2Chr.33.ii) ; but the Israelitish king is only referred to in the in- scriptions as one of the rulers who paid tribute. Esar-haddon attacked " those who dwell in Til-Assur," the Medes, Chaldeans, and Ara- bians. He made two expeditions to Egypt, but died on the road whilst returning frf)m the second, and was succeeded by his son .-VSsur- bani-apli (Assur-bani-pal) in .Assyria, and Saosduchinos in Babylonia (668 B.C.). The former, who is identified with " the great and noble Asnapper " of Ezr.4.io, was one of the greatest of Assyrian monarchs. He also received tribute from Manasseh, and his armies made determined attempts to complete the conquest of Egypt, but did not succeed in retaining the country. He recei\ed the sub- mission of tiyges, king of Lydia, and later of his son, and his wars with the Elamitcs throw a vivid light on the condition of that country. As his brother would not acknowledge his over- lordship. Babylonia was again annexed to Assyria, Saosduchinos ha\ing apparently com- mitted suicide by perishing in the flames of his burning palace. We are greatly indebted to Assur-bani-apli for most excellent copies of the tablets of Babylonia and Assyria. He died in 626 B.C., and was succeeded by AJsur-etil- ilani-ukinni, of whose reign nothing is known. The last king of .Assyria was Sin-sarra-iskun (Saracos), who is said to have sent his general Nabopolassar to put down a revolt in Baby- lonia. Ha\-ing clone this. Nabopolassar made an alliance with the Medes, and marched against Nineveh, which was taken after a two years' siege ; whereujion Saracos raised a funeral pyre, and perished in the flames with all his entourage (606 b.c). After this, the country has no history, though Cyrus mentions the city of A^sur as one of the places to which he returned the gods which had been carried away in former times, apiiarently by the Baby- lonians, and possibly under Nabopolassar. It was a great and sudden downfall which over- took the empire of .Assyria. .About 30 years before the end, .Assyria had claimed dominion from VA.im on Iv. to I'-gypt on W., and from .Armenia and Lydia on N. to the Persian Ciulf on S. .Among the princes who had acknow- ledged her supremacv had been Menahem (2K. 15.19). Ahaz (I6.9). Hoshea (I7.4), Heze- kiah (18. 14), and Manasseh {2Chr.33.i 1-13). as well as numerous rulers of states on exery side, especially the W. Sargon, indeed, set up an ASSYRIA, ASSHTJR image of himself, with an inscription, in the island of Cyprus. It is not quite certain whether Assyria required religious conformity from the people subject to her, but there seems to have been no real compulsion in that respect; if a ruler acknowledged the Assyrian gods, it was probably to curry favour. The Assyrian religion was the complex polytheism of Baby- lonia, differing, however, in having at its head the national deity Assur, the great protector of the land, its people, army, and king. The gods most often mentioned by^ Assur-bani-apli are Assur, Sin {the moon), Samas (the sun), Adad (Hadad), Bel. Nebo, Istar of Nineveh, the divine queen of Kidmuri, Istar of Arbela, Nirig, Nergal, and Nusku ; but the religious inscriptions mention many other deities, be- sides protecting spirits and demons. To all appearance the civilization of Assyria was derived, with its writing and literature, from Babylonia. Like the Babylonians, the As- syrians were Semites, with, probably, a certain admixture of Sumero-Akkadian blood, as the statement in Gen.lO.ii suggests — Nineveh, indeed, must have been a Babylonian (non- Semitic Sumerian) foundation. Besides their writing and literature, their religion and wor- ship, the construction of their temples and the custom of building temple-towers, their method of ornamentation, and, last but not least, their language, were all derived from Baby- lonia. In the course of years, however, their national characteristics naturally became more pronounced, so that they no longer thought of themselves as being of Babylonian race. Their laws became somewhat different from those of Babylonia, their art assumed a style quite its own, with a spirit and boldness, and with efforts towards fidelity and realism, which are altogether admirable. Their pictures of war, the chase, and the camp, with the few repre- sentations of the more peaceful incidents of life which have come down to us, attract as much on account of these characteristics as because of the talent which their sculptors display. The advanced civilization of the country is proved alike by the details of their sculptures and the remains of their buildings. In many respects they were, even at their most advanced period, barbarians, though probably not more so than the nations among whom they lived. Their government was despotic, but probably benevolent, their conduct in war often cruel, and their art largely materialistic. Like the Babylonians and the Semites in general, they were exceedingly religious ; their religion, especially in the worship of " the merciful Merodach," was on a high level, and there are signs of that tendency to monotheism which characterized the original Babylonian form. Nevertheless, they were always very superstitious, and believed in the efficacy of charms, incantations, magic, and all things connected therewith. They studied astron- omy for the purpose of fixing the date of the equinoxes, and also to foretell events. Divin- ation was practised, and calendars of lucky and unlucky days consulted. Their knowledge of medicine was primitive, but probably not more empirical than that in use in the same part of the world at the present day. Their literature shows, however, that whatever their ATER 71 faults, the Assyrians were a great nation, and had not their empire come to an untimely end, there is every probability that they would have advanced along the road of civilization until arrested by the cause which has retarded it throughout the Semitic East. [t.g.p.] Astapoth (Deut.1.4 ; R.V. Ashtaroth). [ASHTEROTH KaRNAIM.] As'tath (iEsd.8.38) = AzGAD. Asty'ag-es, last king of the Medes, 584- 549 B.C. He was conquered by Cyrus, son of his daughter Mandane. Thus " Cyrus the Persian received his kingdom " (Bel i). [c.D.l Asuppim', and House of (iChr.26.15,17, A.V. marg. the house of the gatherings, R.V. storehouse; Ne.i2.25, A.V. thresholds of the gates, marg. treasuries or assemblies, R.V. storehouses of the gates). Nothing is known of it, except that it is the name of a storehouse outside the court of king Solomon's temple, where certain of the porters and Levites kept watch by night. From the context (iChr.26.i4, 16,17,18) it may be assumed that the situation was towards the S.W. of the temple courts. The Vulg. seems to have understood the word to refer to the council-chambers immediately outside the courts of the temple, in which the elders held their deliberations. [c.w.] Asyn'cpitus, a Christian at Rome (Ro. 16. 14). A doubtful tradition makes him bishop of Hyrcania. Atad' (thorn), a threshing-floor (gdren) between Egypt and Hebron (Gen. 50. 10). [Abel, 4.] [c.r.cI Atapah', a wife of Jerahmeel, and mother of Onan (iChr.2.26). Atap'g-atis, corrupted by Gk. writers into Derketo, a Syrian goddess who owed her name and attributes to a combination of 'Athtar, the Assyrian Istar [AshtorethI, and 'Ati (Gatis in Gk.), a Syrian goddess of allied nature. Her most famous temples were at Hierapolis (Ma- bug) and Ascalon. Plutarch says that some regarded her as " Aphrodite, others as Here, others as the cause and natural power which provides the principles and seeds for all things from moisture." A temple of Atargatis (2Mac.i2.26) at Carnion was destroyed by Judas Maccabaeus (iMac.5.44). [a.h.s.] Atapoth'. — 1. One of the towns taken and built by the tribe of Gad (Num. 32. 3, 34), men- tioned with DiBON. On the Moabite Stone, in 9th cent, e.g., it is noticed as a " land " where " the men of Gad dwelt from of old." The name survives in Jebel 'Affanls, with ruins of the same name, N.W. of Dibon. — 2. A place on the boundary of Ephraim and Manasseh (J os. i6.7),nowunknovfn.— 3. ATA' ROTH- AD AR', or -ADDAR', on the border of Benjamin, "near the 'mountain' that is on the S. side of the nether Beth-horon " (Jos.16.2,5,18.13). Evidently the ruin ed Ddrieh, in the required position. — 4. " Ataroth', the house of Joab," a place occurring in the list of the descend- ants of Judah (iChr.2.54). [c.r.c.] Atep'. — 1. The children of Ater were among the porters or gate-keepers of the temple who returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2. 42 ; Ne.7.45). Thev are called in iEsd.5.28, " the sons of Jatal." — 2. The children of " Ater, of Hezekiah " returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2,16 ; Ne,7.2i), and were among the 72 ATEREZIAS heads of the people who signed the covenant with Nehemiah (IO.17). In iEsd.5.15 the name is contracted into Aterezias. Aterezi'as. [Ater, 2.] Athach', a city friendly to David while at Ziklag (1Sam.3O.30). The Vat. MS. reads Nombe, perhaps for Nebo, or Nuba, a village 4 miles S. of Adullam. [c.r.c] Athai'ah, a descendant of Pharez the son of Judah, dwelling at Jerusalem after the re- turn from Babylon {Ne.ll.4). Athaliah'. — 1. DaughterofAhab and Jeze- bel, and grand-daughter of Omri, king of Israel. ATHALIAH On the making of a treaty of peace between the two kingdoms of Judah and Israel, after a war of 60 years, she was married to the crown- prince of Judah, Jehoram, son of Jehoshaphat. The bridegroom was not more than eighteen years of age, and she was still younger. Not till 'he was 32 years old did Jehoram come to the throne. His first act was to destroy his six younger brothers, as possible religious rivals and claimants to the throne, together with those princes of Judah who were zealous for the ancient faith of the nation. Athaliah inherited the strength of mind of her mother, lla/ier ir Boutatlse, I'LAN t)li A llll;N-^, (I-'roin .Siiiitli's Classical Dulionary.) Sec art. " Alhc" ATHAT.IAH as well as her fervent devotion to the cult of the Phoenician god, Melkarth — usually addressed as Baal or Lord — and it is to her influence over her husband that we must attribute this act of "unnaturanferocity. Athaliah survived her husband, who was succeeded by his son Ahaziah, over whose mind she exercised the same sinister influence as over her late husband. Ahaziah was'married to a daughter of the house of Ahab, whose name is not given ; and when, after a reign of a single year, he died, Athaliah procured the massacre of her grand-children — Jehoash excepted, who was rescued by an aunt. She now seized the reins of power in Jerusalem and ruled for six years (2K.II; 2Chr.22.io- 23.15). Two events alone of this dark period in Hebrew history can be extracted from the records of the time, (i) A portion of the temple of Jehovah was broken up, and its materials used for the erection of a house of ATIPHA 73 Athapi'as (xEsd.5.40), a corruption of the TiRSHATHA. Athenians, people of Athens (Ac.17.2i). Atheno'bius, an envoy sent by Antiochus Sidetes to Simon the Jewish high-priest to demand the surrender of Joppa and Gazara (iMac.15.28-36). Ath'ens, the capital of Attica, and the chief seat of Grecian learning and civilization during the golden period of the history of Greece. It is only mentioned in the Bible in connexion with St. Paul, who visited it in his journey from Macedonia, and appears to have remained there some time (Ac.17.14-34 ; cf. iTh.3.1). During his residence he de- livered his memorable discourse in the Areo- pagus to the " men of Athens " (Ac.17.22-31). The Agora or " market," where he disputed daily, was situated in the valley between the Acropolis on the"N.E. and E., the Areopagus ACROPOLIS, ATHENS. (Suggested restoration by Rd. Bolin.) Baal in Jerusalem, (ii) The Zadokian high- priesthood was changed from the family of Ahimaaz to that of Meshullam — Jehoiada, who had married a daughter of Athaliah, being now promoted to the primacy. This action led to the undoing of the usurper, as Jehoiada proved staunchly true to the religion of Jehovah. For six years he and his wife jehosheba concealed in their private apartments, near the temple, the youngest child of Ahaziah, rescued at the time of the massacre, and then six years old. When he was thirteen a revolution was planned, in conjunction with all the better elements of the nation, and Jehoash proclaimed king. Athaliah's personal attempt to stay the revolt failed, and she was cut down by one of the soldiers at the door of her palace, as she fled from the temple. The years of her reign are not counted separately by the Heb. historio- graphers, but are taken to form part of the reign of Jehoash. [Chronology.] — 2. A Benjamite of the sons of Jehoram (iChr.8.26). -^3- Father of Jeshaiah, 3 (Ezr.8.7). [vv.s.c] on the N., the Pnyx on the N.W. and W., and the Museum on the S., as shown in the annexed plan. The remark of the sacred historian respecting the inquisitive character of the Athenians (17.21 ) agrees with the unanimous witness of antiquity. Demosthenes rebukes his countrymen for their love of constantly going about in the market, and asking, What news ? The remark of St. Paul upon the " superstiti- ous" character of the Athenians (17.22) is also confirmed by ancient writers. Thus Pausanias says that the Athenians surpassed all other states in the attention which they paid to the worship of the gods ; and hence the city was crowded in every direction with temples, altars, and other sacred buildings. Of the Christian church founded by St. Paul at Athens, DiONYSius the Areopagite was, according to ecclesiastical tradition, the first bishop. Athlai', an IsraeUte who put away his foreign wife at the exhortation of Ezra (Ezr. 10.28) ; called Amatheis in iEsd.9.2g. At'ipha (iEsd.5.32) == Hatipha, 74 ATONEMENT Atonement. This is the A.V. translation of a word which R.V. translates reconciliation {Ro.5.11 ; 2Cor.5.i8), and in early English means precisely the same, and is better written At-one-ment. Cf. Beaumont and Fletcher: From this atonement let our lives begin ; Be all the rest forgotten. The current meaning of the word as expiation has arisen from a false explanation of the Jewish sacrifice, which regards the death of the victim as representing the vicarious punish- ment of the worshipper. [Sacrifice, B ; Atonement, Day of.] Truer views of sacri- fice in O.T. show that it was intended as the expression of obedience, that expression being most clearly marked in the whole burnt -offering and in the presentation of " the blood which is the life" (Lev.17.ii). We must therefore regard Christ as representing the obedience of the human race, and thereby cancelling its rebellion against God, and " putting away sin by the sacrifice of Himself " (Heb.9.26). The atonement of Christ has therefore an objective value, and Christ is to be regarded as the pro- pitiation for the sin of the world in exactly the same sense as every Jewish sacrifice was a propitiation. Christ, by fulfilling the law " even unto death," satisfied it in a far deeper and more real way that it could be said to be satisfied by the infliction of punish- ment upon an innocent substitute. This explanation is free from the moral difficulties of substitution, which seem greater the more they are considered. The weakness of the popular doctrine lies in the small place it affords for the human side [Repentance ; Faith ; Conversion], and in the too great stress it lays on the removal of punishment in place of the removal of sin. Christ most certainly bore our sins in the sense that He removed them out of the way, so that they need no longer be a barrier between man and God. In the obedience and sacrifice of Christ man is called to share. This seems the main significance of both sacraments ; and is essential to justifica- tion and salvation. See also Saviour ; Salva- tion ; and for the Pauline doctrine see Paul. Moberly, A. and Personality. McLeod Camp- bell, Nature of the A. Dale, Lect. on the A. Scott Lidgett, Spiritual Principle of the A. Aubrey Moore, Appeal and Claims of Christ. Du Bose, Soteriolo^y of N.T. Leighton PuUan, Atonement. ].]. Lias, Atonement. Oxenham, Catholic Doct. of the A. Denney, Death of Christ ; A . and the Modern Mind. D. W. Simon, Reconciliation by Incarnation. M. Scott, Crux Crucis. Bushnell, Forgiveness and Law. Liddon, Passiontide Sermons. Art. in Lux Miindi. s.v. | Jesus Christ.] [m.s.] Atonement, Day of (row hakkippiirim = lit. day of corerini^s, or of wipinns-off). observed on the loth day of the 7th month [Tishri = Sept. -Oct.), 5 days before the Feast of Taber- nacles, being the only periodical fast-day represented as of Mosaic origin [Fasts), was styled in later days (Ac.27.9), '• The Fast." Its annual observance is referred to in Ex.30. 10, and described in Lev. 16. It occurs as a day of hiuuiliation and of obligatory abstinence frum work and food, in the list of special davs in 23.27,28, and the priestly calendar of ATONEMENT, DAY OF Num.28,29 (see 29.7-11) ; and is mentioned in Lev. 25. 9 as the day on which the jubile year was to be proclaimed. The principle of atone- ment is enunciated in 17. 11 — " it is the blood that maketh atonement, by reason of the life " [Atonement], and in that book alone the verb kdphar occurs more than 40 times in very varied contexts, from the formal sacri- fices of burnt-, sin-, and guilt-offerings (I.4, 4.40,5.16, etc., etc.) and those connected with priestly consecration (8.34,9.7), to the rites of purification of a woman after child-birth (12. 8), a leper (14. 18, etc.), a "leprous house" (14. 53) and other uncleannesses, physical (15. 15,20) and moral (19.22). This comprehensive- ness reflected in some degree the wide scope of the rites of the Day ; which, however, in spite of the summary language of Lev.l6.30, inter- preted most liberally by later Judaism, cannot be supposed to have touched those " high- handed " sins expressly exempted from for- giveness in Num. 15. 30 f. Outside the Penta- teuch the verb occurs four times (2Sam.21.3 ; iChr.6.39 ; 2Chr.29.24 ; Ne.10.33) ; but the Levitical Day of Atonement, though possibly alluded to in Zech.3.9, is nowhere named in the prophetical or later historical books of the O.T. The first unquestioned reference outside the Pentateuch is Ecclus.50.5, i.e. c. 180 B.C. Passing over Ac. 27. 9, where " the Fast " is mentioned simply as ushering in the rough weather of autumn, the day plays an important part in the symbolism of the Ep. to the Hebrews (see below). — In describing the clay's ceremonies we follow the order of Lev. 16, supplementing where necessary from other passages. Further details of the ritual as practised in N.T. times may be gathered from Philo, Josephus, and the Mishnic treatise Yoma. Besides the normal morning and evening daily burnt-offering (Ex. 29. 38-42 ; Num. 28. 3-8), Num.29.7-11 prescribes festal sacrifices for this day — viz. as burnt-offerings a bullock, a ram, and seven young lambs, and a he-goat as sin-offering ; distinct from the goats of the atonement ceremony, which is described as follows (Lev. 16. 2 -2 8, cf. 29-34). The high-priest having selected his own offerings (a bullock for sin-offering and a ram for burnt-offering), bathed, and vested himself in white linen garments. Then he received the people's offerings at the door of the tent of meeting (Holy Place) — a ram for burnt-offering and two goats for sin-ofTering. From these latter he selected by lot one ft)r the Lord and one " for Azazel " (see below). Next he killed his own sin-offering and with its blocjd entered within the veil into the Most Holy Place (Holy of Holies), carr\ing also a censer with live coals from the altar of burnt- offering, and a handful of incense. Having censed the ark and the mercy-seat by casting the incense on the coals, he dipped his finger in the blood and sprinkled it once upon the E. side (front) of the merrv-seat, and seven times in the space before it. Hitherto (I6.1-11 ) he had been acting for himself and his family ; next he proceeded to act for the people. Returning from the Holy of Holies to the Holy Place, he slew, as the peojile's representative, the goat selected for the Lord, and re-entering within the veil, dealt with its blood as with that of ATONEMENT, DAY OF the bullock, thus completing the purification or "atonement " of the Holy of Holies. Next he proceeded in solitude to purify the Holy Place, sprinkling the victim's blood (see Ex. 30. lo) on the horns of the golden altar of in- cense ; after which, emerging into the court of the tabernacle, he " atoned for " the altar of burnt-offering, sprinkling its horns with the blood of his own bullock and of the people's goat (Lev. 16. 15-19). This completed the three- fold purification of the Holy of Holies, the Holy Place, and the altar representing the outer court. The goat for Azazel, or " scape- goat," was now presented by the high-priest, who, laying his hands upon it, made a com- prehensive confession of all the sins of the people ; after which it was led off to the wilder- ness by one waiting in readiness, as a symbol of the putting away of the nation's iniquities (cf. Ps.lO3.12). The high-priest then returned to the tent of meeting, bathed, donned his official robes of gold, and offered the two rams of burnt-offering, his own and the people's (Lev. 16. 20-24 ; c/. I't'. 3 and 5 ). Thus the day's ceremonies were completed. When the fat of the burnt -offerings had been consumed, the remains of the victims were carried, as usual (4.11,12), outside the camp; and those who performed this service, as also the conductor of the goat, were to wash themselves and their clothes before returning to the encampment (I6.25-28). The phrase 'ptNTi;^ = "for Azazel" (R.V.), rendered in A.V. scape-goat [cf. LXX. 0 a.TTOTrofxiraio'i, Aq. o Tpi'yo^ aTroXe\v/j.€vos, Sym. 6. Tp. dvepx^jJievos, Vulg. caper emis- sarins ; as though = "pTS Wi " goat for going away."), occurs in this context only. The root 7NT is not actually found, but inferred from Arabic 'azala=" to remove to a distance." The phrase may thus signify " for dismissal " (as R.V. marg.) ; .but in the context the paral- lelism with mnv makes it probable that Azazel is a proper name denoting an evil spirit inhabiting remote and desolate places (so Origen makes 'Afa^T^X = o otd/3o\os). If so, he may be the 'Azalzel who appears in the book of Enoch (c. 2nd cent. B.C.) as leader of the bad angels of Gen. 6. 2-4. In any case the symbolic meaning of the ceremony is broadly the same. The Mishnic tract Yoma supplies various details of this ceremony, some of which are inconsistent with Lev. 16. Our view of the date at which this group of ceremonies as- sumed the form here depicted will depend upon critical problems which are discussed in the arts. Law in O.T. ; Pentateuch; Leviticus, to which the}' more properly belong. But apart from these, it has been urged that if the ceremony had been traditional in Ezekiel's day (c. 592-570), a reference to this climax of the Levitical system would have been natural in the passage (Ezk. 45. 18-20) where the priest- prophet speaks of two atoning rites, on the ist and 7th days of the ist month. Hence some critics have regarded Ezekiel's words as fur- nishing the original idea from which the rite of Lev. 16 was subsequently developed. Stress has also been laid on the fact that Zechariah (c. 520 b.c), while referring (7.3-5, 8. 1 9 ) to four commemorative fasts, one of them ATTAL.IA 75 actually in the 7th month, makes no allusion in that context to the Day of Atonement ; and also upon Ne.8 and 9, where three observances are recorded, all in the 7th month of 444 e.g. — (a) Feast of Trumpets on the ist day ; (b) Taber- nacles, i5th-22nd; (c) a general fast on 24th — but which says nothing of the fast of the loth day. It has been inferred that Lev.l6 (and the parallel passages), as being part of the " New Code " just introduced (Ne.8), was not yet in force. It is possible, however, that the fast summarily described in Ne.9.i may be the Day of Atonement, transposed, like Hezekiah's Passover (2Chr.3O.15), for practical reasons ; especially as the following chapter (Ne.lO.33) refers to a provision " for the sin-offerings to make atonement for Israel." Nor was it ab- solutelv necessary that Ezekiel, Zechariah, or Nehemiah (of whom the second alone mentions the Passover) should name the Day of Atone- ment, even were it a living institution of their times. Thus, even apart from the question of the age of Leviticus, we may doubt whether the post-Exilic institution of the Day of Atone- ment has been demonstrated, and whether, however considerable the subsequent develop- ment, the Mosaic nucleus in its ceremonial may not yet prove to be much greater than has been supposed. Certain it is that the principle of fasting and humiliation in religion is of immemorial antiquity [Fasts], and must have found some expression among the Hebrews earlier than the 6th-cent. fast-days of Ezekiel. But the permanent significance of the cere- mony— fully enacted, at any rate, in N.T. times, as Philo and Josephus testify — is inde- pendent of the exact date of its origin. That significance lies in its relation to the atoning work of Christ, as expounded in Heb.9 and 10. In Christ's atoning death there is nothing of the figurative, imperfect, limited character which marks the Levitical ordinance. The high-priest enters the material Holy of Holies once a year with blood of external victims ; Christ enters once for all into God's actual Presence with, and through, His own in- finitely more efficacious Blood, wherewith He obtains no temporal but an eternal deliver- ance. Moreover, access to the throne of grace, open of old to the high-priest alone, and that under strict limitations of time and mode, is now, by Christ's " new and living way," free at all times to those mystically purged by His atoning Blood. [Hebrews, Ep. to.] Oehler, O.T. Th. § 140 f. ; Edersheim's Temple, pp. 263-288 ; Willis, Worship of the Old Covenant, pp. 190-214 ; Westcott, Hebrews, pp. 279-280 ; Driver, Introd. Lit. O.T. ; Philo, Lift, de Sep- tenario ; Josephus, 3 Ant. x. ; Mishna, Yoma (ed. Surenhusius, ii.). [l.r.] Atpoth', a city of Gad (Num.32.35). Per- haps the name should be taken with that following it, Shophan, to distinguish this place from Ataroth in the same neighbourhood. Attai'. — 1. The son of Ahlai, by Jarha, an Egyptian slave (iChr.2.35,36). — 2. One of the warriors of Gad, captains of the host, who joined David in the wilderness (12.ii). — 3. Second son of king Rehoboam by Maachah the daughter of Absalom (2Chr.ll.20). Attali'a, a coast-town of Paraphylia from which SS. Paul and Barnabas sailed on 76 ATTALTJS II. their return to Antioch from their missionary journey in the interior of Asia Minor (Ac. 14. 25). it was built by Attains Philadelphus, king of Pergamus, and named after him. All its remains are characteristic of the date of its foundation. Leake fixes Attalia at Adalia, on the S. coast of Asia Minor, N. of the Diiden Su, the ancient Catarrhactes. At'talus n. (Philadelphus) -was king oi Per- gamum, 139-138 b.c. To him were addressed letters from Rome in favour of the Jews, 139 B.C. (iMac.15.22), in response to the embassy sent to Rome by Simon the Hasmonaean (14.24). [CD.] Atthara'tes (iEsd.9.49), a corruption of the TiRSHATHA. Au'g'la (iEsd.5.38), daughter of Berzelus (Barzillat, Ezr.2.6i). Her name is not given in the parallels in Ezra or Neh. [Addus.] Aug-ustus, first Roman emperor, in whose reign Christ was born (Lu.2.i). His father was C. Octavius, and his mother Atia, daughter of Julia, the sister of C. Julius Caesar. He came under the care of his great-uncle, the Dictator, who made him his heir. After Caesar's murder, Octavius was adopted into the Julian family, and was thenceforth known as C. Julius Caesar Octavianus. He became triumvir with Anthony and Lepidus, and the struggle between them for supreme power ended in his defeating Antony at Actium, 31 b.c. On his return to Rome, 29. e.g., he did not surrender his command of the military and naval forces, but by degrees strengthened his Ili-AD 1)1' AUGUSl us CAi;SAR. (P.rit. Mils.) W.D.A. position by one after another of the higher magistracies. The surname Augustus by which he is usually spoken of was conferred on him by the senate, 27 n.c. It did not bestow political power, but suggested a sacred and awful character. As such it was continued to his successors, and designates Nero in Ac. 25. 21,25. The priifipal link between Augustus and Jewish history lies in his relations to Herod the Great described by Josephus (15 Anl. vi. 5 ; vii. 3). Augustus died at Nola, 14 a.d., aged 77. The peace which his reign gave to the Roman world has been regarded as a pre- AXE paration for the birth of Christ (Milton's Hymn on the Nativity, iv.). [e.r.b.] Augustus' band (Ac.27. 1). TArmv.] Aupa'nus, leader of a riot at Jerusalem (2 Mac.4.40). Aute'as (iEsd.9.48) = Hodijah, x. Authorized Version. [Version, Au- thorized.] Ava' (properly 'awwd), a place conquered by the .^ssvrians and apparentlv the same as Ivah (2K. 17.24). [IVAH.] ' [T.G.P.] Av'apan (i Mac. 2. 5) or Sav'apan (6.43), the surname of Eleazar, 8. It probably means "the pale " ; but one derivation makes it mean "the piercer," in connection with the feat of 6.43-45. [CO.] A'ven (empty). — 1. Am.1.5, a plain mentioned with places in Syria. The LXX. seems to understand On in Egypt. — 2. Ezk.30. 17, mentioned with Pibeseth ; this is the Egyptian On or Heliopolis, the city of Un (the rising sun), in Egypt. — 3. Ho.10.8 (cf. Beth-aven, 4.15). The " high places of Aven " were idolatrous shrines apparently at Bethel (1K.12.29; Am. 7. 10), which is now Beitin ; for the wilderness of Beth-aven (Jos. 18.12,13) was E. of Bethel. [c.r.c] Aveng-ep of blood. [Goel ; Homicide ; Crimes.] Avim', Avites, correctly Avvim (as R.V.). The LXX. identifies them with the Hivites, rendering both names by ^vatoi- In Deut.2.23 the Avim are mentioned as an ancient race destroyed by the Caphtorim who occupied their land in Hazerim (probably not a proper name, but = villages) " even unto Azzah " (Gaza). It has been inferred that they were one of the ancient giant races of Palestine. In Jos. 13. 3 the Avites are mentioned after the five lords of the Philistines, six instead of five districts being enumerated. In Jos. 18. 23 a city allotted to Benjamin is called hd'avvim = the Avites, and it is noteworthy that the dis- trict assigned to Benjamin was Hivite (Jos. 9. 7,27). [The word means apparently " inhabi- tants of ruins." Some trace of the root may survive at Beit 'Anwa, a group of ruined sites about 12 miles S.W. of Hebron, in the lower hills 30 miles E. of Gaza, c.r.c.] The .\vim have also been identified with the Anakim ; and the city hd'avvim (Jos. 18. 23) is supposed to be a misreading for the Benjamite town of .Ai [Samaria] (2K.i7.3r). [.A.va.] [f.j.f.-j.) Avlth' (ruins), the city of Hadad ben- Bedad, one of the kings of Edom before there were kings in Israel (Gen. 36. 35 ; iChr.l.46). Perhaps the same as IiM (= ruins), [c.r.c] Awl (marrea'), a tool, the only notice of which is in connexion with boring the ears of slaves (Ex.21.6 ; Deut.l5.i7). The Heb. root means to " pierce," and the cognate Arab, root means to " stab." We may assume that in form this instrument resembled a small pointed bar of iron. [w.o.e.o.] Axe. Seven Heb. words are rendered " ax " in A.V. (1) Rarzen, from a root signify- ing " to cut or sever," as " hatchet," from " hack," corresponds to the Lat. securis. It consisted of a head of iron (cf. Is.lO.34), fastened, with thongs or otherwise, upon a handle of wood, and so liable to slip off (Deut.19.5 ; 2K.6.5). It was .used for felling AZAEL AZARIAH 77 trees (Deut.2O.19), .and also^ for shaping the wood when felled, perhaps like the modern EGVPrlAN AXE. (Brit. Mils.) adze (iK.6.7). (2) herebh, usually rendered Sword, is once rendered " axe " (Ezk.26.9), evidently denoting a weapon for destroying buildings, a pick-axe. (3) kashshil (Ps.74.6 only) denotes a large axe. It is also found in the Targum of J e. 46. 22. (4) maghzera (2Sam. 12.31) and t5) m-ghera (iChr.20.3) are found in the description of the punishments inflicted by David upon the Ammonites of Rabbah. The latter word is properly " a saw," and is EGYPTIAN ADZE. (Brit. Mus.) apparently an error of the transcriber for the former. (6) ma'dfddh, rendered, "ax" in the marg. of Is. 44. 12 and Je.lO.3, was an instru- ment employed both by the iron-smith and the carpenter, and is supposed to be a curved knife or bill, smaller than : — (7) qardom, which was a large axe used for felling trees (Judg.9.48; Ps.74.5, etc.). The words i, 5, and 7 have an etymological affinity with each other, " cut- ting " being the idea expressed by their roots. Az'ael (iEsd.9.14) = AsAHEL, 4. Azae'lus, mentioned iEsd.9.34, but not Ezr.lO.41, as putting away his " strange " wife in the time of Ezra. [c.d.] Azal' (R.V. Azel), a name only occurring in Zech.14.5. Perhaps not a proper name. The Heb. may mean, " Ye shall flee the ravine of my mountain : for the ravine of the mountains shall come close " — referring to the earthquake, as in the next clause. [c.r.c] Azali'ah, the father of Shaphan the scribe in the reign of Josiah (2K.22.3 ; 2Chr.34.8). Azani'ah, the father or near ancestor of Jeshua the Levite (Ne.lO.9). Aza'phion (iEsd.5.33; R.V. Assaphioth) = SOPHERETH. Az'apa, one of the " servants of the tem- ple " (iEsd.5.31). Aza'pael, a Levite-musician (Ne.i2.36). Aza'peel (R.V. Azarel). — 1. A Korhite who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.6). — 2. A Levite-musician of the family of Heman (25.18) ; called Uzziel in 25.4. — 3. Son of Jeroham, prince of the tribe of Dan when David numbered the people (27.22).— 4. A son of Bani, who put away his foreign wife on the remonstrance of Ezra (Ezr.lO.41) ; appar- ently = Esril in iEsd.9.34. — 5. A priest, the son of Ahasai (Ne.ll.13). [h.c.b.] Azaplah', a common name in Heb., es- pecially in the families of the priests of the line of Eleazar, whose name has the same meaning as Azariah. It is nearly identical, and often confounded, with Ezra, Zerahiah, and Seraiah. — 1. Son of Ahimaaz (iChr.6.9). He appears from iK.4.2 to have succeeded Zadok, his grandfather, in the high-priesthood, in the reign of Solomon, Ahimaaz having died before Zadok. [Ahimaaz.] To him, instead of to his grandson, Azariah the son of Johanan, probably belongs the notice in iChr.6.io, " He it is that executed the priest's office in the temple that Solomon built at Jerusalem." — 2. A chief officer of Solomon's, the son of Nathan, perhaps David's grandson (iK.4.5). — 3. Tenth king of Judah, more frequently called UzziAH (2K.14.21, etc.). Heis called 'Azriydhu in an Assyrian text. — 4. Son of Ethan, of the sons of Zerah, though Zerahiah is the more probable reading (iChr.2.8). — 5. Son of Jehu and grandson of Obed, of the family of the Jerahmeelites, and descended from Jarha the Egyptian slave and son-in-law of Sheshan (2.38,39). He was possibly identical with one of the captains of hundreds in the time of Athaliah, called the son of Obed (2Chr.23.i). — 6. The son of Johanan and father of Amariah (iChr.6.io,ii ; cf. Ezr.7.3, where several pre- ceding generations are omitted). He was probably high-priest in the reigns of Abijah and Asa, as we know his son Amariah was in the days of Jehoshaphat, the son of Asa. — 7. Another Azariah is inserted between Hilkiah, in Josiah's reign, and Seraiah, who was put to death by Nebuchadnezzar, in iChr.6.13,14. The name may have been inserted here to assi- milate the genealogy to that of Ezr.7.i. — 8. Son of Zephaniah, a Kohathite, and ancestor of Samuel the prophet (iChr.6.36). Apparently the same as Uzziah in ver. 24. — 9. Azariah, the son of Oded (2Chr.l5.i), called simply Oded in ver. 8, was a remarkable prophet in the days of king Asa, and a contemporary of Azariah the son of Johanan the high-priest, and of Hanani the seer. — 10, 11. Two sons of Jehoshaphat, king of Judah (21.2). — 12. In 22.6 Azariah is a clerical error for Ahaziah. — 13. Son of Jeroham, one of the captains of Judah in the time of Athaliah (23. i). — 14. The high-priest in the reign of Uzziah, king of Judah. The most memorable event of his life is recorded in 26.17-20. When king Uzziah, elated by his prosperity and power, " trans- gressed against the Lord his God, and went into the temple of the Lord to burn incense upon the altar of incense," Azariah the priest, accompanied by eighty of his brethren, went in boldly after him, and withstood him. Azariah was contemporary with Isaiah the prophet, and with Amos and Joel, and doubtless wit- nessed the great earthquake in Uzziah's reign. — 15. Son of Johanan ; one of the captains of Ephraim in the reign of Ahaz (28.12), who sent back the captives and spoil that were taken in the invasion of Judah by Pekah.^ 16. A Kohathite, father of Joel in the reign of Hezekiah (29.12). — 17. A Merarite, son of Jehalelel, in the time of Hezekiah, contem- porary with the son of the preceding (29.12). — 18. The high -priest in the days of Hezekiah (31.10,13). He may have co-operated with the king in the thorough purification of 78 AZ ARIAS the temple and in the restoration of the temple services. He succeeded Urijah, the high-priest in the reign of Ahaz. — 19. Son of Maaseiah, who repaired part of the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.3.23,24). — 20. One of the leaders of the children of the province who went up from Babylon with Zerubbabel (7.7). Called Seraiah (Ezr.2.2) and Zacharias (iEsd.5.8). — 21. One of the Levites who as- sisted Ezra in instructing the people in the knowledge of the law (Ne.8.7). Called Azarias in iEsd.9.43. — 22. One of the priests who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah (Ne.lO.2), and probably the same as the Azariah who as- sisted in the dedication of the city wall (12. 33). —23. (Je.43.2.) [Jezaniah.]— 24. The original name of Abed-nego (Dan. 1.6, 7, 11,19). Azapi'as — 1. (iEsd.9.2i) = Uzziah, 3. — 2. (9.43) possibly = Urijah, 3.-3. (9.48) = Azariah, 21. — 4. Priest in the line of Ezra (2Esd.l.r), elsewhere Azariah, 7, andEzERiAS. — 5. Name assumed by the angel Raphael (Tob. 5. 12, 6. 6. 13, 7. 8, 9. 2). — 3. A captain in the army of Judas Maccabaeus (iMac.5.i8, 56,60). Azaz', a Reubenite, father of Bela (iChr. 5.8). Azazi'ah. — 1. A Levite-harpist when the ark was brought from the house of Obed-edora to Jerusalem (iChr.l5.2i).— 2. The father of Hoshea the prince of Ephraim when David numbered the people (27. 20). — 3. One of the Levites in the reign of Hezekiah, who had charge of the tithes and dedicated things in the temple (2Chr.3i.13). Azbaz'areth, king of the Assyrians, pro- bably a corruption of Esar-haddon (iEsd.5. 69 ; cf. Ezr.'t.2). Azbuk', father or ancestor of Nehemiah the prince of part of Beth-zur (Ne.3.i6). Azekah', a town of Judah, with depend- ent villages, lying in the sh'^phela, near Shochoh (iSam.l7.i). Joshua's pursuit of the Canaanites after the battle of Beth-horon extended to Azekah (Jos.l0.io,ii.l5.35), which was fortified by Rehoboam (2Chr.ll.Q), and was still standing at the time of the Babylonian invasion (Je.34.7), and is mentioned as one of the places reoccupied by the Jews after the Captivity (Ne.ll.30). The position of Azekah is still doubtful. [c.r.c] Azel', a descendant of Saul (iChr.8.37,38, 9. 43. 44)- ^ Azem', a city in the extreme S. of Judah (Jos. 15. 29), afterwards allotted to Simeon (19. 3). Called in rChr.4-29 Ezem. Azephupith' (R.V. Arsiphurilh). The name answers in the LX.X. of iEsd.5.i6 to Jorah in Ezr.2.i8 and Hariph in Ne.7.24. It perhaps originated in a mistaken combination f)f these two names, C being read for £ . The Vulg. omits it. [c.D.J Aze'tas. [Ceilan.] Azg-ad'. The children of Azgad, to the number of 1,222 (Ezr.2.i2 ; 2,322, Ne.7.i7), were among the laymen who returned with Zerubbabel. A second detachment of no, led by Johanan, accompanied Ezra in the second caravan (Ezr.8 12). They joined in the cove- nant (Ne.lO.15). The name appears as Astath in iEsd.8.38 and Sadas in 5.13, where the number is given as 3,222. AZZtTA Azi'a (iEsd.5.31) = UzzA, 3. Azi'ei (2Esd.l.2), an ancestor of Ezra, called Azariah, 6 (Ezr.7.3), and Ezias (iEsd.8.2). Aziel', a Levite (iChr.l5.2o). A shortened form of Jaaziel (ver. 18). Aziza', an Israelite who had married a foreign wife after the return from Babylon (Ezr.10.27) ; called Sardeus in iEsd.9.28.' Azma'veth. — 1. One of David's mighty men (2Sam.23.31 ; 1Chr.ll.33). — 2. A de- scendant of Mephibosheth, or Merib-baal(iChr. 8.36,9.42).— 3. The father of Jeziel and Pelet, two Benjamite slingers and archers who joined David at Ziklag (12. 3). — 4. Overseer of David's royal treasures (27.25). Probably i, 3, and 4 are identical. Azma'veth, a place in Benjamin, named with Anathoth. Forty-two Bene-Azmaveth re- turned from captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2. 24). The " sons of the singers " settled there (Ne.12.29). See Beth-azmaveth (Hizmeh, 2 miles N. of Anathoth). [c.r.c] Azmon', a place on the S. boundary of the Holy Land, apparently near the torrent of Egy^t {Wddy el-^Arish ; Num. 34. 4, 5 ; J0S.I5.4). It has not yet been identified. Aznoth -tabop' (Jos.i9.34 ; ears of Tabor), a place at the foot of Tabor on W. The name has not been recovered. [c.r.c] A'zop, son of Eliakim, in our Lord's geneal- ogy (Mt. 1.13,14). AzOtUS. [ASHDOD.] Azotus, Mt. (iMac.9.15), the place where Judas Maccabaeus was killed in battle, after advancing from Eleasa. Josephus places Mt. Aza near Berzetho or Bethzetho (12 Ant. x. 2, xi. 2), the scene of the battle ; now Bir ez Zeit, a village on high ground commanding the Roman road from Antipatris to Jerusalem, 4 miles N.W. of Bethel. [c.r.c] Azpiel'. — 1. The head of a house of the half-tribe of Manasseh beyond Jordan, a man of renown (iChr.5.24). — 2. -A. Naphtalite, ancestor of Jerimoth, 6 (27. iq). — 3. Father of Seraiah, 12 (Je.36.26). Azpikam'. — 1. A son of Neariah of the royal line of Judah (iChr.3.23). — 2. Eldest son of Azel, and descendant of Saul (iChr.8. 38,9.44). — 3. A Levite. ancestor of Shemaiah, 5 (iChr.9.14; Ne.ll.15). — 4. Governor of the house, or prefect of the palace to king Ahaz, who was slain by Zichri, an Ephraimite hero, in the successful invasion of the southern king- dom bv I'ekah. king of Israel (2Chr.28.7). Azubah'.— 1. Wife of Caleb, 2 (iChr.2.i8. 19). — 2. Daughter of Shilhi and mother of king Jehoshaphat (iK.22.42; 2Chr.2O.31). Azup, properly Azzup'. — 1. One of the heads of the people who sealed the covenant (Ne.lO.17). — 2. A Benjamite of Gibeon, and father of Hananiah the false prophet (Je.28.i). — 3. F'athcr of Jaazaniah, one of the princes of the people against whom Ezekicl was com- manded to prophesy (Ezk.ll.i). Azupan'. The sons of .\zuran are enumer- ated in iEsd.5.15 among those who returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel ; perhaps identical with .Azzur in Ne.lO.17. Azzah' (K.\'. Gaza), the more accurate ren- dering of Gaza (Deut.2.23 ; I K. 4.24 ; J e. 25.20). Azzan ,the father of Paltiel (Num. 34.26). Azzup'. [Azuk, i.] PLATE IV WORSHIP OF THE SUX-GOD AT SIPPARA, c. 900 B.C. (From a stone tablet in the Brit. Mus.) See art. " Baal." P- 7S] SARCOPHAGUS FROM SIDON. (Hamdi Pasha supposed this to be the tomb of Alexander the Great, but this is highly improbable. See art. "Sidon.") SAAL Ba'al. — 1. A Reubenite, father or an- cestor of Beerah (iChr.5.5). — 2. The son of Jehiel, father or founder of Gibeon, by his wife Maachah {iChr.8.30,9.36). Ba'al (plur. ba'alim), a word found in all the Semitic dialects in the sense of master, owner (not ruler), as, e.g., owner of a house, land, ox, etc. It is also used in the sense of husband, though not applied to the owner of a slave. Some suppose it was used in N. Israel as equiva- lent to the word 'ddhon (lord) used in the S., but the words are not equivalent. It is found particularly in connexion with the local wor- ship of the Canaanites, which the Israelites found on their entrance into Canaan, and to which they so largely conformed. A local divinity was supposed to have his seat in a particular spot or district of which he was lord, and to exercise special influence over the agri- cultural operations of the district. The Is- raelites, in their transition from a pastoral to an agricultural life, became habituated to the modes of speech of their neighbours, and con- formed to their customs, celebrating the days of the ba'alim, and giving offerings of the pro- duce to the local deities who were supposed to confer fertility (Ho. 2. 5, 13). This conformity was the more insidious that the word ba'al, or lord, harmless enough in itself, was actually ap- plied by the Israelites to their own God, and they no doubt persuaded themselves that they were giving Him reverence by this service. The result was practically the worship of the ba 'dlim , with all the immoral accompaniments of that worship (Ho. 4.13, 14). So it was reprobated by the prophets as a defection from the wor- ship of Jehovah ; and so heinous did it appear to Hosea that he rebuked it as open idolatry, and said the time would come when Israel would see its error, and the very name ba'al would be so abhorred that it would not be men- tioned. [IsHi.] Hence later writers substitute for it the word bosheth [shame] in com- pound words forming proper names, writing Ishbosheth for Ishbaal, Mephibosheth for Meribbaal, etc., though these names had been at first used without any conscious reference to the Baal -worship, and in families most devoted to the Jehovah religion. As the word 6a '«/ is not confined to Hebrew, so we find Baal-worship outside the bounds of Palestine. The Baal of Tyre was Melkart, and it was the worship of this deity that was introduced into N. Israel by Ahab, under the influence of his Sidonian wife Jezebel. This seems to have been a worship of a much more elaborate na- ture than that of the local ba'alim (1K.I8.22) ; and though perhaps it was not designed by Ahab to take the place of the worship of Jeho- vah, Elijah perceived clearly that the nation must choose between the two, and made that solemn appeal and trial by fire which gave a check to the foreign worship. It is, however, to be noted that though this form of Baal- worship was stamped out by Jehu at a suc- ceeding time, the worship of the local ba'alim, associated from time immemorial with the cultivation of the soil, and claiming to be not inconsistent with the acknowledgment of J ehovah as the national God, was still practised, BAAL, BAAL AH, BAAlATH 79 as the book of Hosea shows. Though put down from time to time by reforming leaders, it ever again reasserted itself (cf. Judg.6.25 with 8.33, Judg.lO.io with iSam.7.4, 2K.3.2), and seems never to have been permanently abolished till the Exile (2K.I7.16). In the Assyro-Babylonian religion the name occurs in the form of Bel, who is one of the first triad of gods, the god of the earth, as Anu is god of the heavens, and Ea the god of the abyss. At a later stage he became identified with Mar- duk, the city-god of Babylon. Among wor- shippers of the heavenly bodies the name Baal would be naturally, and apparently was some- times, given to the sun ; but this does not warrant the conclusion that Baal was origin- ally the sun. In 2K.23.5 the worship of Baal is distinguished from the worship of the sun. The name enters into a great many com- pounds, denoting the god of a locality or potency, and then the name of the place of this supposed influence. It also enters into the formation of some personal names. The chief of these compounds (besides the place-names in next art.) are :— 1. BAAL-BERITH' (lord of covenant), also called El-berith, a deity wor- shipped at Shechem (Judg.9.4,46). — 2. BAAL- GAD' (lord of good fortune), in the valley of Lebanon under mount Hermon, identified by some with Ba'albek, by others supposed to be the same as Baal-hermon, and located at Hasbeya (see next art. and Gad). — 3. BAAL- HA NA N' (Baal has been gracious), proper name of (a) one of the kings of Edom (Gen. 36. 38), (b) one of David's officers (iChr.27.28). — 4. BAAL-PEOR' (lord of Peor), a Moabite deitv, into whose impure worship the Israelites fell (■Num.25. 3) — 5. BAAL-ZEBUB' (q.v.). W. Robertson Smith, Religion of the Semites, lect. iii. ; F. Baethgen, Beitrdge zur semitischen Religionsgeschichie (1888), pp. 17 ff. [j.R.] Ba'al, Baalah', Baalath' (geographical). " High," an element in various town names. — 1. BAAL (iChr.4.33), <5nS. borderof Simeon, in the Beer-sbeba desert, called also BAALATH- BEER (J OS. 19. 8 ; height of the well), otherwise Ramath-neghebh (i Sam. 30. 27 ; height of the dry region). The site is unknown. — 2. BAALAH (]os.i5.g), BAALE (2S&m..G.2), or K I RJATH- BAAL (Jos.15.6o, 18. 14), names for Kirjath- JEARIM ('Erma). It is noticed in the Amarna tablets, in 15th cent, b.c, as Bit Belatu (Berlin 106), rebelling from Jerusalem (see 9.17). — 3. Mount BAALAH (15.ii), the high land W. of Ekron.— 4. BAALATH, a town of Dan (19. 44), near Gezer and Beth-horon (8 Ant. vi. i), fortified by Solomon (1K.9.18), possibly the village Bel'ain on a hill 3 miles N. of Beth- horon.— 5. BAAL-GAD, the N. limit of J oshua's conquests ' ' in the valley of Lebanon,' ' and "under mount Hermon" (Jos.ll. 17,12.7, 13.5), perhaps at 'Ain Jedeideh, on the road to Damascus, N. of Hermon. See also preced- ing art. — 8. BAAL-HAMON,\w\ievQ Solomon had a vineyard (Can. 8. 11), is unknown, unless we may read BAAL-HERMON (Judg.3.3; iChr.5.23), Hermon being noted for the vine- yards on its slopes. — 7. BAAL-HAZOR, near the town of Ephraim (2Sam.i3.23), now the high summit Tell 'Asur, N. of Bethel, and E. of the road to Shechem.— 8. BAAL-MEON (Num.32.38 ; iChr.5.8), a town of Reuben near 80 BAALE OF JXTDAH Nebo ; Eusebius places it 9 miles from Heshbotl (Onomasticon), which is correct for Md'ain, a high mound with Byzantine ruins S. of Hesh- bon. On the Moabite Stone (after 900 b.c.) it is called BETH-BAAL-MEON, as also in Jos.13.i7; and Je.48.23 BETH-ME0N.—9. BAAL-PERAZIM (aSam.S.so), a hill near the valley of Rephaim, S.W. of Jerusalem. — 10. BAAL-SHALISHA (2K.4.42), perhaps in the land of Shalisha (iSam.9.4). Eusebius places it 15 Roman miles N. of Lydda ; perhaps at Ke/r Thilth (the Arab, th being the Heb. sh), 18 miles N. of Lydda.— 11. BAAL-TAMAR (htll of the palm), near Gibeah of Benjamin (Judg.20.33), perhaps near the palm S. of Bethel (4.5).— 12. BAAL-ZEPHON [height of the north ; Ex. 14.2, 9), near the old head of the gulf of Suez. [c.R.c.j Baale of Judah. [Baal, geogr. 2.] Ba'ali. [Ishi.] Baalim. [Baal, the god.] Baalis', the Ammonite king who used the traitor Ishmael to slay Gedaliah (Je.4O.14). [Ishmael, 6.] . Baal-zebub (a-Ut 7^3; LXX. BdaX Mvtav, 2K. 1.2, 3, 6,16), the Philistine god of Ekron, whose oracle was so famous, that when Ahaziah, king of Israel, was dangerously sick, he sent to inquire of it whether he should recover, and was accordingly rebuked by Elijah. The name Baal-zebub (lit. lord of flies), assuming it to be correct, would probably mean among the Philistines, " he who sends and averts plagues of flies" ; cf. the worship of Zei^s dvo- /xvios (Zeus, the averter of flies) in Elis, attested by Pausanias and Clement of Alexandria. But probably the second component, 2-13T (z''bhubh = fly) is a contemptuous Jewish substitute (cf. the substitution of boshelh, shame, for Baal) for an original '?2r, z'bhul, = lofty abode, a word used of Solomon's temple (1K.8.13), and of heaven (Is.63.i5 ; Hab.S.ii). The true form, therefore, is Baal-zebul (cf. N.T. BeeX- fe^ouA), and the true meaning is, either, lord of the temple (at Ekron), or (more probably) lord of heaven. The LXX. wrongly renders Baal- zebub " the lord Muian," i.e. the lord Zebub = fly. Josephus has a further error. Misled by the feminine article of the LXX. [iv rij lidaX Mviav, 2K.1.2a,6,i6), which merely indicates that, in reading, at'crxt'"''? {shame) is to be sub- stituted for the hateful word Baal, he makes Baal-zebub a goddess (9 Ant. ii. i). In N.T. the word occurs 7 times (Mt. 10.25,12.24,27 ; Mk.3. 22 ; Lu.ll.15,18,19), always as a title of Satan, an application natural enough at a time when the gods of the heathen were generally identi- fied with demons. The true N.T. form is un- doubtedly UeeX^e^ouX, Beelzeboul (W. H.'s liee^efiovK is a palpable blunder), and the N.T. meaning is, therefore, "lord of the abode" (cf. the play upon the meaning, BeeXfe/ioi/X = olKo5f(nr6Tr]s, Mt.lO.25), the " abode " being understood to be not heaven, but hell. J. Lightfoot's suggestion that Beelzeboul is a con- temptuous alteration of Beel-zebub (lord of flies) into ?3T bv2, ba'al zebhel ( = lord of dung), is less probable. Baudissin in Realency. f. prot. Jheol.', " Baal and Bel " ; Enc. Bib., arts. " Baal-zebub," " Beel-zebub." [ch.J | BABEL, BABYLON" Baaha'. — 1. Solomon's of&cer in the town§ of Issachar (1K.4.12). [Jehoshaphat, 4.]^ 2. The father of Zadok who assisted ia rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem under Nehe- miah (Ne.3.4).— 3. (iEsd.5.8) = Baanah, 4. Baanah'. — 1. Son of Rimmon, a Ben- jamite, who with his brother Rechab murdered Ishbosheth. Eor this they were killed by David, and their mutilated bodies hung up over the pool at Hebron (2Sam.4.2,5,6,9). — 2. A Netophathite, father of Heleb or Heled, one of David's mighty men (aSam. 23.29 ; iChr.11.30). — 3. Accurately Baana, son of Hushai, Solomon's commissariat officer in Asher (iK.4.i6). — 4. One of the "guides" of Zerubbabel on his return from the Captivity (Ezr.2.2 ; Ne.7.7 ; = Baana in iEsd.5.8). Pos- sibly the same person is intended in Ne.lO.27. Baani'as = Benaiah, 8, of the sons of Phorosh = Phoros (iEsd.9.26 ; cf. Ezr.lO.25). Baapa', one of the wives of Shaharaim, a descendant of Benjamin (iChr.8.8). Baasei'ah, a Gershonite Levite, forefather of Asaph the singer (iChr.6.4o[25]). Baasha', c. 925-902 e.g., 3rd king of the separate kingdom of Israel, and founder of its 2nd dynasty. He was son of Ahijah of the tribe of Issachar, and conspired against king Nadab, son of Jeroboam, when besieging the Philistine town of Gibbethon (1K.I5.27), and killed him with his whole family. His origin appears to have been humble (16. 2). He made war on Asa, probably in the i6th year of the latter's reign [Chronologv], and began to fortify Ramah. He was defeated by the unexpected alliance of Asa with Benhadad I. of Damascus. Baasha " walked in the way of Jeroboam," and therefore Jehu, the son of Hanaui, pronounced against him Jeroboam's fate (I6.1-4) ; he himself, however, died a natural death in the 24th year of his reign, and was buried in the beautiful city (Can. 6. 4) of Tirzah, which he had made his capital (iK.16.6 ; 2Chr.l6.1-6). [h.c.b.] Babel, Babylon, was properly the capital of the country called, in O.T., Shinar, and in later times Chaldea, or the land of the Chaldees. Whether it goes back to the same date as Erech, Accad, Calneh, and other cities, is doubtful, but it is certain that it existed in the time of Sargon of Agade (c. 3000 B.C.), or even earlier. It probably attained the position of capital of the country c. 2000 B.C., when the " Dynasty of Babylon " ruled, the provinces not included being Ellasar (Gen.l4.i) and the southern states, which last always retained a measure of independence. According to Herodotus, the city formed a vast square of 120 stades each way (close upon 14 niiles, or nearly 56 miles in circuit). It was surrounded by a deep and broad ditch, and by a wall 50 royal cubits thick and 200 cubits high, pierced by 100 gateways with brazen gates. The city was situated on both sides of the Euphrates, and at the point where the wall met the river, return-walls in the form of ramparts stretched along each bank. Its houses were of three and four stories high, and the roads by which it was cut up ran in straight lines. Those leading to the river were closed by brazen gates set in the ramparts. Within the great outer wall was another " not much weaker, but enclosing a BABEL, BABYLON smaller space." In each division of the city [ was a building, one being the king's palace, j large and " strongly fortified around," and the other the great temple of Belus. The latter was a tower in stages to the number of eight, with a sanctuary at the top in which the god was said to visit the woman who dwelt there. [B.\BEL, Tower of.] The two divisions of the city were united by a bridge formed of stone piers connected by movable platforms, said to have been built by queen Nitocris when she changed the course of the Euphrates to prevent invasion. Ctesias gives the circuit of the city as 360 stades only (rather less than 41 i miles). The two divisions were connected by a bridge 5 stades (more than 1,000 yds.) long, and BABEL, BABYLON 81 30 ft. broad, of the kind described by Herodo- tus. At each end was a royal palace, that in the eastern city being the grander of the two. Besides the bridge, the two palaces were also connected by a tunnel under the river ! Ctesias' description of the temple of Belus has not come down to us. All the ancient writers represent Babylon as occupying a tract of large size, and enclosed within lofty walls, but their estimates differ. (To the above may be added Strabo, 385 stades ; Q. Curtius, 368 ; and Clitarchus, 365 stades.) From Herodotus' and Diodorus' descriptions it seems clear that this space was not covered with houses, and Q. Curtius says that as much as nine- tenths consisted, even in the most flourishing Scale of I Mile. i ^ ATTKMPIED RESTORATION OF BABYLON. S2 BABEL, BABYLON times, of gardens, parks, paradises, fields, and orchards. The reference to the height of the gates of Babylon and the breadth of her walls (Je.51.58; cf. 50.15 and 51.53) indicates that it was these dimensions, rather than their extent, that were renowned. About 21 in. has been suggested as the length of the royal cubit, which would make their height, as indicated by Herodotus, about 360 ft., which is clearly impossible. According to Ctesias, the wall was strengthened by 250 towers, irregularly disposed so as to guard the weakest parts (in- cluding, probably, the gates). — The Ruins. These lie about 5 miles above Hillah, on the E. bank of the Euphrates, and consist chiefly of three great masses of buildings. The northern- most is a squarish mound called Babil ; some distance S. is a group of mounds designated al Mujelliheh, " the overturned," the lower one, which is called the Qasr, or " castle," being the most considerable. Still farther S. is the mound 'A mrdn ibn A It, so called from the tomb which, with the sanctuary named Ibrahim al rovince, and Merodach-baladan seized the throne three months later. Sargon made good his position in Babylonia, however, and was succeeded by his son Sennacherib in 705 ; but in 703 Merodach-baladan again took the thnine. lla\iiig de])iis('d him, Senna- cherib set on the thrnnc Bel-ihni, a Chaldean ; but iiis rule not being satisfactory, he was re- placed in 700 B.C. by Assur-nadin-sum, Senna- cherib's son, who reigned 6 years. This Sabel, Babylon prince was captured by HalUiSu, king of Elam, whereupon Nergal-usezib (Siizub) mounted the throne. Taken prisoner by the Assyrians after a troubled rule of 18 months, he was followed by Musezib-Marduk (likewise called Suzub) in 692 B.C. He being captured in his turn by the Assyrians, Sennacherib again mounted the throne (689 b.c), which he occupied until his death in 681. Sennacherib's ravages during the final struggle for supremacy were remem- bered by the Babylonians long afterwards. His son Esar-haddon (681 b.c.) tried to appease the people by rebuilding the destroyed temples, but met with much discojitent. He was succeeded by his second son, Samas-sum- ukin, in 669 b.c This ruler incurred the enmity of his brother Assur-bani-apli, king of Assyria, and fearing to fall into his hands, set fire to his palace and perished in the flames. The next three rulers were Kandalanu, sup- posed to be the same as Assur-bani-apli, his son Assur-etil-ilani, and Sin-sarra-iskun (Sara- cos). Nabopolassar is thought to have been a general in the army of the last-named, who, having been sent to Babylonia to put down a revolt, turned his arms against his royal master, and became king of Babylon. His reign of 21 years (625-604) was a most suc- cessful one, and under him Babylonia again became a great power. Wishing to conquer Syria, he sent his son Nebuchadnezzar with an army to reduce the country to submission, but died at Babylon whilst the operations were in progress. Nebuchadnezzar became king in 604. He reduced Jehoiakim to subjection (2K.24.1ff.), and later on captured Jerusalem, carrying off Jehoiachin and his court captives to Babylon (598 b.c). Jerusalem was be- sieged and captured again in 586 b.c, when the temple was destroyed ; and Tyre and Egypt also felt the force of his arms. Evil- Merodach succeeded him in 561 b.c, and showed marked favour to Jehoiachin. He was murdered by his brother-in-law Neriglis- sar, who mounted the throne in 359 b.c, and was followed by his young son Labasi-Marduk in 556. This last was assassinated after a rule of only 6 months, when Nabonidus, father of Belshazzar, was elected to succeed him. Bel- shazzar, who held the jiost of connnander-in- chief, seems to have failed to keep the country in a proper state of defence. This attracted the attention of the conquering Cyrus, who sent his general Gobryas ol Ciuti (a part of Media — see Dauius), and Babylon was cap- tured in 538 B.C. The ease with which the conquest was effected suggests that the Baby- lonians rather desired the change. Nabonidus is said to have been transferred to Carmania, but Belshazzar was ai'iiarently killed in an attack on the night of Marchesvan 11. As a part of the Persian empire Babylon con- tinued to be a royal residence. Alexander the (ireat intended to make it the capital of his eastern pro\inces, but died before he could carry out his plan. To all a])iiearance it was the foundation of Seleucia on the Tigris which gave the death-blow to the prosperity of the city, though the services in the great temple of Belus still continued, for the i>eoplc were closely attached to the centre of their religious life. The site was probably still inhabited BABEL, TOWEB, OF until within a decade or two of the Christian era, and perhaps even later (cf. iPe.5.13). Babylon has formed quite a mine of building- material for the towns around, and still does so. The " great city," " the beauty of the Chaldees' excellency," has thus in reality "become heaps " (Je.5i.37). Her walls have " fallen " (51. 44), been " thrown down " (50. 15), become " utterly broken " (51. 58). "A drought is upon her waters " (50. 3 8), for the system of irrigation on which, in Baby- lonia, fertility largely depends is no longer carried out in the same systematic way. Her cities are everywhere " a desolation " (50. 45), her " land a wilderness " ; " wild beasts of the desert lie there," and " owls dwell there " [cf. Layard, Nineveh and Babylon, p. 484, with Is. 13. 21, 22 and Je.5O.39). The natives are said to regard the whole site as haunted, and the Arab will neither pitch his tent there nor the shepherd fold sheep (Is.l3.2o). For the ruins, see Fried. Delitzsch, Im Lande des einstigcn Paradieses (1903) ; Weissbach, Das Stadtbild von Babylon (1904). For the occur- rence of the name in iPe.5.13 and in the .Apocalypse, see Babylon. [t.g.p.] Ba'bel, Towep of. This edifice is only mentioned in Gen. 11. 4, 5, and is spoken of as having been built of brick, with bitumen (A.V. (slime) for morter, and left in an incomplete state in consequence of the builders ceasing to understand each other. Jewish tradition states that fire fell from heaven, and split the tower through to its foundation ; whilst Poly- histor and other writers say that the winds overthrew it. Traditionally the tower of Babel was regarded as the great ziqqurat or temple-tower of Nebo at Borsippa (the Birs- Nimriid), though the distance of that site from Babylon is against this identification. Notwithstanding the statement in Gen. 11. 8 that the building of the tower was stopped, there is every reason to think that it was ul- timately finished, and it is probably the build- ing called " the Tower ^of Babylon " by Nebu- chadnezzar— namely, E-temen-an-ki (the house of the foundation of heaven and earth), N. of the temple of Belus in that city. [Babel.] E-temen-an-ki is called by Herodotus (i. 181) the temple of Belus, and described as a solid step-pyramid within an enclosed space 400 yds. square, to which access was gained through doorways closed by gates of bronze. The stages of the pyramid (not reckoning the lowest, which was the foundation-platform) were seven in number, and an ascent going round the structure gave access to the top. At this point was a chapel or shrine regarded by the Babylonians as the god's dwelling-place, though no statue represented him there; his image, a seated statue said to have been of solid gold, was in a shrine lower down. Before it was a table, likewise of gold, as were also the throne and the steps thereto. Outside were two altars, the smaller (for the sacrifice of un- weaned lambs only) being of gold. The larger altar was for full-grown victims. A Baby- lonian description of this building is probably in existence, a tablet containing one having been for a time in the hands of the late George Smith. It stated that the temple had two courts, one within the other, and both oblong. BABEL, TOWER OF 85 The temple-area was provided with six gates. The platform within it, however, was square, and its wall had four gates opening towards the points of the compass. The building con- nected with the ziqqurat or temple-tower had Prob.ihle form of the "Tower of Babylon," based on Mr. G. Smith's account, the description of Herodotus, and the remains of similar structures in Babylonia and Assyria. TEMPLH OF TOWER OF BABEL. on the E. shrines to Nebo and Tasmit, his spouse ; on the N. to Ea (Hea) and Nusku ; and on the S. to Anu and Bel. On the W. was a building consisting of two wings — probably a temple dedicated to Merodach (Belus), for it was there, according to Smith's tablet, that they kept the couch and throne of gold, to- gether with other things of great value. Adopting Smith's measurements, the lowest stage of the tower itself was 300 ft. square by no ft. high, and ornamented with recessed groovings which were characteristic of Baby- lonian architecture. The second stage was 260 ft. square by 60 ft. high, and had appar- ently sloping or hollow sides. Stages 3 to 5 were 20 ft. high, and respectively 200. 170, and 140 ft. square. The measurements of the sixth stage were not given, but it was probably in the same proportion as the others. The text made the seventh stage to be the sanctuary of the god, its dimensions being 80 ft. long, 70 ft. broad, and 50 ft. high. The total height of the structure Smith estimates to have been the same as the length and breadth of the lowest stage — namely. 300 ft. above the plain. Like other temple-towers, the stages were probably tinted with the planetary colours, the order, beginning at the top, being gold, silver, yellow, blue, black, and white, the first two being em- blematic of the sun and moon. There was probably no idea of " scaling heaven " in the minds of those who raised either this or any other of the Babylonian temple-towers ; the expression used in Gen. 11. 4 is a mere ex- aggeration for great height (cf. Deut.l.28 ; Dan. 4. II, etc.), and is not to be taken literally. Diodorus says that the great temple-tower dedicated to Belus was used by the Chaldeans as an observatory (ii. 19), but it is doubtful if there is any confirmation of this. These lofty erections may have been partly due to the 86 BABI feeling that, when sacrificing i>r worshipping, those on the summit were nearer to the deity than on the plain below. It has been stated that the temple-tower at Calah was built over a tomb. Sec Athenaeum, February 12, 1876; Weissbach, Stadtbild von Babylon (1904), pp. 10 ff. [t.g.p.J Ba'bi (iEsd.8.37) = Bebai. Babylon. For an account of the city, see Bahel. In this article we shall discuss only the two special uses of the name in N.T. — A.. In iPe.5.13. St. Peter closes his epistle with a greeting from " Babylon." The question arises as to what place is in- tended by this name. Three chief interpreta- tions are offered : (i) Babylon in Egypt, which is a small fort mentioned by Strabo. But this was so insignificant a place, that St. Peter would hardly be likely to thus mention it without further identification. (2) Babylon in Mesopotamia. But there is no evidence either that St. Peter went there or that a church existed there in the apostolic age. Indeed, both hypotheses are unlikely. (3) Rome. FZusebius states that this was the traditional interpretation ; ^ and this is corroborated by a v.l. iv 'Pu/xr], in two cursive MSS. in this passage. It accords with what we know of the apostolic age to suppose that St. Peter was in Rome at the time of writing the epistle. For the early tradition of St. Peter's visit to Rome is too strong to be set aside. Moreover, St. Paul summoned St. Mark to Rome shortly before his own martyrdom (2Tim.4.ii), and St. Peter here sends greetings from St. Mark. Silvanus, by whom the letter was carried, was, if we may identify him with the Silas of Acts, a prominent companion of St. Paul ; and it is an interesting conjecture that by St. Paul's own wish St. Peter should have written this letter from Rome as an eirenicon to deepen the unity of the Church, as against the tendency to form a Petrine and a Pauline party, and that he should have selected Silvanus, as a friend of St. Paul, to bear his letter. Further, the whole sentence in which the name " Babylon " occurs is cast in allegorical terms. The church is regarded as a lady (17 crt'ce/cXeK-rTj : cf. 2jn.l.i3) ; and this accords with the general usage of the epistle, which allegorically applies to Christians a description drawn from Jewish history (iPe.l.i) and ascribes to them in a spiritual sense the privileges which O.T. gives to Israel (2.4-10). Finally, the allusion to Rome as " Babvlou " occurs both in Jewish and Christian literature, and so would be well understood. In such mystical use of language the later Jews delighted. — B. In the Apocalypse (16.19,17.5,18.2) represents Rome. The Apocalypse is a great drama of the working out of the perpetual conflict between tin- opjiosing principles of good and evil, between the spiritual forces on the one hand and the world-power on the other. To the apocalyptist the mighty Roman empire, with its luxurious and vicious capital and its persecution of the Christian Church, was the einbodiuiciit of lh(- world-power in his day. But liirouglioul till! book tix! groat c.ontlict is represented under symbolic imagery ; BADGER-SKINS hence Rome appears as " Babylon," the typical world-power of O.T., while the holy city of the old covenant is spiritualized as the new Jerusalem and represents the Christian Church. [j.c.v.d.] Babylo'nians, in a sj^ccial sense the in- habitants of Babylon, who were among the colonists planted in the cities of Samaria by the conquering Assyrians (Ezr.4.9). These people were of Semitic stock, but probably had a considerable admixture of non-Semitic (Sumerian) blood, and spoke, from about the middle of the third millennium onwards, the Semitic-Babj'lonian language. When, however, the warlike Chaldeans became predominant about the 7th cent, b.c, the names Chaldean and Babylonian became almost svnonymous (Ezk. 23. 14,13 ; cf. Is.48.i4,2o). ' [t.g.p.] Babylonish g-arment (lit. robe of Shinar ; Jos. 7. 21), an ample robe ornamented with embroidery, or perhaps a variegated gar- ment with figures inwoven in the celebrated Babylonian fashion. Baca', Valley of, a valley through which the Psalmist sees in vision the pilgrims passing in their march towards the sanctuary' of Jehovah at Zion (Ps.84.6). The R.V. reads " of weeping," or " of balsam trees." Perhaps habbdkhd is connected with hab b'khaim (A.V. mulberries ; 2Sam.5.23,24), near the Rephaim Valley. [c.r.c] Bac'chides, a friend of Antiochus Epi- phanes, and governor of Mesopotamia, was sent by Demetrius I. (Soter), 162 B.C., to install .\lcimus as high-priest in Jerusalem. Having done this, he withdrew (iMac.7.8-20). .After Nicanor's defeat by Judas, Bacchides was again sent into Judaea, and defeated and killed Judas at Elasa (9.i-i8). To maintain Syrian dominance there against Jonathan (9.25-32, 43-53). he remained in Judaea till the death of .\lcimus (160 B.C.), when he returned to An« tioch (9.57). In 158 B.C. he was once more in Jerusalem at tlie request of the Syrian party there, bvit met with ill success, and was glad to make terms with Jonathan and withdraw (9.r,8-72). Bacchu'pus, one of the " holy singers," who had taken a foreign wife (iEsd.9.24). Possibly the name of the " porter " Uri in Ezr.10.24, which is not otherwise represented in il^sd., has got displaced and corrupted into Bacchurus (sec S /leaker's Comm., on lEsd., I.e.). Bacchus. [DioNYSiA.] Bace'nop (2Mac.i2.33), appareiitly a captain of horse in the army of Judas Mac- cabaeus ; or possibly a title of the company. Bach'pites, The, tlie family of Beciier, son of l';plir.um (Num. 26. 33). Badg-ep-skins. Tlie Ileb. iahash, which A.\. renders badger, occurs in connexion with 'or, 'oroth (skin, skins), in Ex. 25. 5, 26. 14, 25.7,23,36.19; Num.4.riff.i4,25. In Ezk.l6.io tahash occurs without 'oroth, and is mentioned as the substance out of which women's shoes were made ; in the former passages the iahash skins are named in relation to the tabernacle, ark, etc., and ajijiear to have formed the ex- terior covering of these. There is much ob- scurity as to tiir uicaning of tahash. Most ancient \ersioMS scfiii agreed that it ilenotes not an animal, but a colour, either black or sky- BAG blue. It is difficult to understand why it should be thus interpreted, since there is no justifica- tion for such a meaning, either from etymology or from cognate languages ; while from Ex.35. 23 tahash seems to have been a material in frequent use among the Israelites of the Exodus, and the construction of the sentences where the name occurs points to a skin rather than a colour. In the German of Luther and in A.V. it is translated badger ; but although a badger (Meles taxus canescens) near akin to the European animal is common in the wooded parts of Palestine, it certainly cannot occur in the Sinaitic desert in numbers sufficient to have furnished skins for the purposes indicated. On the other hand, tahash appears equivalent to the Arab, takhas, a term which seems to be applied to the Red Sea porpoises, dolphins, and du- gongs ; Tristram adds seals, which are, how- ever, absent from the seas connected with the Indian Ocean. The Red Sea dugong has been named Halicore tabernaculi on the sup- position that its skin, which forms excellent leather, constituted the real tahash. Du- gongs and manatis (Manatus), collectively known as sea-cows, are marine and estuarine mammals constituting the order Sirenia. Although often confounded with whales and porpoises (Cetacea), they are really more nearly akin to elephants. [r.l.] Bag', (i) hdrit (2K.5.23 ; Is.3.22 ; A.V. crisping- pins, R.V. satchels), only in plur. ; used to carry money, or as a lady's orna- ment. The root gives no indications as to size, shape, or material. (2) Ms, a bag for carrying weights (Deut.25.i3 ; Pr.l6.11 ; Mi. 6. 11), also used as a purse (Pr.l.14 ; Is.46.6). (3) k''li, translated "bag" in 1Sam.i7.40, 49, is a word of most general meaning (see Gen. 42.25 ; rSam.9.7). The shepherd's " bag " which David had seems to have been worn by him as necessary to his calling, and was pro- bably, from a comparison of Zech.ll.13,16 (where A.V. instruments is the same word), for the purpose of carrying the lambs which were unable to walk, and contained materials for healing such as were sick and binding up those that were broken (c/. Ezk.34.4, 16). (4) i'''rdr, properly a " bundle " (Gen.42.35 ; i Sam. 25. 29), appears to have been used by travellers for carrying money during a long journey (Pr.7.20 ; Hag.1.6 ; cf. Lu.i2.33, Tob.9.5). In such "bundles" the priests bound up the money which was contributed for the restoration of the temple under Jehoiada (2 K. 12. 10 ; A.V. put up in bags). The "bag" which Judas carried was probably a small box or chest (Jn. 12. 6,13-29, yXwaadKOfiov, used in LXX. for " chest " in 2Chr.24.8, 10,11). In Lu.12.33 ^aXdvTLov is used for " bag " (A.V. purse in 10.4,22.35,36). Ba'^o (iEsd.8.40) = BiGVAi. I. Bagoas' ( J th. 12. 11, 13, 15, 13. 1,3, 14. 14). This name of Holofernes' confidential eunuch is probably borrowed by the author of this apocryphal romance from that of the favourite Egyptian eunuch of Artaxerxes III. of Persia. The historical Bagoas poisoned Artaxerxes in 338 b.c. and killed Arses 3 years later, but was himself put to death in 334 B.C. by Darius Codomannus. The name is Persian (Bagavao or Bagavo nom., BALAAM 87 cf. Skt. bhagavdn, " fortunate," " lucky " ; Akhaemenian Pers. baga, " god " ; Avestic baga, bagha, "lot," "gift," bdga, "wealth"). Another form is Bagaeus (Herod, iii. 128, vii. 80; Xen. Hellenica, iii. 4, 13). [w.st.c.t.] Bag-oi' (iEsd.5.14) = BiGVAi, I. Bahupim' (youths), a town of Ben- jamin (2Sam.3.i6,16.5,17.i8,19.i6), on David's route to Mahanaim (iK.2.8). The hero AzMAVETH was a Bahapumite (1Chr.ll.33), or a Barhumite (2Sara. 23.31), probably of Bahurim. The Targum of Jonathan reads 'Almon for Bahurim, perhaps only as meaning "youth," but suggesting Almon ('Almit), a little N. of the old road to the Jordan Valley, which crosses N. of the mount of Olives. It is remarkable also that Beth-azmaveth (now Hizmeh) is only a mile N.W. of 'Almit. The main road does not pass through the ruin, but a steep " hill side " slopes thence, separated from it by a ravine to "go over " (see 2 Sara. 16.9,13). [C.R.C] Ba'jith (the house; R.V. Bayith, Is.15.2), preceded by the def. article in the Heb. The LXX. does not mention it. Perhaps a " temple." [c.r.c] Bakbakkap', a Levite, apparently a descendant of Asaph (iChr.9.i5). Bakbuk'. " Children of Bakbuk " were Nethinim who returned from captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.51 ; Ne.7.53)- Bakbukiah' 1. A Levite in the time of Nehemiah (Ne.ll. 17,12.9), perhaps the same as — 2. A Levite porter (Ne.i2.25). Bakep, Baking. [Bread.] Balaam, son of Beor (Num.22.5). hved at PETHORin Mesopotamia (Deut.23.4), and was summoned hence, " brought from Aram out of the mountains of the East " (Num.23. 7). by Balak, prince of Moab, in order to curse Israel. The mingling of desire and re- luctance in his mind with regard to Balak's request has led to many studies of Balaam's character, most noteworthy of which is that by Bishop Butler, containing the clever suggestion that in Mi.6.5ff. we have the traditional dialogue which took place between the prince and the soothsayer. He comes to Balak from the high places of Baal, next he goes to the field of Zophim near the cairn of Nebo, and lastly to the chff of Peor, on the narrow spur which runs out to Minyeh, each of which was a place sacred to one of the Moabite deities corresponding to Apollo, Mercury, and Priapus, and at each seven altars were raised, one to each of the seven planetary gods, whose aid was invoked against the God of Israel by the sacrifice to each of a bullock and a ram. But at each place Balaam, wish- ing to curse, blesses, and at last, recognizing his defeat, " he went not, as at the other times, to seek enchantments, but he set his face towards the wilderness." Then " the Spirit of God came upon him," and, to Balak's disgust, he not only foretells the victories of Israel, but indicates their future triumph over Moab. Then he rose up and went his way, having first given the advice to Balak by which the children of Israel were seduced into wickedness and punished by plague 1 (Num.25.i8,31.i6; Rev.2.i4)- He joined him- self with Midian, and was slain in company 88 BALAC BANI VIEW TROiM MINVEII (TOP OF PEOR). LOOKING NORTH UP JORDAN VAI.LEV (Num.23,: (From an original sketch by Col. Conder.) with five Midianite kings by the sword of the T eople he had endeavoured to curse (Num.31. 8). The speaking ass (Num. 22. 28) occasions no difficulty to those who believe in miracle or are familiar with folklore. " It is enough that the ass gave intelligible expression to its resentment and sense of wrong in such language as was natural to an ass, and that it attained all the ends of language, since it spoke home comprehensibly to the evil conscience of Balaam." Butler's Sermons, serm. 7 ; F. D. Maurice, Patriarchs and Law-givers of O.T., pp. 229 f. ; F. W. Robertson, Sermons, vol. iv. serm. 4, 5 ; cf. art. in Guardian, Sept. 27, 1905, by A. Smythe Palmer on " The Speaking of Balaam's Ass." [Nicolaitanes.] [c.r.d.b.] Ba'Iac (Rev. 2. 14) — Balak. Baladan. [Merodach-raladan.] Balah' {waste; Jos.l9.3),or Bilhah' (iChr. 4.29), a town of Simeon. The site is unknown; it has no connexion with Baalah. [c.r.c] Balak', son of Zippor, king of the Moabites at the close of the Israclitish wanderings in the wilderness. Balak entered into a league with Midian and hired Balaam to curse the Israelites ; but his designs were frustrated (Xum.22-24'). He is mentioned also in Jos. 24. 9 ; Jik1k.11.25 ; Mi. 6. 5 ; Rev. 2. 14. [Balaam.] Balamo (Jth.8.3). [Belmaim.] Balance. [Weights ; Law in O.T.] Balas'amus in iEsd.9.43. The corre- sponding name in Nehemiah is Maaseiaii, 6. Balm (Heb. fori) occurs in Gen. 37. 25 as brought by Ishmaelites from Gilead to Egypt ; in 43.11, as one of the presents sent by Jacob to Joseph ; in Je. 8. 22, 46. 11, 51. 8, where it ap- pears that the balm of Gilead had a medicinal value ; in Ezk.27.i7 (marg. rosin), as an article of commerce imported by Judah into Tyre. Perhaps fori does not refer to an exu- dation from any particular tree, but denoted any resinous substance with a medicinal value. [Spices; Mastick.] Hasselquist {Travels, 2g'i) describes the true balsam-tree of Mecca. As the true balm or balsam was a rare and costly medi- cament, several other sophistications did duty for it, or contained it in an adulterated state and received its name. The trees yielding balm be- longtothegenusBrt/sflMior/fnrfron, of .\siaticand N. African growth. Coverdale was the first to render ( or i "balm"; previously it was trans- lated resin. " Balm of Gilead " is a modern term, arisingnaturally outof Je.8.2 2,46.ii. For a summary of what is known of the history of the balm-tree {B. opobalsamum), which grew in the region about J ericho according to J osephus, and was lost by the time of the Crusades, see Smith's Diet, of Economic Plants. But Pliny's account is the most important. He says (xii. 25) : "The tree that yeeldeth it, Nature hath bestowed onely upon the land of lurie. In old time it was not to be found but in two parks or hortyards, belonging both to the kings of lurie. . . . The Emperours Vespasian, both father and son, brought one of those little Balme trees to Rome, and shewed it openly. . . . Pompey the Great likewise made proud boast [of it]. At the sacking of Jerusalem . . . about this very plant, there was a cruell battaile fought." See the whole chapter, [h.c.h.] Balnu'us (iEsd.9.31) = Binnui, 2. Balthasap' (Ba. 1.11,12) = Belshazzar. Bamah'. This word appears in its Heb. form only in one passage (Ezk.2O.29 ; see R.V. marg.). The cuneiform sign for Bamatu represents an altar or shrine, and the Heb. word has always this meaning. [c.r.c] Bamah (trtwrf). [High Place iSanctuar v.] Bamoth'-ba'al {high places, or monuments, of Baal; Jos.i3.17), a town S. of Heshbon, otherwise Bamoth (Num. 21. 19, 20) "in the ravine," where Balaam found a " high place " (Num. 22.41, 23. 3 ; see Is. 15.2). Possibly the remarkable dolmens of Wddy Jideid, 6 miles S.W. of Heshbon, mark this site (Surv. E. Pal. p. 254). [c.r.c] Ban (rEsd.5.37) = ToBiAH, i. Banai'as = Benaiah, 8, of the sons of Nobo = ]:thma (iEsd.9.35: cf. Ezr.lO.43). Band. [Troop.] Banl. — 1. .\ Gadite, one of David's mighty men (2Sam.23.3f)). — 2. A Levite of the lino of Mcrari, and forefather to Ethan (i Chr.6.46). — 3. A man of Judah of the line of Pharez(iChr.9.4). — 4. "Children of Bani" re- turned from captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2. 10,10.29,34 ; Ne.lO.14 ; iEsd.5.12). — 5. .\n Israelite " of the sons of Bani " (Ezr.lO. 38). — 6. A Levite, father of Rehum, 3 (Ne.3. 17). — 7. A Levite who taught the people and BANID BAPTISM 89 sealed the coveuant (Xe.8.7,9.40,10.13); called Anus in iEsd.9.48. Possibly the same as 6, if the name is that of a family. — 8. Another Levite, of the sons of Asaph (Ne.ll.22). Banid' (Banias, R.V. ; iEsd.8.36). This represents a name which has apparently es- caped from the present Heb. text (seeEzr.8.10). Bannai'a (iEsd.9.33) = Zabad, 5. Banner. [Ensign.] Ban nus (iEsd.9.34) = Bani, 5, or BlXNUI, 3. Banquets, among the Hebrews, were not only a means of social enjoyment, but often a part of the observ^ance of religious festivity. At the three solemn festivals, when all the males appeared before the Lord, the family also had its domestic feast {Deut.l6.ii). Both males and females (iSam.1.9) went up to- gether, to hold the festival. Sacrifices, both ordinary and extraordinary, as amongst heathen nations (Ex.34. 15 ; Judg.l6.23), in- cluded a banquet, and Eli's sons made this latter the prominent part. Besides religious celebrations, such events as the weaning a son and heir, a marriage, the separation or reunion of friends, and sheep-shearing, were customarily attended by a banquet or revel (Gen. 21. 8, 29. 22,31.27,54 ; iSam.25.2,36 ; 2Sam.i3.23). Birthday banquets are only mentioned in the cases of Pharaoh and Herod (Gen. 40. 20 ; Mt. 14.6); but see Birthdays. The usual time of the banquet was the evening, and to begin early was a mark of excess (Ec.l0.i6 ; Is.S.ii). The most essential materials of the banqueting- room, next to the viands and wine, which last was often drugged with spices (Pr.9.2 ; Can. 8.2), were perfumed ointments, garlands or loose flowers, white or brilliant robes ; after these, exhibitions of music, singers, and dancers, riddles, jesting and merriment (Judg.l4.i2 ; 2Sam.i9.35; Ne.8.io; Ec.l0.i9;_Is.5.i2,25.6, 28.1 ; Am.6.5,6; Wis.2.7ff. ; Mt.22.ii ; Lu. 15.25). Seven days was a not uncommon duration of a festival, especially for a wedding, but sometimes fourteen (Gen. 29. 27 ; Judg. 14.12 ; Tob.8.19) ; but if the bride were a widow, three days formed the limit. The " table " (shi'.lhdn) was often merely a mat spread on the ground ; round this the guests sat on the floor. The recumbent position referred to in N.T. belonged to a time when town-life had brought with it more luxurious habits. The separation of the women's banquet was not a Jewish custom (Esth.1.9). At the Pass- over four cups of wine, mixed with three parts of water, were blessed and passed round by the master of the feast. Ban'uas (Bannas, R.V.). In iEsd.5.26 " Banuas and Sudias " answer to " the children of HoDAViAH," 3, in Ezr.2.40. Baptism. (i) O.T. Preparation. As through divine providential guidance pagan rites had their ceremonial lustrations as signs of the need of purification and grace, so also under the more direct revelation of God there was in O.T. a foreshadowing of the sacramental principle which was to be prominent in the Christian religion, and an anticipation of the use of water in one of the chief sacraments. The rite of Circumcision ; the ceremony of washing after conditions symbolical of sin (Lev. 13-1 7 ; Num.19) and before approach to God (Ex. 19.10,14,29. 4,30.18-21 ; Num.8.7,21) ; the bathing of Naaman (2K.5.10-14) ; and the references to washing in the prophecies of the Messiah (Is.52.i5, A.V. and R.V., but not R.V. raarg. ; Ezk.36.25 ; Zech.l3.i ; cf. Heb.9.io, 10.22) ; may all be regarded as being in their different ways preparations for the institution of Christian baptism. The^', or some of them, may have led to the Jewish belief that the Messiah and His forerunner would baptize ANQUET : ASSYRIAN DRINKING SCENE. (From Khorsabad.) 90 BAPTISM (Jn.1.26). The deliverance of Noah and the passage of the Red Sea and the overshadowing of the Israelites by the cloud are types of baptism (iPe.3.2i ; iCor.lO.1,2). (2) Jewish Baptisms and the Baptism of St. John the Bap- tist. Baptism was not used by the J ews in the case of those who were Jews by birth or the children of proselytes ; but in the admission of proselytes a ceremony of baptism was neces- sary in addition to circumcision and a sacrifice, and some Jewish teachers held this baptismal rite sufficient for proselytes without circum- cision. Partly through the O.T. purifications and partly through these Rabbinical baptisms, the idea of baptism would be familiar to the Jews at the beginning of the ministry of St. John the Baptist. The "baptism of John," in a sense, placed all those who were invited to it in the position of Gentiles. While not itself a means of grace or of the forgiveness of sins, it was an indication of the will of God to forgive sinners, a sign of the remission of sins which was to be the result of the life and death and work of Christ, a preparation for the baptism of regeneration which Christ was to institute, and it mav have conveyed some anticipatory touch of the effects of what Christ was to do in the future. By an act parallel to His sub- mission to circumcision in His infancy, our Lord received the baptism of St. John as there- by fulfilling all righteousness, dedicating His rriinistrv to the Father, and indicating the future sanctification of water through His death and resurrection to be a sacramental instrument (Mt.3 ; Mk.l.4-11 ; Lu.3.i-22 ; Jn. 1.19-34). (3) Anticipations by our Lord and His disciples. In His discourse with Nicode- mus our Lord, perhaps not altogether without reference to the baptism of St. John the Baptist, alluded to the sacrament of Christian baptism, before the institution of it, in the sayings, " Except any one be begotten anew [or, from above] he cannot see the kingdom of God " ; " Except any one be begotten of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God " (Jn.3.3,5)- By the ministry of His disciples, but not by His own personal act. He administered a rite of baptism during His life on earth which was probably similar in its purpose and effects to that of St. John the Baptist (Jn.4.1,2). The flow of blood and water from His side on the cross after His death is not unreasonably regarded as having had a mystical significance, and as pointing to the efficacy which the sacramental use of water derives from the death of Christ (Jn.i9.34 ; cf. ijn.5.6). (4) Institution and Administration of Christian Baptism. The sacrament of Chris- tian baptism was instituted by our Lord be- tween His resurrection and ascension, when He gave command to His apostles, " All author- ity hath been given imto Me in heaven and on earth. Go ye therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy (ihost, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I commanded you ; and lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world " (Mt. 28.18-20). It is more likely that the apostles received the grace of Cliristian baptism together with the other gifts of the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost than that BAPTISM they were on this, or on any other, occasion baptized by our Lord, though there have been opinions that He baptized them (St. Augustine, Ep. cclxv. 3), or that He baptized the Blessed Virgin and St. Peter and that St. Peter baptized the other apostles (Euthymius Zigabenus, In Joan. Ev. iii. 5), or that our Lord baptized St. Peter, St. Peter baptized St. Andrew and the sons of Zebedee, St. Andrew and the sons of Zebedee baptized the other apostles, and St. Peter and St. John baptized the seventy disciples (Nicephorus, H.E. ii. 3). After the descent of the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost, and the sermon of St. Peter which followed, the first converts asked St. Peter and the rest of the apostles, " Brethren, what shall we do?" and received from St. Peter the answer, " Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ unto the remission of your sins ; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost " ; and the subse- quent baptism was the means of the converts being added to the Church (Ac.2.37-41). Bap- tisms were administered as a result of the preaching of St. Philip the deacon in Samaria and to the Ethiopian eunuch (Ac.8. 12, 13,36- 38). Saul of Tarsus after his conversion, Cornelius and his company after receiving the Holy Ghost, the proselyte Lydia and her household after she had given heed to the things which Paul spoke, the gaoler at Philippi, (after asking what he must do to be saved and receiving the answer, " Believe on the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved " together with "all his,") the Corinthians who believed, andthe disciples at Ephesus who had already received the " baptism of John," were baptized (Ac.9. 18,10.47,48,16.14,15.30-33,18.8,19.1-5). Bap- tism is spoken of by SS. Paul and Peter in their epistles, and by the author of Hebrews, as if it was assumed that all those in the Christian community had been baptized (Ro.6.3,4 ; iCor.1.13 ; Gal.3.27 ; C0I.2.12 ; iPe.3.20,2i ; Heb.6.1,2). (5) Subjects of Baptism. The facts mentioned in the last section, coupled with the command to baptize " all the nations " (Mt. 28.19), indicate that baptism was regarded as a necessary rite for all who wished to become Christians. That infants as well as adults were baptized is not expressly mentioned in N.T. A concurrence of reasons supplies a high probability that they were so baptized. The relation of Christian baptism to the Jewish religion would make it likely that the adminis- tration of circumcision to Jewish infants and of the Jewish baptism to the children of prose- lytes together with their parents would sug- gest to the earliest Christians that any infants who were members of a household receiving baptism should be baptized. It is likely that there were infants in the " households " bap- tized. The natural inference from the history of baptism in the Church is that infants had been baptized from the days of the apostles. The theological reasons for the baptism of in- fants which have been held weighty in later times are of such a character as would be likely to appeal to the earliest Christians. These general considerations derive some support from expressions in N.T. — e.g. the words "of St. Peter, "To you is the promise, and to your children " ; St. Paul's exhortations to children BAPTISM BAPTISM 91 and his teaching as to their duties and those of their parents, and his description of children as "holy" (iCor.7.14 ; Eph.6.1-4 ; Col. 3. 20, 21). Thus, that infants were baptized in N.T. times, while it cannot be proved, is very highly probable. (6) Matter of Baptism. It is obviously assumed throughout N.T. that baptism was administered with water. This is expressly stated in Ac.8. 36-39, and neces- sarily implied in 10.47,48, as also in the vvords of St. Paul, " by the washing of water " (Eph. 5.26), and of the writer of Hebrews (IO.22), " having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our body washed with pure water." In some cases the method of using the water may have been by the complete immersion of the person being baptized. This may be the meaning of the words " they botli went down into the water," " they came up out of the water," in connexion with the baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch by St. Philip (Ac.8. 38, 39). Such a practice might give special signi- ficance to St. Paul's comparison between bap- tism and the burial and resurrection of Christ (Ro.6.4 ; Col. 2.12). At the same time, a going down so as to stand with the feet in water while water was poured over the head would satisfy the requirements of the account of the baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch or of the comparison used by St. Paul. It is not likely that the three thousand persons baptized in one day in Jerusalem (Ac. 2. 41), or those baptized at Caesarea and Philippi in or near the houses of Cornelius and the gaoler (Ac. 10. 44-48,16.33), were all completely immersed. An examination of the verb /iaTTTtfa; in the LXX. and N.T. shows that, while it sometimes means to immerse completelv, it does not alwavs do so (2K.5.14; Is.21.4; Jth.12.7; Ecclus.34.2'i[31. 30]; Mt.20.22,23, T.R. ; Mk.7.4, T.R., and re- visers' text, but not marg., 10.38,39 ; Lu.ll.39, 12.50). The nouns ^awTiafia and ^anTia/uLds do not occur in the LXX. In N.T. fiairTi.(Tfia is always used either for baptism or for the bap- tism of suffering ; j3aTrTi(Tfx6s is used for bap- tism in Heb.6.2, and as a variant reading for §awTL(7fia in Col. 2. 12, and for ceremonial wash- ing in Mk.7.4 (also ver. 8.T.R.). Thus, both the records of practice in N.T. and the terminology leave it uncertain whether complete immersion was ever used in N.T. times ; while it was un- likely that it was always used. (7) Form of Bap- tism. Our Lord's command, as recorded in Mt. 28.19, is for the administration of baptism "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost " — a command which goes far to explain the references to the doctrine of the Holy Trinity in such early passages as iTh. 1. 1 -6, 2C0r.i3.14. The phrases " in " or " upon " or "into," "the name of," "Jesus Christ," or " the Lord Jesus." or " the Lord," are used in Ac.2.38,8.16,10.48,19.5. The most probable explanation of these differing phrases is that the actual form of baptism was "In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," and that the phrase " In the name of Jesus " meant that the baptized were enrolled among the servants of Jesus. The phrase e/s t6 tvofiam Mt.28.19 and Ac.8. 16,19.5 possibly ought to be translated " into the name " ; it is perhaps more likely that, owing to the influ- ence of Aramaic on N.T. Gk., it is rightly rendered " in the name." (8) Minister of Baptism. In the N.T. period baptism ap- pears to have been administered by the apostles themselves, by deacons, and by Chris- tian laymen. No statement is made as to who administered the earliest baptisms (Ac. 2. 41) or baptized Lvdia or the Corinthians or the disciples at 'Ephesus (16.15.18.8,19.5). Either St. Paul or St. Silas apparently baptized the Philippian gaoler and his household (16. 29-33). St. Paul says that it was not his ordinary custom to baptize, but that he had baptized in some cases (iCor.l.14-17). St. Philip, one of the " seven men of good report " of Ac. 6. 5, probably baptized those at Samaria (8.12,13), and certainly baptized the Ethiopian eunuch (8.38,39). Ananias, a Christian dis- ciple, apparently baptized St. Paul (9.i7,i8, 22.12-16); and "brethren from Joppa " ap- pear to have baptized Cornelius and his com- pany (10. 44-48). (9) Conditions of Baptism. Repentance and belief are everywhere assumed as conditions of baptism, and these are ex- plicitly mentioned in 2.38,8.12,13,16.31. The words of St. Philip to the Ethiopian eunuch and the eunuch's reply in 8.37. "And Philip said, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest. And he answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God," are found in a very early reading, but are apparently not part of the original text of the Acts. (10) Doctrine of Baptism. In our Lord's discourse with Nicodemus baptism is described as the means of seeing or entering the kingdom of God, and of being " begotten anew" or "from heaven" (Jn.3.3,5). Simi- larly, St. Paul describes it as the "washing of regeneration " (Tit. 3.5). Being thus begotten anew and regenerate, the baptized are said by St. Paul to be the sons of God (Gal. 3. 26, 27 ; cf. Ro. 8. 14-19), to have put on Christ (Gal. 3. 27), to be members of the body of Christ (i Cor. 12. 12,13,27, cf. 6.15 ; Eph. 5. 26-30), and to have been united with the death and burial and re- surrection of Christ (Ro.6.3,4 ; Col. 2.12-20, 3. i). In thus being made sons of God and members of Christ, the baptized come under the agency and gift of the Holy Ghost. St. John the Baptist foretold of the work of Christ in Christian baptism, " He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost " (Mt.S.ii ; Mk.1.8 ; Lu.3.i6, cf. Jn.1.26). St. Peter promised the first con- verts that on being baptized they should " re- ceive the gift of the Holy Ghost" (Ac. 2. 38). Ananias, in speaking of St. Paul's coming baptism, said that he should be ' ' filled with the Holy Ghost " (9.i7,i8). St. Paul connects the " renewing of the Holy Ghost " with the " washing of regeneration " (Tit. 3. 5). Baptism, then, is represented in N.T. as the outward means whereby great gifts are bestowed on the Christian. Through the reception of these gifts his sins are forgiven (Ac.22.i6), and he is placed in the way of salvation (Mk.l6.i6 ; Ac.2.41, 47,16.30-33 ; iPe.l.3,4,3.21 ; Tit. 3. 5-7). Yet, as the way to baptism is througli conversion, so it is possible through sin to fall from the high state which baptism is the means of conferring (Ac. 8. 13, 21-23 ; iCor.3. 16,17,5.3-5 ; Gal. 5. 2, 4,19-21). (11) TheGiftof the Holy Ghost in Baptisnu Some writers have 92 BAB supposed, that, while the operation of the Holy (ihost is exercised on the soul in baptism, His indwelling presence in the soul is withheld until confirmation, because of the statements, " When the apostles which were at Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of (iod, they sent unto them Peter and John: who, when they were come down, prayed for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost : for as yet He was fallen upon none of them : only they had been baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost " ; " They were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Ghost came on them " (Ac.8. 14-17,19. 5, 6). It appears to be easier to explain these statements of the reception of the Holy Ghost at the laying on of hands as referring to His special gifts at confirmation than to explain " ye shall receive the gift of the Holv Ghost " in 2.38, and " that thou mayest be filled with the Holy Ghost " in 9.17, as re- ferring not to baptism itself, but to the laying on of hands which was to follow it. [Laving ON OF Hands.] (12) Baptism for the Dead. In iCor.15.29 St. Paul writes, " Else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead [ol ^aTTTiii'd/j.evoi vwep twv vsKpCiv'] ? If the dead are not raised at all, why are they then bap- tized for them {htrkp avrGiv. T.R. irnkp tC^v j'fK-pwc] ? " The opinion of Tertullian that St. Paul is referring to — though not necessarily approving — a custom of a living person being baptized with a view to vicariously benefiting one who had died unbaptized {Dc Res. Cam. 48; Adv. Marc. v. 10) — has been adopted by many ; but is less likely than the interpreta- tion of several Gk. commentators that the allusion is to those who receive baptism with a view to the resurrection of the dead (see, e.g., St. Chrysostom, In Ep. \.,ad Cor. Horn. xl. i, 2). Elwin in Smith's D.B. (2nd ed.), i. 344-354 ; Armitage Robinson in Encycl. Bibl. i. 471 • 476; Plummerin Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), i. 238-245 ; Marcus Dods in Hastings, Did. of Christ and the Gospels, i. 168-171 ; Bellamy in Vacant and Mangenot's Did. de Theol. Cath. ii. 167-178 ; Mangenot in op. cit. ii. 360-364 ; Pusey, Scriptural Views of Holy Baptism ; Stone, Holy Baptism ; Elwin, The Minister of Baptism ; Puller, What is the Distinctive Grace of Confirmation ; Mason, The Relation of Con- firmation to Baptism ; Wirgnian, The Doctrine of Confirmation considered in Relation to Holy Baptism ; Horsley, in Newbery House Maga- zine for January and April, 1900 (for i Cor. 15. 29) ; Scliiirer, Hist, of the Jeivish People in the Time of Jesus Christ, 11. ii. 319-324 ; and Edersheim, Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, i. 273, ii. 745-747, and Krauss and Kohler in Jctvish Encyclopaedia, ii. 499, 500, iv. 94, 93 (ff)r Jewish baptisms). [d-^-J Bap. [Son.] Barabbas (Bar-Abba = sow of the fathr, i.e. (A the teacher, or of a man called Abba), a notable ])ris((ner (Mt.27.i6) released (by the desire of the jieople) instead of Jesus. He was one of an insurgent band who had committed murder, and were at that time in [irison (Mk. 15.7; .\c.3.ii). The term robber ai)plic(l to Barabbas (Jn.l8.40) shows that plunder was BARLEY in part their object ; and the same term being applied to the two malefactors suggests that they had been members of Barabbas's band. The reading Jesus Barabbas, in Mt.27.i6,i7, though interesting, is critically worthless, [e.k.b.] Barachel', " the Buzite," father of Elihu (Job 32.2,6). [Buz.] Bapachias (Mt.23.35). [Zacharias, 11 ; Zechariah, I.] Bapak (lightning; Judg.4,5), son of Abinoam of Kedesh-naphtali ; near to Hazor, Jabin's capital. From 4.6 we may in- fer that he had felt a call to deliver Israel, but needed Deborah's inspiration and decision of character to determine his rising at Mt. Tabor. He defeated Sisera, took Harosheth, and joined in the recitation of Deborah's ode. [De BORAH; Sisera; Jael; Jabin.] [h.m.s.] Bapbapian. The word is formed from the supposed sound of a language unintelligible to the hearer (c/. Eng. " jabber "), and is the term applied by the Greeks to all who were not of their own race. This original underlying idea appears in its application to the islanders of Malta, whose language, perhaps a dialect of Latin, was probably unknown to St. Paul (Ac. 28. 2, 4). The Greeks summed up the nations of the world as " Greeks and Barbarians," and this non-offensive usage is followed by St. Paul (R0.I.14). From this point of view the Jews themselves would be included among the pdpfiapoi, though their own natural distinction was between 'lov5a7oL and'E\X7?i'es. [Gentiles.] But such distinctions are now transcended by Christianity, which allows no national differences to be a barrier to unity in Christ (Col. 3. 11). [j.c.v.d.] Bapbep. The Heb. word (Ezk.S.i only) is formed from the root meaning to " shave " ; cognate words occur in the whole Semitic group. [Razor.] [w.o.e.o.] Baphumite, The. [Bahurim.] Bapiah', a son of Shemaiah in the royal line of Judah (iChr.3.22). Bap-Jesus. [Elymas.] Bap-Jona. [Jona ; Peter.] Bapkos'. " Chiklren of Barkos " were Ncthniim who returned from the Captivity with Zernbbabel (Ezr.2.33 ; Ne.7.55). Bapley (Heb. s<''ord, Arab, sh'air) is mentioned in many passages of the Bible. It was grown by the Hebrews (Lev. 27. 16; Dent. 8.8 : Ru.2.17, etc.), who used it for baking into Bread (Judg.7.13; 2K.4.42 ; Jn.6.9,13), also mixing it with wheat, beans, lentiles, millet, etc. (Ezk.4.9.12) ; and as fodder for horses (iK.4.28). The barley harvest is men- tioned Ru. 1.22, 2.23 ; 2Sam.21.9,io. It takes place in Palestine in March and .\pril, and in the hilly districts as late as May. Barley harvest always I'recedes wheat harvest, in some places by a week, in others by fully three weeks. In ligyi^ barley is about a month earlier than wheat, whence its total destruction by the hail-storm (F.x.9.31). Barley was sown at any time between November and February, according to the season. Barley bread is still generally eaten in Palestine (Num. 5. 15). The homer and a half of barley, as part of the purchase-money of the ailulteress (Ho.3.2), represents a trifling sum ; cf. Ezk.i3.19, " Will BABNABAS ye pollute me among my people for handfuls of barley ? " The barley corn was the unit of weight and of measurement, and Hebrew barley appears to have had an average weight of 53 lbs. to the bushel — the mean between English and Arab barley. [Weights.] [c.r.c] Barnabas, an Aram, name signifying " son of prophecy," i.e. endued with the gift of prophecy ; and as the main function of N.T. pro- phets was exhortation (c/. Ac. 11. 23), St. Luke renders it correctly " son of exhortation " (Ac. 4.36, R.V.). This additional name was given him by the apostles to distinguish him from others who bore the common name Joseph. He belonged to a Levite family settled in Cyprus, but had kindred living in Jerusalem, namely, his cousin John Mark, and Mary the mother of Mark, (i) He is first mentioned as an example of those who made over their pro- perty to the Christian community, and in con- trast to the case of Ananias and Sapphira. That he was highly respected in the church of Jeru- salem appears from the help which he was able to give to Saul on the latter's arrival there after his conversion (9.26ff.). On the news of the conversion of Greeks at Antioch, Barnabas was chosen to investigate the work, and, ap- preciating its importance, he fetched Saul from Tarsus to assist him in carrying it forward (Ac. 11.22-26). During the year so occupied we must place the mission to Jerusalem recorded Ac. 11. 30, and their return to Antioch, bringing Mark with them (Ac. 12. 25). (2) A new period opens in Ac.13.1 with the choice and dedication of Barnabas, together with Saul, for missionary work. The selection of Cyprus for their desti- nation, and Mark for their attendant, was prob- ably due to Barnabas. He returned to Antioch at the close of the mission, and was sent thence with St. Paul to plead the Gentile cause at the Council of Jerusalem (Ac. 15. 2). On their re- turn an incident occurred which may have pre- pared the way for the subsequent separation of the two friends. Barnabas, though fully aware of his inconsistency, had not strength to resist the example of St. Peter, who when at Antioch separated himself, and would not eat with the Gentile Christians (Gal. 2. 12, 13). But the breach did not actually take place till, on their intended departure for the second journey, Barnabas insisted on taking John Mark, who in St. Paul's estimation had forfeited his position by his desertion of his companions on the first journey. Barnabas sailed to Cyprus with Mark, and passes out of the history. A single verse (iCor.9.6) implies that at the date of that epistle he was still labouring, and the recon- ciliation between St. Paul and Mark may surely be taken to imply a reconciliation between St. Paul and Barnabas. St. Paul's debt to his colleague in the earlier years of his life was un- doubtedly very great. He owed to him much of that impulse and guidance which he denies having owed to the other apostles. Two ques- tions remain : {a) the apostleship of Barnabas. The title is clearly given him Ac.14.4,14. He is recognized by James, Cephas, and John as holding, together with Paul, the same position towards the Gentiles as they held toward the circumcision (iCor.9.5,6). (b) The (so-called) Epistle of Barnabas. Though the external testimony to its authenticity is strong, yet its BARUCH, BOOK OiF 93 substance is so alien from apostolic teaching in its view of O.T., that it is impossible to re- gard it as the work of a fellow-labourer of St. Paul. [E.R.B.] Bapo'dis, a name (iEsd.5.34 only) in the list of those who returned with Zerubbabel. Bapsabas. [Joseph Barsabas ; Judas Barsabas.] Bap'tacus, the father of Darius' concubine Apame. " Illustrious " (A.V. admirable) was probably his official title (iEsd.4.29). [cd.] Baptholomew^, one of the Twelve, of whom nothing is recorded, unless he is to be identified with Nathanael. [e.r.b.] Baptimaeus (i.e. the son of Timaeus), a beggar whom our Lord healed of blindness on the outskirts of Jericho during His last journey up to Jeiusalem. St. Matthew (20.29ff.) speaks of two men healed as He was leaving the town. St. Mark (10.46ff. ) agrees with him as to the place, but only mentions one and him by name (apparently because Bartimaeus was the chief spokesman on the occasion or because he was afterwards a well-known character among the brethren). St. Luke (18.35ff.) also speaks of but one (and not byname), but infers that the miracle took place the day before, as our Lord was approaching the town. On the dis- crepancy, see, e.g., Sadler, St. Mark, pp. 236 f. [C.L.F.] Bapuch'. — 1. Son of Neriah, the friend, amanuensis, and faithful attendant of Jere- miah (Je. 32.12, 36. 4-6,17,18, 32, 45.1) in the discharge of his prophetic office. He was of a noble family (Je.5i.59 ; Ba.l.r), a worthy and trusted assistant. Seraiah his brother held office in the court of Zedekiah. Slanderers ac- cused him of influencing Jeremiah to deliver his countrymen to the Chaldeans (Je.43.3), re- viving an old reproach to the prophet (37.13). On the destruction of Jerusalem, 586 e.g., Nebuchadnezzar allowed him to stay with Jeremiah at Mizpeh (Josephus, loAnt. ix. i), but later they were forced to go into Egypt (43. 6). Baruch perhaps hoped to succeed Jeremiah as Elisha succeeded Elijah, and Je.45.5 may have been intended to check such an aspiration. The production of the book of Baruch suggests the survival of the idea. — 2- Son of Zabbia. He assisted in rebuilding the walls of Jeru- salem (Ne.3.20). — 3- A priest who signed the covenant (10.6) 4. Son of Col-hozeh, de- scended from Perez (Pharez), or his brother Shelah, sons of Judah (11. 5). [w.h.d.] BaPUch', Book of. Baruch is the only apocryphal book cast in the st^'le of the Hebrew prophets. Though having largely the char- acter of an imitation, with little originality, it is not without striking passages of consider- able force, such as 4.9-16 ; so that the unpre- judiced saying of La Fontaine (fit'og. M;t/v., "La Font.") is fairly just, " Quel etait done ce Baruch ? c'etait un beau genie." Sound ad- vice is offered to the distressed Israelites in an encouraging and hopeful tone, while sub- mission to, and prayer for, their captors is counselled ( 2. 2 2, 1 . 1 1 ) ; yet a tingeof melancholy accords well with the last reflection of O.T. prophecy. Two main divisions of the book, differing in style, and in the names for God, are generally agreed upon — viz. 1-3.8 and 3.9 to the end. The first is supplicatory, preceded by 94 sarxJcbc, Soo^ off 14 verses of narrative : the second is horta- tory. The latter has itself been divided into two at 4.5 ; and even further subdivision has been suggested. — Language. As to this, great divergence of competent opinion has mani- fested itself. It seems on the whole most likely that pt. i. was translated from a Semitic original. Pt. ii. has much more the aspect of original fik. Kneucker and Rothstein, however, decidedly incline to belief in a Heb. original for both parts, ascribing the (irecisms in the latter to the dexterity of the translator, who was well acquainted with (ik. idioms : while Marshall maintains an Aram, original up to 4.4 only ; and Andre deems the whole book to have been composed in Gk. — Text and Versions. Any Semitic original has been lost, and we are dependent for oiy knowledge of the text on the LXX.and versions made from it. Jerome omitted Baruch intentionally, and so did not revise or even include the Itala, which now stands in the Clementine Vulg. There are two other Lat. texts, edited by Sabatier and Hoberg respectively, the former deeming his to be the old Itala, and the latter printing a Vatican copy of the Codex Legio- nensis, which he styles " die iilteste lateinische Uebersetzung." — Author. Except among R.C. writers the traditional authorship by Baruch is now rarely supported. 1.11,12 and 3. 10 are especially difficult to attribute to the historic Baruch. There is a strong probability of different authors for the first and second parts. We may postulate Jewish writers, but these remain anonymous. — Date. This is as much disputed as the language. Schiirer, Ryle, Streane, and others would place Baruch, as we now have it, after Titus's destruction of Jeru- salem, making 4.30 ff. refer to that event. But the early Christian acceptance of the book, from Athenagoras and Irenaeus onward (not to mention a possible reference in Logion iii. ser. 2), does not imply so late a date; nor does the strong similarity of the LXX. text to that of Jeremiah, e.g. 2.25,8.22,4.26 compared with Je. 32. 36, 49. 7, 2. 25 ; nor the marked omission of a parallel to Dan. 9. 16, 17, to which the writer's correspondences in the earlier part of ch. 2 naturally lead him up, and which would be very apposite at that time. This very late date is largely grounded on the clear corre- spondence of 5.7 with Ps. Sol. xi ; but which document had priority is not so clear. Ryle hesitatingly decides for Ps. Sol., because " a Heb. writing would not have been based upon a Gk. writing" (Smith, D.B.^). A Gk. original of pt. ii. is therefore essential to his argument. He also adduces " the absence of testimony to the existence of Baruch until the 2nd cent." But were books added to the LXX. as late as this? Hoberg reasonably alleges its inclusion in LXX. as proof of pre- Christian Jews' acquaintance with it. Roth- stein, while conceding the possibility of an a.d. date for the book in its present form, yet thinks the separate parts earlier. Those how- ever who, with Rcuss and Ewald, would place Baruch in 4th cent. n.c. have either to accept an earlier date for Daniel or to assume the ex- istence of Dan. 9 before the rest of the book. This divergence as tf) date has been taken by Philippe as a testimony to Baruch's author- bashak ship (Vigouroux, B.D.) ; an argument used against the defenders of Judith's historic char- acter by Bissell (p. 157). Although there is much support for an a.d. date, the difficulties attendant upon it appear little lighter than those involved in the older notion of placing pt. i., at any rate, about the close of the Persian period, and the latter half in 2nd cent. B.C. — History. The statement in the Gk. .ipostolic Constitution, v. 20, that Baruch was read, with Lamentations, in the synagogues on the Day of Atone,ment is uncorroborated. It does not accord with Baruch's expressed view of its suitability for festal reading (I.14) ; and, unless a mistake, must refer to some local and temporary usage. In a large part of the Chris- tian Church, Baruch was early regarded as an appendage to Jeremiah. Patristic writers were naturally attracted by 8.37, which they often quoted as foretelling the Incarnation. The Council of Trent, after some hesitation, decreed the book canonical. I^otestant bodies generally reject Baruch, though individuals have highly esteemed it : while the English Church has one proper and two daily lessons in her present calendar from what Art. vi. styles " Baruch the Prophet." The Apocalypse of Baruch is a distinct extra-Biblical work. Speaker's, S.P.C.K., and Bissell's Comm. ; art. in Hastings's and Vigouroux's Diets. : Streane, Age of the Maccabees (1898); J. J. Kneucker, Comm. (Leipzig, 1879) ; G. Hoberg (Freiburg i. B., 1902) ; L. E. T. Andre, Les Apocryphes (Florence, 1903). [w.h.d.] Bapziriai. — 1. A wealthy Gileadite who showed hospitality to David when he fled from Absalom (2Sam.i7.27). On the score of his age, he declined the king's oiTer of dwelling at court, but sent his son Chimiiam in his stead (2Sam. 19.31-40). The descendants of his daughter (called Augia, iEsd.5.38), who married into a priestly family, were unable, afterthe Captivity, to prove their genealogy (Ezr.2.6i ; Ne.7.63, 64). — 2. .\ Meholathite, whose settcr translated, " we proan like bears." Bears ;ire also mentioned in Uev.13.2 ; Dan. 7.5: Wis. 11. 17 ; and licclus.47.3. Beapd. Semitic races have always fiEASTSj Cherished the beard as the badge of the dignity of manhood. The Egyptians, on the contrary, usually shaved the hair of the face and head, and compelled their slaves to do the like. The Semitic enemies of the Egyptians, including many of the nations of Canaan, Syria, and Armenia, etc., are nearly always represented bearded. On the Ninevite monuments is a series of battle-views from the capture of Lachish by Sennacherib, in which the captives Other nations. (From Rosellini and Layard.) BEARDS. have beards very like some of those in the Egyptian monuments. The precept (Lev. 19. 27,21.5) regarding the " corners of the beard " refers to the well-known hair-offerings among all ancient peoples. [Hair.] Size and fulness of beard are regarded by Arabs, at the present day, as a mark of respectability and trust- worthiness. The beard is the object of an oath, and that on which blessings or shame are spoken of as resting. The custom was and is to shave or pluck it and the hair out in mourn- ing (Ezr.9. 3 ; Is.15.2,50.6 ; Je.41.5,48.37; Ba. 6.31), to neglect it in seasons of permanent affliction (2Sara.i9.24), and to regard any insult to it as the last outrage which enmit}' can inflict (10. 4). The beard was the object of salutation (20. 9). The dressing, trimming, anointing, etc., of the beard was performed with much ceremony by persons of wealth and rank (Ps.133.2). The removal of the beard was a part of the ceremonial treatment proper to a leper (Lev.l^.g). Beast, the representative in the A.V. of the following Heb. words, (i) b''hemd, the general name for " domesticated cattle " of any kind, is also used to denote " any large quadruped," as opposed to fowls and creeping things (Gen.6. 7,20,7. 2 ; Ex. 9. 25 ; Lev. 11. 2 ; iK.4.33 ; Pr.30.30, etc.); for "beasts of burden," horses, mules, etc., as in 1K.I8.5, Ne.2.12,14, etc. ; or for " wild beasts," as in Deut. 32.24, Hab.2.17, iSam.17.44. (2) b'-'ir is used either collectively of " all kinds of cattle," like the Latin pecus (Ex.22.5[4] ; Num. 20.4,8,11 ; Ps.78.48), or specially of " beasts of burden " (Gen. 45. 17). It has a more limited sense than the preceding. {3) hayyd is used to denote any animal. It is, however, fre- quently used specially of " wild beasts," when the meaning is often more fully expressed by the addition of the word hassdde, " of the field " (Ex.23.li ; Lev.26.22 ; Deut.7.22 ; Ho.2.i2[i4], 13.8 ; Je.12.9, etc.). JBEi) 9? Beatitudes. [Sermon on the Mount.] Beautiful Gate. [Temple.] Beba'i. " Sons of Bebai," 623 (Ne. 628) in number, returned from Babylon with Zerub- babel(Ezr.2.ii ; Ne.7.i6; iEsd.5.13), and later 28 more returned with Ezra under Zechariah, who is further described as "the son of Bebai," which may however be used as the family name (Ezr.8.11). Four of the family had taken foreign wives (Ezr.lO.28 ; iEsd.9.29). The name occurs also among those who sealed the covenant (Ne.lO.15). Beba'i (Jth.15.4), an imknown town in central Palestine. [cr-c] Be'ehep. — 1. The second son of Benjamin, according to the lists in Gen. 46. 21 and iChr. 7.6,8 ; but omitted in Num.26.38 and iChr.8.i. The Heb. text of iChr.8.i, however, suggests that " b'khoro, his first-born," is a corruption of Becher, so that the genuine reading would be "Benjamin begat Bela, Becher, and Ashbel," in agreement with Gen. 46. 21. Some have thought that iChr.8.i is right, and that in Gen. 46. 2 1 and iChr.7.8 Becher, as a proper name, is a corruption of b'khor, "first-born," so that Benjamin had no son Becher. It is possible that Becher, or his heir and head of his house, married an Ephraimitish heiress, a daughter of Shuthelah (iChr.7. 20,21), and that so his house was reckoned in the tribe of Ephraim, just as J air son of Segub was reck- oned in Manasseh (iChr.2.22 ; Num.32. 40,41). — 2. Son of Ephraim (Num.26. 35) ; called Bered in iChr.7.20. Bechorath', an ancestor of king Saul (iSam.9.1,2). Bec'tileth, The plain of, mentioned in Jth.2.2i as lying between Nineveh and Cilicia. The name has been compared with Ba/craiaXXd, a town of Syria named by Ptolemy, Bactiali in the Peutinger Tables, which place it 21 miles from Antioch. Bed and Bedcliambep. We may dis- tinguish in the Jewish bed five principal parts : (i) the mattress ; (2) the covering ; (3) the pillow ; (4) the bedstead or support for (i) ; (5) the ornamental portions, (i) This consisted of a mere mat, or one or more quilts. (2) A quilt finer than those of (i). In summer a thin blanket or the outer garment worn by day (i Sam. 19. 13) sufficed. Hence the law that it should not be kept in pledge after sunset, that the poor man might not lack his needful cover- ing (Deut. 24. 13). (3) The only mention of the material for this is in 1Sam.i9.13, and the word used is of doubtful meaning, but seems to signify some fabric woven or plaited of goat's-hair. As, however, it was something hastily adopted to serve for a Pillow, it is not decisive of the ordinary use. In Ezk.l3.i8 those mentioned are probably not bed-pillows, but fillets or amulets for the arms (so Ephrem Syrus). Pillows are common to this day in the E., formed of sheep's fleece or goat's-skin, with a stuffing of cotton, etc. (4) The bed- stead was not always necessary, a platform along the side or end of an Oriental room serving as a place for the bedding. Yet some slight and portable frame seems implied among the senses of two of the six Heb. words trans- lated in A.V. "bed," and used variously for a " bier " (aSam.S.si ; 2Chr.l6.14), for the 98 BEDAD ordinary bed {2K.4.10), for the litter for carry- ing a sick person (i Sam. 19. 15), for Jacob's sick- bed (Gen. 47. 31), and for the couch on which guests reclined at a banquet (Esth.1.6). For the " bedstead " of Og, see Oc. (5) The orna- mental portions were pillars and a Canopy (Jth.tS.g), ivory carvings, gold and silver, and probably mosaic work, purple and fine BED AND HEAD-REST. (Wilkinson, Ancient Egyptians.) linen (Esth.1.6; Can.3.9, 10). The ordinary furniture of a bedchamber is given in 2K.4.10. The position of the bedchamber in the most remote and secret parts of the palace seems indicated in Ex. 8. 3 and 2K.6.12. The " bed- chamber " in the temple where Joash was hidden (2K.II.2 ; 2Chr.22.ii) was probably not a sleeping-room, but a store-chamber (per- haps a mere cupboard such as is used in the East in the present day) for the rolled-up mats. Bedad', the father of Hadad king of lulom (Gen.36.35 = iChr.l.46). Bedan'. — 1. (iSam.l2.ii.) Samuel refers to him as a deliverer of Israel. Nothing more is known of him. LXX. identifies him with Barak. He has also been identified with Samson and Abdon. — 2. (iChr.7.17.) A Manassite. [h.m.s.] Bedei'ah, a son of Bani, in the time of Ezra, who had taken a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.35). Bee (d'bhord; Deut.l.44; Judg.14.8; Ps. 118.12 ; Is.7.18). That Palestine abounded in bees is evident from the description that it was a land " flowing with milk and honey," there being no reason to suppose that this expression is to be understood otherwise than in its literal sense. Dr. Thomson (Land and Book, p. 299) records swarms of bees inhabit- ing a cliff of Wddy el Qttrn. " The people of M'alia, several years ago," he writes, " let a man down the face of the rock by ropes. He was entirely protected from the assaults of the bees, and extracted a large amount of honey ; but he was so terrified by the prodigious swarms of bees that he could not be induced to repeat the exploit." This illustrates Deut.32. 13 and Ps.81.i6 as to "honey out of the stony rock"; while Deut.l.M and I's.ll8.i2 suggest the fearful nature of the attacks of these insects when irritated. In Palestine, as in India, the attacks of bees are more to be dreaded than in more temperate climates, the swarms being larger, and their stings not unfrequcntly causing death ; hence the force of the Psalm- ist's complaint, " They compassed me about like bees" (II8.12). The passage about the swarm of bees and honey in the lion's car- case (Judg.14.8) can be easily explained whea BEEROTS we remember that in a hot dry country* after a carcase has been picked nearly clean by vultures, jackals, and ants, the skeleton might well form a nidus for a swarm of bees. Is.7.i8, " the Lord shall hiss for the bee that is in the land of AssvTia," has been understood by some to refer to the practice of " calling out the bees from their hives by a hissing or whistling sound to their labour in the fields, and summoning them again to return " in the evening. More probably the expression has reference to the Eastern custom of calling the attention of any one by a hiss or " hist.'" The honey-bee of Palestine, although nearly allied to the European Apis mellifica, is regarded as a distinct species, A. fasciata. [r.l.1 Beeriada (Baal knows), one of David's sons, born in Jerusalem (iChr.14.7). In2Sam. 5.16 the name is Eliada (El knows). Beel'sarus (iEsd.5.8) = Bilshan. Beolteth'mus, an officer of Artaxerxes residing in Palestine (lEsd. 2.16,25). The name is a corruption of the title of Rehum (chancellor), the name preceding it (Ezr.4.8). This title, according to Sayce (Introd. to Ezr., Ne., and Esth.), signifies "lord of official intelligence " or " postmaster." Beelzebub. [Baal-zebub.] Beep' (well). — 1. One of the latest halting- places of the Israelites, lying beyond the Arnon, and so called because of the well which was there dug by the " princes " and " nobles " of the people (Num. 21. 16-18). This is possibly the Beer-elim referred to in Is. 15. 8. — 2. A place to which Jot ham, the son of Gideon, fled for fear of his brother Abimelech (Judg.9.2i) ; perhaps Beeroth. Beepa', an Asherite, son of Zophah (iChr.7.37). Beepah', prince of the Reubenites, taken captive by Tiglath-pileser (iChr.5.6). Beep-elim', a spot named with Dimon in Is. 15. 8 as on the " border of .Moab." [Beer.] Beepi'. — 1. The father of Judith, one of the foreign wives of Esau (Gen. 26. 34). [Anah.] — 2. Father of the prophet Hosea (Ho.l.i). Beep-laha'i-poi' (well of the Living One Who sees me, R.V. marg.), between Kadesh and Bered, in the wilderness, " in the way to Shur," and therefore in the " south country " (Gen. 24. 62). According to the explanation of the text, it was so named by Hagar, because God saw her there (Gen.l6.14). By this well Isaac dwelt both before and after the death of his father (Gen.24.62,25.ii). In both these passages the name is given in A.V. as " the well Lah d-roi." Near Kadesh (Qadis), S. of Beer-sheba. [Kadesh ; Kedesh.] [c.r.c] Beepoth', one of the four cities of the Hivites who deluded Joshua into a treaty of peace with them ; the other three being Gibeon, Chephirah, and Kirjath-jearim (Jos.9. 17). Beeroth was allotted to Benjamin (18. 25), in whose possession it remained at the time of David (2Sam.4.2). It is named with Chephirah and K.-jearim in the list of those who returned from Babylon (Ezr. 2.25 ; Ne.7. 29; Bcroth, iEsd.5.19). Eusebius (Onomas- ticon) places it " under the hill Gibeon," as visible from the road to Lydda at the seventh milestone. Now el-Birch, a village about 8 miles N, of Jerusalem by the road to BEEROTH Ndblus. Nahari "the Beerothite " (aSam. 23.37), or "the Berothite"£^(iChr.ll.39), was one of David's guard. [Beer;Berea.] [c.r.c] Beepoth' of the childpen of Jaakan, the wells of the Bene-jaakan (perhaps named from Jakan, iChr.l.42, or Akan the Horite, Gen.36.27) ; a halting-place of the Israelites in the Arabah near mount Hor (Deut.10.6). In Num.33. 31, 32 Bene-jaakan only. [cr.c] Beep-she'ba {well of the oath, as given in the Bible, Gen. 21. 31), where Abraham made a covenant with the Philistines, and planted a tamarisk by the well that he dug. The alliance was renewed by Isaac, who ap- parently dug a second well {26.23,28,32,33). Beer-sheba is often mentioned as the S. boun- dary of the land of Israel (Judg.20.i, etc.), and was given to Judah (Jos. 15. 28) and afterwards to Simeon (19.2). Here Samuel's sons were judges (iSam.8.2). It was in the negebh, or " dry " country (A.V. south : 2Sam.24.7) ; and Elijah here slept under the desert broom bush (iK.19.3,5). It was probably an idola- trous centre in the time of Josiah (2K.23.8), BELIAL 99 Jordan (Jos.2i.27). It "appears as Ashtaroth in iChr.6.71. Probably short for Beth-ash- terah. [Ashteroth.] Beetle. [Locust.] Beeves. [Cattle.] Beheading'. [Crimes.] Behemoth'. There can be little doubt that in Job 40.15-24 the hippopotamus is intended, as the description of behemoth accords well with the habits of that animal. As in the first part of Jehovah's discourse (Job 38,39) land animals and birds are mentioned, it seems probable that aquatic or amphibious creatures are referred to in the latter part. Moreover, since "leviathan" usually denotes the croco- dile, behemoth seems to point to the hippo- potamus, its associate in the Nile. The description of behemoth lying under " the shady trees," amongst the reeds and willows, is perfectly applicable to the hippopotamus. In former days hippopotamuses were foimd in Lower Egypt, although they have now receded far up the Nile ; there is, however, no evi- dence, geological or otherwise, of their former BEER-SHEBA. (From an original sketch by Co!. Cond and condemned as such yet earlier^ (Am. 5. 5, 8.14). It was reoccupied by descendants of Judah after the Captivity (Ne.ll.27,30). The site is now called Bir es Seba', at the foot of the Hebron hills, in the open pastoral plateau which is covered with grass in spring, and supports flocks of goats and cattle. There are two wells, with a constant supply of good water even in autumn, cut in rock in the bed of the boundary valley, which runs W. to Gerar. There is also a third dry well. {Siirv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 394-396.) The largest well is over 12 ft. in diameter, lined with masonry to a depth of 28 ft., and with water at 37 ft. The masonry in the 15th course bears an Arabic tablet with a date (505 a.h.) answering to 1 1 12 a.d. Though much furrowed by ropes, the stonework is therefore not very ancient. A few rude stone troughs stand round this well, but neither it nor the others have any parapet. The second well, some little distance to W., is 5 ft. in diameter and 40 ft. to the water ; the stones are cut to the arc of the circle. The third well to E. is dry ; the masonry is superior ; the diameter is over 9 ft., and the depth 23 ft. It has large stones at the bottom. Ruins of a Byzantine town, or village, including the foundations of a church, exist N. of the wells ; and Beer-sheba in the 5th cent, was an episcopal town. [c.r.c] Beesh-tepah', one of the two cities allotted to the sons of Gershom in Manasseh beyond occurrence in Syria or Palestine. The de- scription is certainly not applicable to the African elephant. See Nile ; but for the opposite view, see Palestine. [r.l.] Bekah. [Weights and Measures.] Bel. [Baal.] Bel and Drag-on. [Daniel, Apocryphal Additions to.] Be'Ia. — 1. The old name of Zoar (Gen.14.2, 8). — 2. A king of Edom son of Beor (Gen.36.32), whom some Jewish commentators identify with Balaam son of Beor (Num. 22.5) and the LXX." renders Balak. — 3. The eldest son of Benjamin (Gen.46.2i), Belah in A.V. ; the ancestor of the Belaites (Num.26.38,40). — 4. A son of Azaz, of the tribe of Reuben (iChr.5.8). Belah, Be'laites, The. [Bela, 3.] Be'lemus. [Bishlam.] Belial (Heb. b^liyya'al, lit. " worthless- ness," from bHi, " without," and ya^al, " worth ") occurs generally' in such phrases as " sons of B.," " men of B.," " daughter of B.," " thing of B.," etc., and always in O.T. as a common noun, denoting an extreme degree of depravity: e.g. Deut. 13. 13 (apostasy) ; Judg. 19.22 (sodomy and rape) ; iSam.l.i6 (female drunkenness), 2. 12 (the profanation of the priestly oflice), 20.i, 2Chr.l3.7 (rebellion) ; i K.2I.10, Pr.19.28 (perjury). In two passages it seems to mean the perdition of the soul — viz. Ps.41.8 (see marg.), " a matter of perdition," i.e. a matter which brings a man to perdition ; 100 BELLOWS and Ps.18.4 (see marg), " the floods of perdi- tion." In N.T. the word has become a proper name, and is a title of Satan (2Cor.6. 15). The correct N.T. form is Beliar (BeXidp), probably an intentional alteration of the word (c/. Baal- zebub). The form BeXid/) is also found in the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs and in the book of Jubilees. In Milton's Paradise Lost Belial is the spirit of lust. [Satan.] [c.h.] Bello\vs. The word occurs only in Je.6. 29, where it is used figuratively, " The bellows are burned," their use being to heat a smelt- ing furnace. A picture of two different kinds of bellows, both of highly ingenious construc- tion, may be found in Wilkinson, Anc. Egypt. iii. 338. " They consisted," he says, " of a leather, secured and fitted into a frame, from which a long pipe extended for carrying the wind to the fire. They were worked by the feet, the operator standing upon them, with ECYPIIAN iii;LLu\vs. (H. Cailliard. Kt-Lherchfs sifl'flw6Mtw) which alternated with the tri-coloured pfimegranatcs round the hem of the high-priest's long rt)be are twice mentioned, Iix.28.33ff. and Ecclus.45.9 (c/. Josephus, 3 Ant. vii. 4) ; their object is described as being to give forth a sound as he went in and f)ut of the sanctuary. The number of these bells is given by the Rabbis as 72 in all, while others give 12 or 365 (Ka- lisch. Comment, on Exod., in lac). This bell and pomegranate arrangement has been thought to be derived from the old ligyptian ornamental bf)rder of lotus and bud, with its original meaning lost or altered. The word translated " bells " in Zech.l4.2o is quite a different one {nv\ill6th), and is represented by "bridles" in I,X.\. (so A.V. marg.); but a metal substance that would tinkle when shaken seems here indicated rather than leathern BEX straps. See Flinders Petrie's art. " Bells " in Hastings, D.U. (5 vols. 1904). [c.l.f.] Belmaim (Jth.7.3). The name survives in Wddy BeVameh. [Bethulia.] Probably the same as Balamo and Belmen. [c.r.c] Bel'men, a place named amongst the towns of Samaria (Jth.4.4). [Belmaim. J Belshazzap', the last native king of Babylon (Dan. 5. iff.). According to Daniel, he was slain in the night, after a splendid feast in his palace. The first Babylonian record in which the name of Belshazzar was discovered is that inscribed on four clay cylinders found at Muqeir (Ur of the Chaldees). In this Nabonidus, after describing his restoration of the temple there, calls down a blessing on his first-born son, Belshazzar [Bil-sarru-nsur). He does not appear in the official records as a ruler, but is apparently meant when, in the Babylonian Chronicle, " the son of the king," who was for many years " with the army in Akkad," is referred to. Belshazzar is often mentioned on contract-tablets, always with the same title. In the first year of Nabonidus he bought some land of Marduk-iriba ; in the fifth his secretary hired a house ; in the eleventh Iddina-marduk seems to have owed him 20 mana of silver on account of woven stuff or clothing supplied through Nabii-sabit-qate, the prince's major domo. Other tablets, dated in the seventh, ninth, and twelfth years of Nabonidus, record offerings made on behalf of Belshazzar in the temple at Sippar (Abu-habbah). This confirms the statements in the Babylonian Chronicle that the son of the king was with the army in Akkad in the seventh to eleventh years of Nabonidus, at which point the record is defective until the seventeenth and last year of that king. On Tammuz 16 in that year Gobryas entered Babylon with the army of Cyrus, and it is stated that on the night of Marchosvan 11, Gobryas . . . did something, and the son of the king (or " the king " simply) died. In this we may in all probability see the attack in the night spoken of in Daniel. The date of his death was 538 b.c, at which time he could hardly have been less than 37 years old. Xenophon describes " the king " (probably Belshazzar) as dying, sword in hand. With regard to his father, Nabonidus, Berosus in Josephus (.-Ia's/. Apion, i. 20) states that he was captured in the neighbouring city of Borsippa, and kindly treated by Cyrus, " who gave Iiim Carmania as a place for him to inhabit." Kawlinson connected Belshazzar with Nebuchadnezzar (Dan. 5. 2) through his mother, who may have been a daughter of that king, in which case Nebuchadnezzar was Belshazzar's maternal grandfather. This would make Nabonidus Nebuchadnezzar's son-in-law, and j^robably receives confirmation from two tablets in which a certain Nabonidus, " who is o\er the city," is called " the son of the king " (Nebuchadnezzar's eighth year). Na- bonidus calls himself, in his records, " son of Nabu-balat-su-i(ibi." Smith, D.B. (4 vols. 1893); Hastings, D.B. (4 vols. 1898), etc.; The Old Testament in the Light of the Records (S.l'.C.K.). PI1. 412 ff., 435 ff. rT.G.P.] Belteshazzap. [Daniel.] Ben. — 1. A Levite "of the second degree," BENAIAH one of the porters for the ark appointed by David (iChr.l5.i8).— 2. [Son.] Bena'lah — 1. The son of Jehoiada the chief priest (iChr.27.5), and therefore of the tribe of Levi, though a native of Kabzeel (2 Sam. 23.20 ; iChr.ll.22),intheS. of Judah; set by David (1Chr.ll.25) over his bodyguard of Cherethites and Pelethites (2Sam.8.i8 ; iK.1.38; 1Chr.l8.17: 2Sam.2O.23), and oc- cupying a middle rank between the first three of the " mighty men " and the 30 " valiant men of the armies" (2Sam.23.22,23 ; 1Chr.ll.25, 27.6). The exploits which gave him this rank are narrated in 2Sam.23.2o,2i, 1Chr.ll.22. He was captain of the host for the third month (iChr.27.5). Benaiah remained faith- ful to Solomon during Adonijah's attempt on the crown (iK. 1.8, 10, 32, 38, 44) ; and was raised into the place of Joab as commander- in-chief (2.35,4.4). He appears to have had a son, called after his grandfather, Jehoiada, who succeeded Ahithophel about the person of the king (iChr.27.34). But this is possibly a copyist's mistake for " Benaiah the son of Jehoiada." — 2. "The Pirathonite," an Ephraimite, one of David's 30 mighty men (2Sam.23.30 ; 1Chr.ll.31), and the captain of the eleventh monthly course (iChr.27.i4). — 3. A Levite in the time of David, who "played with a psaltery on Alamoth " (15. 18,20,16.5). — 4. A priest in the time of David, appointed to blow the trumpet before the ark (15.24,16.6). — 5. A Levite of the sons of Asaph (2Chr.2O.14). — 6. A Levite in the time of Hezekiah, one of the " overseers of offerings " (31.13). — 7. One of the "princes" of the families of Simeon (iChr.4.36). — 8. Four lay- men in the time of Ezra who had taken strange wives: I. (Ezr.10.25) [Baanias]; 2. (IO.30) [Naidus] ; 3. (IO.35) [Mabdai] ; and 4. (10. 43) [Banaias]. — 9. The father of Pelatiah, " a prince of the people " in the time of Ezekiel (Ezk.ll.1,13). Ben-ammi {son of my kindred), son of the younger daughter of Lot, and progenitor of the Ammonites (Gen.i9.38 ; cf. Deut.2.19). Bene-bepak', one of the cities of Dan, mentioned only in Jos. 19. 45. It was captured by Sennacherib in 702 b.c. Now the village Ibn Ibrdq, 4 miles E. of Joppa. [c.r.c] Bene-jaakan'. [Beeroth of the child- ren OF Jaakan.] Bene-ke'dem, " the children of the East," or people, dwelling to the E. of Palestine (Gen. 29.1 ; Jobl.3; Judg.6. 3, 33,7.12,8. 10) ; mentioned with the ]\Iidianites and Amalekites. From Judg.7.11-15 we infer that they spoke a dialect intelligible to an Israelite, and the name itself is Semitic. From 1K.4.30 it is evi- dent that the term is used in a very general sense, but in Is. 11. 14, Je. 49.28, Ezk.25.4,io, they are noticed with Amnion and Kedar. The term thus includes all the tribes between Israel and the Euphrates. [c.r.c] Benhadad', the name of three kings of Damascus. — Benhadad I. was (iK.15.i8) son of Tabrimmon and grandson of Hezion ( ? Rezon), and in his time Damascus was supreme in Syria. His alliance was courted by both Baasha of Israel and Asa of Judah. He finally closed with the latter on receiving a Ivge amount of treasure, and conquered BENJAMIN 101 a great part of the N. of Israel, thereby enabling Asa to pursue his victorious opera- tions in the S. It would appear (1K.2O.34) that he continued to make war upon Israel in Omri's time, and forced him to make " streets " in Samaria for Syrian residents. [Ahab.] — Possibly the contemporary of Ahab was a Benhadad II., son of the preceding (though not so stated in O.T.), as otherwise Benhadad I. must have reigned 50 or 60 years, which, however, is not impossible [see under Damascus]. Long wars with Israel characterized his reign, of which the earlier campaigns are described under Ahab. He was signally defeated at Aphek (rK.2O.34ff.). His power is shown by the 32 vassal kings who accompanied him to his first siege of Samaria. In Jehoram's reign Benhadad renewed the war with Israel, attacked Samaria a second time, and pressed the siege so closely that there was a terrible famine in the city. But the Syrians dispersed in the night in con- sequence of a sudden panic (2K.7.7). Soon after, Benhadad fell sick, and sent Hazael to consult Elisha as to the issue of his malady. Hazael, the day after his return, smothered his master and seized the throne (2K.8.15). — Benhadad III., son of Hazael. When this king succeeded Hazael on the throne of Syria, Jehoash recovered the cities which Jehoahaz had lost to the Syrians, and beat him in Aphek (2K. 13. 17, 25). Jehoash gained two more vic- tories, but did not restore the dominion of Israel on the E. of Jordan. This glory was reserved for his successor. Benhadad III.'s misfortunes in war are noticed in Am. 1.4. Ben-ha'il, one of the princes whom king Jehoshaphat commanded to teach the law in the cities of Judah (2Chr.l7.7). Ben-hanan', son of Shimon, in the line of Judah (iChr.4.20). Beninu', a Levite who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah (Ne.l0.i3[i4]). Ben'amin (son of the right hand), the youngest child of J acob, and the 2nd of Rachel, own brother of Joseph, and the only one of the family born in Palestine (Gen. 35. 18). His mother called him Benoni (son of my sor- row) ; the meaning of Benjamin (ben-ydmin) may be " son of the south," as*he was born so farS. of Haran. Since Joseph was 30 years old when he stood before Pharaoh (Gen. 41. 46), and Benjamin apparently only a year younger (30.25), the latter must have been more than 37 years old when Israel went into Egypt (41.53). He alreadv had ten children (46. 21), yet (in A.V.)heis called a "lad" (43.8). The Heb. word however (na'ar) is of very indefinite meaning, and applies not only to David when he was more than 20 (1Sam.i7.42), and a " man of war " (16. 18), but also to Absalom, who was married (2Sam.l8.32), and to others, like the spies(Jos.6.23), who were grown men. The only indication of Benjamin's personal character is found in the blessing of Jacob (Gen.49.27), where he is compared to a wolf. In the wilderness the tribe, under Abidan, is by no means one of the smallest (Num. 1.37,2.23, 26.41), nor was its lot in Palestine the least of any tribe. But when Saul speaks of it as the smallest tribe of Israel (iSam.9.2i), we must remember that, abgut three cei^turies and a half 102 BENJAMIN before his time, after the massacre at Gibeah, Benjamin had been reduced to only 600 men (Judg.20.47). In the blessing of Moses there appears to be an allusion to the fact that the three most sacred centres of Israel all lay within this tribe's border (Deut.33.i2). The men of Benjamin appear to have been famous as bow- men and slingers (J udg.20. 16 ; 2Chr. 14. 8, 17.17), and it is remarkable that all left-handed persons mentioned in O.T. are Benjamites (Judg.3.15,20.16 ; iChr.12.2). In the song of Deborah a difficult verse may (see LXX.) be rendered " From Ephraim was their rooting out; against Amalek after thee, Benjamin, in thy people" (Judg.5.r4). Benjamin was destined to destroy Amalek under Saul (1Sam.i5.1-33), THE TRIBAL LOT OF liHNJAMlN. and the war cry " after thee, Benjamin," was known (as was the story of Gibeah) to Hosea (5.8,10.9). The sin of 'Gibeah (Judg.19-21) almost blotted out the tribe for a time. David had friends among the Benjamites (i Chr.l2.i6) before Abner deserted Saul's heir (aSam.S.ig) ; and, though he was bitterly hated by some of the tribe — such as Shimei — (16.5,19.17), yet one of his heroes was Ittai of Gibeah (2Sam.23.29 ; 1Chr.ll.31), and after the separation of the two kingdoms Benjamin adhered to the house of David (iK. 12.21 ) with- out any indecision. The Benjamite genealogies (iChr.7.6-i2,8.i-4o)go down apparently to the time when Benjamin occupied towns of Dan after the Captivity (iChr.8.12 ; Ne.ll.35). In the Psalm (68.27) Benjamin is still a small tribe. The E. Kate of Jerusalem was named from it (Je.37.r3,38.7; Zech.l4.io). The ethnic form occurs in full (iSam.9.2r,22.7 ; 2 Sam.l6.ii,19.i7 ; iK.2.8 : iChr.27.i2 ; Ps.7, title), but it is sometimes shortened to ycmini in Heb. (JudK.3.i5,19.i6 ; iSam. 9.1,4 ; 2Sam. 20.1 ; Iisth.2.5), the last-cited passage re- ferring to Mordecai : while St. Paul, yet later, was of this tribe (Ph. 3. 5). The Tribal Lot {]os. 18. 11-28) was all occupied early except Jeru- salem (Ju(lg.l.2i), and coincided with Solo- mon's eleventh district (1K.4.18). Its borders are described under Ephkaim and J udah. and it included about 400 square miles, mostly con- sisting of very rugged hills, but considered very good land by Josephus (5 Ant. i. 22) be- cause it included the plain of Jericho. The W. border ran S. along the crest of the moun- tains'froin ATAKf)TH-Ai)AK to Kirj ath-jeakim (J0S.I8.13-14), for it " turned about on the W. BERED quarter southward" (R.V.). Two of the tribe who were named after its founder are noticed in later times (iChr.7.io ; Ezr.lO.32). Ben- jamin is last mentioned in Rev. 7. 8. [c.r.c] Ben'jamin, Hig^h g'ate, or Gate, of (Je. 20.2,37.13,38.7; Zech. 14.10). [Jerusalem.] Beno', apparently a Merarite Levite; more probably not a proper name, but meaning " his son" as describing Jaaziah (iChr.24.26,27). Ben-oni' (son of my sorroiv, or hurt — i.e. last effort), the name given by the dying Rachel to her second son, but changed by his father into Benjamin (son of the right hand ; Gen. 35. 18). Ben-zoheth, a descendant of J udah (iChr. 4.20). Beon' (Num.32.3) is probably an early clerical error for Meon (ver. 38). [c.r.c] Be'op. — 1. The father of Bela, one of the early Edomite kings (Gen. 36. 32 ; iChr.l.43). — 2. Father of Balaam (Num. 22. 5, etc.). Be'pa, king of Sodom, one of the 5 kings who rebelled against Chedorlaomer (Gen.l4.2ff.). Berachah', a Benjamite archer who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.3). Berachah', Valley of (R.V. Beracah), a valley in which Jehoshaphat and his people assembled to " bless " Jehovah after the over- throw of the hosts of Moabites, Ammonites, and Mehunira, and which thus acquired its name of " the valley of blessing " (2Chr.2O.26). The name Breikiit still survives, attached to ruins 4 miles W. of Tekoa. [c.r.c] Bepachiah' (iChr.6.39) = Berechiah, 6. Bepalah', son of Shimhi, a chief man of Benjamin dwelling in Jerusalem (iChr.8.21). Bepe'a. — 1. (R.V. JBeroea). A city of Mace- donia, to which St. Paul retired with Silas and Timotheus during his first visit to Europe, on beingpersecutedinThessalonica(.A.c.l7.io). and whence, being again persecuted by emissaries from Thessalonica, he withdrew to the sea for the purpose of proceeding to Athens (14,15). The community of Jews must have been con- siderable in Berea, and their character is described very favourably (11). Sopater, one of St. Paul's missionary companions, was from this place (20. 4). Berea, now called Verria or Qara-Verria, is situated on the E. slope of the Olympian mountain-range, commanding an extensive view of the plain of the Axius and Haliaemon.'and has now 15,000 or 20,000 inhabitants. A few ancient remains, Greek, Roman, and Byzantine, still exist here. — 2. (R.V. Bercea; 2Mac.l3.4.) The modern Aleppo. — 3. A place in Judaea (iMac.9.4), probably Beeroth. [Azotus, Mt.] Bepechlah'. — 1. A son of Zerubbabel, and in the royal line of J udah (iChr.3.2o). — 2. The father of Mesiiui.lam. 13 (Ne. 3. 4. 30, 6. 18). — 3. A Levite of the line of Elkanah dwelling in the villages of the Netophathites (iChr.9.i6). — 4. A doorkeeper for the ark (15. 2 3). — 5. One of the chief men of Ephraim in the time of king Ahaz (2Chr.28.12). — 6. AClershonite Levite, father of Asaph the singer (1Chr.i5.17). — 7- Father of Zechariah the prophet (Zech. 1. 1,7). [Zacharias, II ; Zkciiariah, I.] Be'ped. — 1. A place in the south of Pales- tine, between which and Kadesh lay the well I.ahai-roi (Gen. 16 14). — 2. A descendant of Ivphraim (iChr.7.2o). iiossibly a clerical error for Bpcher ift Nijm.?6.^5. BERENICE BETHABAEA 103 Bepenice. [Bernice.] Bepi', anAsherite.sonof Zophah(iChr.7.36). Bepiah' {in an evil case, or possibly a gift). — 1. A son of Asher, from whom descended the " family of the Bepiites" (Gen.46.i7 ; Num. 26.44,45). — 2. A son of Ephraim, so named on account of the state of his father's house when he was born (iChr.7. 20-23). The event here recorded must be assigned to the time between Jacob's death and the beginning of the oppres- sion, as some of Ephraim's sons must have attained to manhood, and the Hebrews were still free. Perhaps the land in which the men of Gath were born was the eastern part of Lower Egypt, if not Goshen itself. At this time very many foreigners must have been settled in Egypt. Possiblv these men of Gath may have been mercenaries in the Egyptian service, to whom lands were probably allotted as to the native army ; but for another view see Elead. — 3. A Benjamite. He and his brother Shema were ancestors of the inhabi- tants of Ajalon, and expelled the inhabitants of Gath (8.13,16). — 4. A Levite (23. 10,11). Be'pites, The (2Sam.2O.14), mentioned with Abel in the extreme N. of the land of Israel. Perhaps not a proper name, [c.r.c] Bepith', The g-od (Judg.9.46) = Baal- berith. [Baal, i.] Bepnice. Eldest daughter of Herod Agrippa I. She was first married to her uncle Herod king of Chalcis, and after his death lived under circumstances of grave suspicion with her own brother Agrippa H. (Juvenal, Sat. vi. 156), who brought her with him to greet Festus on his arrival in Judaea as pro- curator (Ac.25.13). She listened to St. Paul's defence as her sister Drusilla had done (24. 24). She married, as her second husband, Pole- mon king of Cilicia, then, leaving him, became the mistress of Titus, who at last dismissed her from Rome to appease public discontent on account of his connexion with her. [e.r.b.] Bepodaeh'-baladan' (2K.20.i2)=Mero- DACH-BALADAN. Bepoth' (iEsd.5.19) =Beeroth. Bepothah', a cit}' named (Ezk.47.i6) with Hamath on the N. of the land of Israel; possibly, but not certainly, the same as Berothai. Bepothai'(2Sam.8.8)isthenameof acityof Zobah, tributary to David, noticed with Tib- hath (see Betah), both belonging to Damascus. The LXX. gives " chosen cities " for Berothai (i.e. Heb. bard, " to choose ") and for Chun in the parallel passage (iChr.18.8). The latter is supposed to be the later Conna (Rob. Later Bib. Res. p. 5 3 5 ), now Rds Ba'albek, 24 miles N.E. of Ba'albek. The village Breitdn, 5 miles S. of Ba'albek, is a possible site for Berothai. [c.r.c] Bepo'thlte, The(iChr.ll.39). [Beeroth.] Bepyl {tarshish) occurs in Ex. 28. 20, 39. 13, Can. 5. 14, Ezk. 1.16,10.9,28. 13, Dan. 10.6, as the translation of the Heb. tarshish. and of the Gk. /3^pi'\Xos in "Rev. 21. 20. It is gener- ally supposed that the tarshish derives its name from the place so called. The beryl was known to Pliny, who admits several varieties, stating that the palest one, called chrysoprase, was by some considered a different stone, and he mentions the relation between the ordinary kind and the emerald. Theo- phrastus does not use the name, but probably knew the stone as one variety of his smarag- dus ; apparently Rev. 21. 20 is the first ap- pearance of the word in a Gk. author, but there it almost certainly denotes the modern beryl. This, the aquamarine of jewellers, is hardly more than a variety of emerald, con- taining less of the colouring material. Whether tarshish also signifies this stone is more doubt- ful. The emerald was known to the Eg^qj- tians, for there are ancient mines near the Red Sea, slightly N. of the latitude of Assouan, and the gems there obtained are rather pale in colour ; but some think that tarshish refers to the chrysolithus of Pliny, a golden-colomred gem, probably the modern topaz, which also occurs in that part of Eg^'pt. [t.g.b.] Bepze'Ius (iEsd.5.38) = Barzillai, i. Besai'. " Children of Besai " were Nethinim who returned to Judaea with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.49 5 Ne.7.52). Besodeiah', father of Meshullam, 14 (Ne.3.6). Besop', The bpook, a torrent-bed in the extreme S. of Judah, mentioned only in iSam. 30.9,10,21. It was in the Amalekite country or Tih desert. [c.r.c] Betah, a city belonging to Hadadezer, king of Zobah, mentioned with Berothai (2Sam.8.8). In iChr.l8. 8 the name is perhaps better called Tibhath. Tibhath is probably the Tubakhi of the Amarna letters (Berlin 171) noticed in 15th and also (by an Egyptian traveller) in 14th cent. B.C. Possibly Kefr Dubbeh, W. of Ba'albek. [c.r.c] Bet'ane, a place apparently S. of Jerusalem (Jth.1.9); probably Beth -anoth. [c.r.c] Be'ten, on the border of the tribe of Asher (Jos. 19. 25). By Eusebius it is said to have been then called Bebeten, and to have lain 8 miles E. of Ptolemais {Onomasticoft). He perhaps means el B'aneh, a village 12 miles E. of Acre. [c.r.c] Beth (house, temple, or tent as among modern Arabs; Judg.l8.31, iSam.l.7). BETH- E'KED, the " shearing house " (2K.IO.12) be- tween Jezreel and Samaria, according to Jerome 15 miles from the town of Legio, and in the plain of Esdraelon, probably Beit Qdd, 13 English miles S.E. of Lejji'm. BETH- HAGGAN', the "garden-house" (2 K. 9. 2 7) near Ibleam (Yebla), possibly Beit Jenn, 9 miles N. of Yebla, or otherwise Jenin near Belmaim, according as Ahaziah fled N. or S. from Jezreel. [c.r.c.] Bethab'apa (house of crossing), where St. John baptized (Jn.l.28). It was " be- yond Jordan." The three oldest MSS. read " Bethania beyond Jordan," which could not mean Bethany (where there is no water, and which is not " beyond Jordan "), but probably refers to Batanaea. [Bashan.] Origen states that, in 3rd cent, a.d., nearly all the MSS. had this reading ; yet he considers Bethabara to be the true reading, as did Epiphanius in 4th cent. a.d. Eusebius (Onomasticon) indicates the traditional site at the ford E. of Jericho (as still shown) ; but while Bethabara was only a day's journey from Cana of Galilee (Jn.l.29, 35,43,2.1), it was two or three days distant from Bethany (Jn.lO.40,11. 3,6,17), and must have been on the upper Jordan. The name of a ford N. of Beisan was ascertained in 1874, by 104 BETH-ANATH the surveyors of Jordan, to be well known as 'Abdrah, and this is about 20 miles from Kefr Kenna, and 60 from Bethany. The site is suitable, and the name shows St. John's know- ledge of Palestine, as the place is otherwise un- noticed. It can have no connexion with either Bcth-barah or Beth-arabah. [c.r.c] Beth-anath', one of the " fenced cities " of Naphtali, named with Beth-shemesh (Jos. 19. 38) ; from neither of them were the Canaanites expelled (Judg.l.33). Now 'Ainitha, a village 6 miles W. of Kedesh. [c.r.c] Beth-anoth', a town in the mountains of Judah, named with Halhul, Beth-zur, etc., in Jos. 15. 59 only. Now Beit 'Ainun. [c.r.c] Bethany, a village on the mount of Olives (Mk.ll.i ; Lu.i9.29), nearly a mile from Jerusalem (Jn.ll.i8), on the road from Jericho (Mk.lO.46; Lu.l9.i). It was the home of Lazarus (Jn.ll.i), and hence is now called el 'Azeriyeh, on the road which crosses the S. shoulder of Olivet. It was a "sabbath day's journey " from the city (Ac.l.12) ; for near Bethany Jesus was last seen by His disciples (Lu.'24.50). See Mt.21.i7,26.6 ; Mk. 11.11,12 ; Jn.l2.i. The name probably means " house of dates," and a date palm still grows there, with figs [c/. Bethphage] and olives. It is a small stone village, dominated by the tower of Queen Melisinda's convent (1148 a.d.), and a very small undergroimd chapel is shown as the tomb of Lazarus. The ancient tombs are beside the road E. of the village. (Sttrv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 27-28.) [c.r.c] Beth-arabah', one of six cities of Judah which were situated in the Arabah (Jos. 15. 61), on the N. border of the tribe, and near Beth- hoglah (15.6). It is also included among the towns of Benjamin (18. 22). In Jos. 18. 18 {cf. R.V.) we find "the Arabah" for Beth-arabah, the site of which is unknown. [c.r.c] Beth-apam' (R.V. Beth-haram), a town of Gad, described as in " the valley " (Jos. 13. 27), and no doubt the same as Beth-haran in Num.32. 36. Eusebius (Onomasticon) says that Syrians called it Bethramphtha, and that, in honour of Augustus, Herod had named it Livias. Josephus says that Herod (Antipas) fortified Betharamphtha, calling it Julias in honour of the Emperor's wife Julia, or Livia (18 Ant. ii. i). Ptolemy gives the locality of I.ivias as 31° 26' lat. and 67° 10' long., or near the N.E. shore of the Dead Sea. It is now Tell er Rdmeh, 7 miles N.E. of the Jordan mouth (Surv. E. Pal. p. 238). [c.r.c] Beth-arbel' (H0.IO.14 only), the scene of a sack and massacre by Shalman. No clue is given to its position ; it may be Arbela in Galilee [Irhid), or another Arbela near Pella, 1'^ of Jordan. Now Irhid (cf. Sayce, Higher Cril. and Man. p. 482). [c.r.c] Beth-a'ven, a place on the mountains of Benjamin, E. of Bethel (Jos. 7. 2,18.12), and between it and Michmash (iSani.l3r5,14.23). In Ho.*. 15,5.8,10.5 the name is transferred, with a play on the word very characteristic of this prophet, to the neighbouring Bethel — once the " house of God," but then the house of idols, or of " naught." The name has not been found extant. [c.r.c] Beth-azma'veth (Ne.7.28 only), a towa of Benjamin which is elsewhere called BETHEL, Bethsamos (iEsd.5.i8). Noticed with Ale- METH ('Almit), close to which, r mile to N., is the village HizmeJi. [Azmaveth.] [c.r.c] Beth-baal-meon' (Jos.13.i7). [Baal, 8.] Beth-bapah', named only in Judg.7.24, as a point S. of the scene of Gideon's victory. It was apparently in the Jordan Valley, [c.r.c] Beth-ba'si, a town in which Jonathan and Simon took refuge from Bacchides (iMac. 9.62,64). Josephus (13 Ant. i. 5) calls it Bethagla. [Beth-hoglah.] [c.r.c] Beth-bipei' (R.V. Beth-biri), a town of Simeon (rChr.4.31), otherwise Beth-lebaoth (Jos. 19. 6), near Hazar-susah and Sharh- HEN. It was probably Bireh, a ruined site 13 miles S.W. of Hebron, and 12 miles N.E. of Tell esh SherVah. [c.r.c] Beth-cap', a place named as the point to which the Israelites pursued the Philistines (iSam.7.ii). From the expression " under Beth-car " it would seem that the place itself was on a height. Josephus says that the stone Ebenezer was set up here (6 Ant. ii. 2). The site is doubtful. [Ebenezer.] [c.r.c] Beth-dag-on' (temple of Dagon). — 1. A town of Judah (Jos. 15. 41, in Dan), now Beit Dejan, a village 6 miles S.E. of Joppa, called Caphar-dagon in 4th cent. a.d. (Ono- masticon), between Lydda and Jamnia. It was taken by Sennacherib in 702 b.c — 2. A town apparently on the N. border of Zebulun, near the sea (Jos. 19. 27), probably the ruin D'auk on a hill 5 miles S.E. of Accho, near the Belus River. This agrees with the situation of Cabul, and other points on the border of Asher and Zebulun. [c.r.cI Beth-diblatha'itn, a town of Moab (Je. 48.22), apparently the place elsewhere called Almon-diblathaim. It lay between Dibon and Nebo. [c.r.c] Bethel' (house of God).— \. Jacob, fleeing to Haran, found a certain " place" (Heb. mdqom, Arab. maqdm),ov " shrine," near Luz (Gen. 28. 11,19), which he called Bethel. It was perhaps the site of Abraham's altar, E. of the town afterwards itself called Bethel (Gen.12.8). On his return from Haran (35. 7, 9,15), this shrine, called El Bethel, near Luz, is (ver. 6) said to have been so named by him when he " fled from the face of his brother." He again raised up a pillar and anointed it (ver. 14) when God appeared to him " again " (ver. 9). The second episode thus refers back to the first. The town of Bethel — now Beitin — is a small stone village, on a high, bare, and very rocky ridge, 9^ miles N. of Jerusalem. It contains the ruins of a 12th cent, church : and in the valley 3 miles to W. the spring called 'Ain I.ozeh preserves tlio name of Li'z. Bethel lay within the N. boundary of Benjamin, and E. of Luz (Jos. 16. 2, 18. 13) : but the place was conquered by the sons of Josojih (Judg.l.22). It was a sacred centre to which the ark was brought in war-time (see R.V. Judg.20.i8,26, 21.2), and was one of the places where Samuel judged Israel (iSani.7.i6). Here Jeroboam set up a calf idol (iK.12.2o). which remained till destroyed by Josiah (2K.23.15). though Bethel was for a time recovered by Abijah (2 Chr.i3.19). and inhabited by " sons of the pro- phets " (2K.2.3). About 772 B.C. it is called the " holy place," and " royal house," of " the BETHEL, MOUNT king," or of Moloch (Am. 7.12, 13), to whom, as a calf, human sacrifices appear to have been offered (Ho.13.2, R.V. marg.). Bethel was recolonized by Benjamites after the Captivity (Ne.ll.31), and fortified by Jonathan the Hasmonaean (iMac.9.50). In iEsd.5.2i it is called Betolius. — 2. A royal Canaanite city (Jos.12.i6) apparently near Tappuah. Perhaps the present village Beit Aula, 7 miles N.W. of Hebron, and 4 miles N. of Tuffiih. [c.r.c] Bethel, Mount (Jos. 16. i ; iSam.13.2). The mountain region round Bethel, i. Beth-e'mek, a place on or near the border of Asher (Jos. 19.27). Probably '/Iw^a (Robin- son), 7 miles N.E. of Accho ; E. of it the border ran N. to Dabbasheth. [c.r.c] Beth ep. Mountains of (Can. 2. 17). Bether (Bittir) was a town near Jerusalem on S.W., where the Jews were massacred in 135 A.D. ; but the word may only mean " division " (LXX.), or may refer to Bithron, the hills W. of Mahanaim (2Sam.2.29). [c-r.c] Bethes'da. Probably " house of the stream," at Jerusalem (Jn.5.2), a pool by the "sheep market" (R.V. "sheep gate") or " sheep place," perhaps where the sheep were watered. It had " five porches," and the water was periodically " troubled." Steps led down to the water (ver. 7). Robinson suggested the Gihon spring ('Ain Umm ed Deraj), which is reached by a long flight of steps, and is still " troubled " by the peri- odical rise of the fountain. The sick still bathe in it, and flocks are watered thence. In 4th cent. A.D. Bethesda was shown at the Twin Pools, just outside the temple enclosure on N.W. In 12th cent, it was placed at the Inner Pool, a tank to the N. of the preceding. Since the 14th it has been shown at Birket Isrdil, outside the N. wall of the temple en- closure. But none of these pools appears to have existed in the time of Christ, and none of them has any " stream." [c.r.c] Beth-e'zel, named only in Mi.l.ii, with places on E. border of Philistia. [c.r.c] Beth-g-adep' (iChr.2.51). Possibly the same as Gedor. Beth-gamul', a town of Moab, in the mishor, E. of Jordan (Je.48.23, cf. 21). Proba- bly Jemail, a ruin E. of Dibon. [c.r.c] Beth-hacce'pem (house of vineyards). From Je.6.i we find it was used as a beacon- station, mentioned with Tekoa. In the time of Nehemiah (8.14) it seems to have been in the "environs" (A.V. part) of Jerusalem. The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Beth-hapan' (Num. 32. 36). [Beth-aram.] Beth-hog'la' or -hogflah', a place on the border of Judah (Jos. 15. 6) and Benjamin, to which latter tribe it was reckoned to belong (18.19,21). The name occurs at 'Ain Hajlah, in the required position E. of Jericho, by the old monastery Qiisr Hajlah. [c.r.c] Beth-hopon', the name of two towns or villages, an " upper " and a " nether " (Jos. 16.3,5 ; iChr.7.24), on the road from Gibeon (Jos. 10. 10, 11) to the Philistine plain (iMac. 3.24), and on the boundary-line between Ben- jamin and Ephraim (Jos.16.3,5 and 18.13,14); it was counted to Ephraim (Jos. 21. 22 ; iChr.7. 24), and given to the Kohathites (Jos. 21. 22 ; lChr.6.68[53]), These two towns are the BETHLEHEM 105 modern villages of Beit-'ur et-tahta and Beit- 'ur el-foka — that is, " the lower " and " the up- per " Beit-'ur. The old road to Jerusalem rises 500 ft. in about a mile between the two ; the pass was thus always important for defence. Beth-horon is noticed in Shishak's list of con- quests (loth cent. B.C.) next to Gibeon. See 1K.9.17; 2Chr.8.5 ; iMac.9.50 ; Jth.4.4. From Gibeon to the Upper Beth-horon is about 4 miles of broken ascent, and this appears to be the " going up " to Beth-horon which formed the first stage of Joshua's pursuit. With the upper village the descent commences ; the road is rough and difficult. This is the " going down to Beth-horon." [c.r.c] Beth-jeshimoth', or -jesimoth', a town E. of Jordan, at the S. end of the Jordan Valley (Num. 33. 49). It was one of the limits of the encampment of Israel before crossing the Jordan. Later it was allotted to Reuben (Jos. 12.3,13.20), but came at last into the hands of Moab, and is described as " the glory of the country" (Ezk.25.9 ; LXX. best land). Now the ruin Suweijneh near the N.E. corner of the Dead Sea shore. [c.r.c] Beth-Ietaaoth', a town of Simeon (Jos. 19.6; Lebaoth, 15. 32). [Beth-birei.] Bethlehem (house of bread). — 1. Bethle- hem OF Judah. Its old name was Ephrath, or Ephratah (Gen. 35. 16, 19 ; Ru.4.ii ; iSam. 17.12; iChr.4.4; Ps.132.6 ; Mi.5.2), meaning " fertile." Near it Rachel was buried. It is now called Beit Lahm, a small town on a high ridge 5 miles S. of Jerusalem. The site of Rachel's tomb, according to early tradition, is fixed on the main road a mile N. of the town, and is now covered by a modern shrine. Bethlehem seems to have been quite a small place (Mi.5.2), and is not mentioned in the geography of Joshua, except in the verse (15.59) added in LXX. : " Ephratah which is Bethlehem." [Eltekon.] It is called " of BETHLEHEM, FROM S.E. W.D.A (P'rom an original sketch by Col. Conder.) Judah" (Judg.17.7,19.2; iSam.l7.i2 ; Mt.2. 1,6) to distinguish it from No. 2. Jonathan the grandson of Moses [Jonathan, 5] (Judg. 17.7-9,18.30) was a, Levite living as a ^er. 106 BETHLOMON or protected member of another tribe, at Bethlehem, as did another Levite (19.2, i8) ; and the g'riith of Chimham (see 2Sam.i9.37 ; Je.4i.17) seems to have been a " dwelling " given to a Gileadite near Bethlehem. There were fields (Ru.2.3) and pastures (1Sam.i7.15) near the town, the latter in the wilderness to S.E. Yearly' sacrifices were here offered (iSam. 16.2-5,20.6) before the temple was built. It had no natural water supply — for there is only a small spring 2 miles to E. — but had a well (b'^er), now supposed to be a cistern N.W. of the town (2Sam.23.i4,i6 ; iChr.ll.i6), which depends on Pilate's aqueduct for water ; this no doubt is the reason why it was not a large place originally. It was inhabited by the family of Caleb (iChr.2.5 1,54,4.4), and after the Captivity (Ezr.2.2i ; Ne.7.26). But, in consequence of prophecy (Mi. 5. 2), it was a general Jewish expectation in our Lord's time that the Messiah would be born here (Mt.2.5 ; Jn.7.42) ; and in the manger at the " inn," or "lodging," Jesus was laid (Lu.2.7). Justin Martyr, c. 150 a.d. {Trypho 78), says that the " cave " where Christ was born was shown in his time ; and Origen intimates that it was well known {Agst. Celsus i. 51). Jerome [Epist. ad Paulin. xiii. 49) says that this cave had become a scene of Adonis-worship before Constantine cut down the grove and built his first church on the site in 330 a.d. It is remarkable that, in the Hebron hills, there are still many rock-cut stables, with mangers, in ancient ruins. The site is the only one in Palestine of which there is Christian tradition traceable before the 4th cent. a.d. The ancient basilica is still standing — the old- est church perhaps in the world — adorned with glass mosaics added, c. 1150 a.d., on the nave walls (above the original pillars), and with a roof of English oak put up in 1482 a.d. Beth- lehem was the retreat where Jerome translated the Bible into Latin at the close of 4th cent. A.D. It has now a population of 4,700 Christians and 300 Moslems, and is a thriving town, with fields, olives, fruit, and pastures near it. {Sitrv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 28-9, 83-5, 129, 130.) — 2. Bethlehem of Zebulun (Jos. 19. 15). Now the village Beit Lahm, 7 miles N.W. of Nazareth. It is not said which of the two towns was the home of the judge Ibzan (Judg.l2.8,io). [c.R.c] Bethlo'mon (iEsd.5.i7) = Bethlehem, i. Beth-maachah', named in 2Sam.2O.14, 15 as a definition of the position of Abel in or close to Maacah, or Aram-maachah, one of the petty Syrian kingdoms in the N. of Pales- tine (c/. 2 K. 15. 29). [c.R.c] Beth-mapcaboth' (house of the chariots), one of the towns of Simeon, mentioned with Ziklag and Horinah (Jos. 19. 5 ; iChr.4.31). In Jos. 15. 30, 31 Madniannah occurs instead. The place, like Hazar-susah, which name stands next, refers no doubt to a military post with a force of chariots, dating perhaps from the Egyptian occupation of such posts in the plains in the 15th and i6th cents, b.c. [c.r.c] Beth-meon' (Je.48.23). [Baal. 8.] Beth-nimpah', one of the fenced cities of (lad (Num.32.36) lying in the valley near Beth- haran (Jos. 13.27). In Num. 32-3 it is called sjniply NiMRAH. Now Tell Nimrin, at the foot BETHSAIDA of the hills of Gilead, 10 miles N. of the Dead Sea (Surv. E. Pal. p. 237). [c.R.c] Bethopon' (Jth.4.4), correctly (as R.V.) Beth-horon. Beth-pa'let, Beth-phe'let (R.V. Beth- pelet), a town among those in the extreme S. of Judah, named in Jos. 15. 27 and Ne.ll.26 with Moladah and Beer-sheba. The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Beth-pazzez', a town of Issachar named with En-haddah (Jos. 19. 21). Beth-peop' (temple of [Baal] Pear ; Deut. 3.29,4.46,34.6 ; Jos. 13. 20), a place apparently not far from Nebo. in Moab, probably near the " top of Peor " (Num.23. 28), which com- manded a view of the Jeshimon on W. of the Dead Sea. If Peor was at Minyeh, the very remarkable rude stone circle with its central standing stones at el Mareighdt (smeared things) on the same ridges may represent this " temple of Peor." [Peor.] (Surv. E. Pal. pp. 10, 184-189.) [c.R.c] Beth'phag'e (house of figs), a place on Olivet (Mt.21.i ; Mk.ll.i ; Lu.i9.29), appar- ently close to Bethany. There is no clue to the exact site and the Talmudic references are vague. [c.R.c] Beth-phe let. [Beth-palet.] Beth-papha' occurs in the genealogy of Judah as the son of Esh-ton (iChr.4.12), pro- bably a place-name. Beth-pehob', a place near the valley in which lay the town of Laish or Dan (Judg.18. 28). It was one of the little kingdoms of Aram or Syria (2Sam.l0.6). In ver. 8 the name occurs in the shorter form of Rehob. [c.R.c] Bethsa'ida, the home of SS. Philip, An- drew, and Peter (Jn. 1.44,12. 21), a place impor- tant as defining the site of the miracle of feeding the five thousand. There is no doubt that a town so called lay immediately E. of the J ordan, close to where it entered the sea of Galilee, in " lower Gaulonitis " within the tetrarchy of Herod Philip, who died and was buried there. He named the city Julias from Caesar's daugh- ter (Josephus, 18 Ant. ii. i, iv. 6, 3 Wars x. 7). Pliny also (Hist. Nat. v. 15) places Julias on the E. side of the lake, with Hippos (SAsieh). Ruins in this position were described by L. Oliphant in 1884, including possible remains of a synagogue, and Greco- Roman fragments, at ed Dikkeh (the platform) on the slope of a ■ barren hill a few hundred yards E. of the river, a mile N. of the ruin et Tell. The Jordan has probably filled up the N. shores of the lake considerably since 34 a.d., when Philip died ; but this site is still only 2 miles from the point at which it enters the lake. Two difficulties have been found, from early times, in applying all the N.T. references to Bcthsaida Julias, though most of them clearly apply to this site. First, that Bethsaida is said to be " of Galilee" (Jn.l2.2i) ; this, however, might be an early clerical error for the less familiar " of Golan." Secondly, that the disciples took boat, from near the desert where the feeding of the five thousand occurred, " to go to the other side before unto Bethsaida " (A.V. Mk. 6.45). or simply "the other side to Bethsaida" (R.V.). The distance from their starting-point to Capcrnavnn (Jn. 6. 17,19) exceeded 25 or 30 furlongs, that is 3 or 4 nxijes ; and " the land of BETHSAMOS BETHUEL 107 Gennesaret," where they landed (Mk.6.53), was 5 miles S.W. of Julias. But they are not said to have reached Bethsaida ; and the Greek preposition Trpos, with the accusative case, means not only " to " but also " against " or " in relation to." The difficulty disappears if we render the passage "go to the side opposite to Bethsaida," which would be Julias as opposite Gennesaret, E. as opposite W. of Jordan. The notices of Bethsaida with Chorazin and Capernaum present no objec- tion (see Mt.ll.21, Lu.lO.13), since Julias was only about 3 miles from the former and 5 from the latter. The belief that Bethsaida was in Gennesaret (which is nowhere stated in N.T.J was due to the passage above quoted (Mk.6.45), and led to the supposition that the miracle occurred W. of the lake. The Sinaitic MS. (which contains several serious blunders) alters the topography to agree with this view. It omits the words " belonging to a city called Bethsaida " (Lu.9.io), as defining the position of the desert where the miracle occurred, and it alters the phrase " there came other boats from Tiberias nigh unto the place where they did eat bread " (Jn.6.23), into " which was nigh where they did also eat bread." The emendation has created much confusion. In Mt.l4. 13,34 we find that Jesus retired from " His own country " (13. 54) going " by ship unto a desert place apart " ; and after the miracle, "when they were gone over they came into the land of Gennesaret." In Mk. 6.31,45,8.13,22 the account of the first event is the same, and a second voyage from Dalmanutha [Magdala] led to " the other side " and " to Bethsaida." In Lu.9.io the miracle is stated, in all the oldest MSS. except the Sinaitic, to have occurred near Bethsaida, a city which lay on the borders of the desert region of Golan. In Jn.6.1,3,15, 17 Jesus, having crossed the sea of Galilee, returned after the miracle to Capernaum, a distance of more than 3 or 4 miles. Hence the four accounts agree in placing Bethsaida at Julias, in all respects except in the two verbal expressions already noticed. This question, which has been said to be the most difficult problem of N.T. geography, is due, not to any discrepancy between the various accounts, but to the misunderstanding that arose about the 4th cent. a.d. The site of Julias is not noticed in the Onomasticon, and the scene of the miracle was then wrongly shown W. of the lake of Gennesaret. The Sinaitic MS. took this view, as it took the prevailing view as to Emmaus ; but its writer is responsible also for supposing an eclipse of the sun to occur at full moon (Lu.23.45), and for un- grammatical Aramaic in substituting raKida KoufjL for " Talitha cumi " (Mk.5.41). To reconcile all known notices of Bethsaida, we require only to read Golan for " Galilee," or to take the latter as rather loosely used in contrast with Judaea — Bethsaida, "the house of fish- ing," being only about a quarter of a mile out- side the Galilean border. [c.r.c] Bethsa'mos. [Beth-azmaveth]. Bethsan' (iMac.5. 52, 12.40,41), Beth- shan' (iSam.31.io,i2 ; 2Sam.2i.12) ; else- where Beth-she'an, a city which, with its " daughtej: " towns, beloiiged to Manassph (iChr.7.29), just within the limits of Issachar (Jos. 17. 11), and therefore on the W. of Jordan (c/. iMac.5.52). The Canaanites were not driven out from the town (Judg.l.27). In Solomon's time it seems to have given its name to a district extending from the town itself to Abel-meholah ; and " all Beth-shean " was imder charge of one of his officers (1K.4.12). The corpses of Saul and his sons were fastened up to the wall of Beth-shean by the Philistines (iSam.31.io,i2) in the open "street" or space, which then, as now, fronted the gate of an Eastern town (2Sam.2i.12). Bethsan is men- tioned c. 150 B.C. in iMac.12.40,41. The later name Scythopolis appears first in 2Mac.l2. 29, but has not survived, and the place is still called Beisdn. It lies in the Jordan Valley, about 12 miles S. of the sea of Galilee, and 4 miles W. of the Jordan, at the mouth of the valley of J ezreel. The ruins on N. include those of a Roman theatre. It has recently become the seat of a district governor, but is only a poor village of mud huts. [c.r.c] Beth-she'mesh (temple of the sun). Four places so named include — 1. A town on the border of Judah and Dan (Jos. 15. 10), W. of Kirjath-jearim, otherwise Ir-shemesh (town of the sun ; Jos. 19. 41), a city of Levites (Jos. 21. 16), who are here noticed early (iSam.6.9,14,15) ; now 'Ain Shems, a ruined village in the valley of Sorek, 4 miles W. of 'Ernia (Surv. W. Pal. ii. p. 231), distinguished from others as "of Judah" (2K.I4.11). Amaziah was here defeated (2Chr.25.21). It was in the sh''pheld (2Chr.28.18). — 2. A place on the border of Issachar (Jos. 19. 22), appar- ently near Jordan on S.E. boundary. It is probably the ruin at 'Ain Shemsiyeh, 7 miles S. of Beisdn in the Jordan Valley.^3. A town of Naphtali (Jos.i9.38 ; Judg.l.33), possibly the ruin Shemsin, 8 miles E. of Tabor. —4. In Egypt (Je.43.i3). The LXX. reads " Heliopolis " — that is. On, named from the Egyptian Un, the " rising sun." The site is 10 miles N.E. of Cairo, and the mediaeval Arabs called it 'Ain Shems. [c.r.c] Beth-shittah' (house of the acacia ; Judg. 7.22). The Midianites pitched in the "valley of Jezreel " (6.33), which was that E. of the city, and fled to Abel-meholah ( 'Ain Helweh) in the Jordan Valley. The village of Shuffa, on N. side of the valley, 6 miles E. of J ezreel, is there- fore a fit position for Beth-shittah. [c.r.c] Beth-su'pa. The form in i and 2 Mac. (i Mac. 4. 29, etc.) of Beth-zur. Beth-tappu'ah, a town of Judah, in the mountains near Hebron (Jos. 15. 53 ; cf. iChr. 2.43). Now Tuffuh, a village 4 miles W. of Hebron. [c.r.c] Bethuel', the son of Nahor by Milcah : nephew of Abraham, and father of Rebekah (Gen.22.22, 23, 24.15, 24,47, 28.2). In 25. 20 and 28.5 he is called " Bethuel the Syrian." Though often referred to in the narrative, Bethuel only appears in person once (24.50). Upon this Prof. Blunt ingeniously suggested (Coincidences, i. §4) that he was the subject of imbecility or some other incapacity. Bethuel' (iChr.4.30), Beth'ul (Jos.19.4), otherwise probably Chesil (Jos. 15. 30), a town of Simeon in the far S. The site is unknown Pephaps Bethel, 2 (iSam.30,27). [;c.r,c.] 108 BETHUIilA Bethulia, the home of Judith, the topo- graphy of which is very minutely described. It was " over against Esdraelon " and near the plain of Dothaim (Jth.4.6). The enemy camped in the latter plain, as far as Belmaim or Balamo (7.3,8.3), or from Dothdn E. to Wddy Bel'ameh. But Bethulia was in the hills, on the slope of a mountain {6.11,12) with springs at its foot (7.7,12), but no water at the town (7.13,20). Other mountains surrounded it (15. 3), and the view extended down to a valley (10. 10). These details apply to the village Mithilia or Meselich (Surv. W. Pal. ii. p. 156), on the N. slope of a hill, 5 miles S.E. of Tell Dothdn. It has only wells, but on S. side of the mountain there is much water in the Merj el Ghuruk, or " drowned meadow." The view on N. extends over Esdraelon to Nazareth and Tabor. [c.r.cI Beth-zachapias. [Bath-zacharias.] Beth-zup', a town in the mountains of Judah, named between Halhul and Gedor (J OS. 15. 58). Beth-zur would appear from iChr.2.45 to have been founded by the people of Maon, and was fortified by Rehoboam (2Chr.ll. 7). The people of Beth-zur assisted Nehemiah in rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.3.i6). In the wars of the Hasmonaeans, Beth-zur, or Beth-siura, played an important part. The name means " house of the rock " ; now Beit Silr, close to Halhul on W., a ruin on a cliff at a narrow pass of the road from Hebron to Jerusalem. [c.r.c] Beto'lius (iEsd.5.2i). [Bethel, i.] Betomas'them and Betomes'tham, a town " over against Esdraelon, facing the plain that is near Dothaim" (Jth.4.6, 15. 4). An unknown site. [c.r.c] Betonim' (Jos.i3.26), named on N. border of Gad. Probably the Biitein district of N. Gilead. [c.r.c] Betrothal. [Marriage.] Beulah' (married). In the imagery of Isaiah (62.4 ; cf. 49.i4,54.iff.) the name which the land of Israel is to bear when the Gentiles share its spiritual privileges. Bezai'. " Children of Bezai " returned from captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.i7 ; Ne.7.23). The name occurs again among those who sealed the covenant (Ne.10.i8). Bezaleel'. — 1. Son of Uri the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah ; the artificer to whom was confided by Jehovah the design and exe- cution of the skilled work, especially in metal, wood, and stone, for the tabernacle (Ex. 31. 1-6). —2. One of the sons of Pahath-moab who had taken a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.30). Be'zek. — 1. A Canaanite town (Judg.l.4,5), probably the ruin Bezqah 6 m. S.E. of Lydda. — 2. A place evidently in Central Palestine, a day's march from Jabesh-gilead (iSam.11.8), where Saul gathered Israel witliin a week. Euscbius (Onomasticnti) mentions a Bezek 17 Roman ni. from Shecheni, now Ihziq, an ancient ruin 14 English m. N. of Nablus. This lies immediately W. of the jirobable site of Jabesh, about 25 m. distant (Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 231, 237)- [c.r.c] Be'zep, an Asherite, son of Zophah (iChr. 7.37). Be'zep, a town of Reuben in the desert (midhbar), and in the^mishor or "plateau" BIBLE (Deut.4.43 ; Jos.20.8 ; iChr.6.78), given as a city of refuge, and to the Levites (Jos.2i.36). The site is doubtful. [c.r.c] Be'zeth (iMac.7.19), a place outside Jeru- salem where Bacchides camped. Josephus reads Beth-zetho (12 Ant. x. 2). [Azotus, Mount.] [c.r.c] Bi'atas (iEsd.9.48) = Pelaiah, 2. Bible. I. Name. Derived from byblos, (/3i'/3\os), the Gk. name for the papyrus reed. [Gebal.] It was frequently spelt biblos, audits diminutive biblion was used not only for the material paper, but also for what was written on it. The plur. biblia thus became a collection of papers and books, whilst bibliotheca was used both for a depository of books and also for the books themselves. After a time the word biblia passed from being a neuter plur. and be- came afem. sing., as in the De I mitatione Christi (DuCange). It is curious that the word was used in another sense in the Middle Ages — viz. for a weapon of assault against a besieged city. — II. Divisions. The various books and parts of the Bible are dealt with under their respective headings, but it is the purpose of the present article to regard the book as one whole. As it stands in English, it contains 66 documents, 39 in O.T. (exclusive of the Apocrypha) and 27 in N.T. Each book is divided into so many chapters and verses, which have taken the place of old paragraph divisions in the Heb. and of the sectional marks in the gospels. The law had been divided into 54 lessons for syna- gogue reading in ancient days, and the same was the case with the prophets. The division of the Bible into chapters is frequently ascribed either to Cardinal Hugh de St. Cher or to Stephen Langton ; while the O.T. verses were marked by the Massoretes, and those in N.T. date from the middle of the i6th cent, and first appeared in Stephens' ed. of 1551. — III. Contents. These extend from the beginnings of human history to the mission of Christ and the foundation of His Church. They may be divided into seven portions — viz. the origin of man, primitive history, patriarchal narratives, Israel's history from the Exodus to Samuel, the period of the Kings, the return from captivity, and the events connected with the coming of J esus Christ into the world. The histories thus sketched out are by no means in equal proportion. Thus, the first eleven chapters of the Bible comprise half of the whole period which the book covers. There is nothing in it of the nature of annals. It is only a selection of events written by prophets (i.e. si^ecially gifted men), intended for the in- struction of those who should come after. But the Bible is not wholly historical. It contains poetry, proverb, and j^rophecy. Nor are these kept rigidly apart — they are all blended and are closely related to the history ; and it may be said tiiat wiiat the prophets are to the historians in O.T. tJiat the epistles and Apoc- alypse are to the gospels in N.T., and all work together for good. — IV. Unity. It is evident that this collection of books must present a great deal of variety. There are many authors of different ages, ranks, and degrees of culture, living under diverse circumstances, some writ- ing at great lengtii, others very shortly, others again beiujj compilers rather thi\a original BIBLE contributors. Yet beneath all these varieties of composition there is a remarkable and signi- ficant unity of spirit. This is not only because all, or almost all, the writers are of one nation, but because they teach the same truths about the nature of the Divine Being and His relation to man, and — perhaps unwittingly — testify to a great scheme or purpose running through the ages and culminating in the manifestation of the Son of God. This is led up to not only by direct prophecy, but also by type and ceremony and by God's dealings with men exhibited during the long course of Jewish history, so that when the Lord Jesus had accomplished His work He might be identified by means of the broken lights afforded in the O.T. as a whole. It is natural that this relationship of the books should be dwelt upon in N.T., as it formed part of the justification of Christ in presenting His claim, through His accredited followers, to the world. Whilst the later O.T. writers make far more use of their predecessors than is usually supposed, the N.T. writers quote no less than 600 passages from O.T. {vide Gough's N.T. Quotations), and thus reveal the true meaning and bearing of God's dealings with the seed of Abraham in ancient days. — V. Language. The O.T. is mainly in Hebrew, a simple, mas- sive, yet graphic language, possessing a re- markable wealth of words and idioms, and peculiarly suited for the purpose it had to ful- fil. The Chaldee or Aramaic is closely related to Hebrew, and seems to have been almost a lingua franca in the East in one or other of its dialects, having been spoken in Canaan, Syria, and Mesopotamia. It was a Hebraized form of it which was the spoken " Hebrew " of N.T. In O.T. it is to be found in Ezr.4.8-6.i8, 7.12-26, in Dan. 2. 4-7. 28, and in Je.lO.ii. There are various "provincialisms" in the Heb. Bible which were formerly regarded as marks of late date, but which probably point in a very different direction. The N.T., as we have it, is all in Greek, though there are strong reasons for believing that St. Matthew wrote in " Hebrew," and we know that some of the speeches in the Acts which we now have only in Greek were uttered in Hebrew. At first sight there seems to be a great gulf between the Semitic O.T. and the Gk. N.T. But in the providence of God this has been bridged over by the preparation of the Gk. translation of O.T. (250-150 B.C.). This magnificent under- taking gave to the world what has well been called Hebrew thought in Greek clothing ; and although, as Deissmann pleads, there has been too great a tendency during the last century to create or imagine a Hellenistic or Judaeo- Greek dialect quite distinct from other Greek, yet, as Dalman and Abbott in their studies on N.T. emphasize, the Greek of N.T. must always be read in the light of the LXX., which practi- cally became almost an authorized version of O.T. amongst the earliest Christians ; and con- sequently every word in the Gk. Testament has to be examined in the light of the Heb. word to which it answered in the LXX. reading of O.T. Thus our N.T. combines the strength and depth of Hebrew conviction with the refine- ment and elasticity of Greek. — VI. Archaeo- . LOGY has done much to make the Bible a living and real book during the past century. The land BIBLE 109 of Palestine, as we now call it, has been opened up, its ruinous heaps or tells have been identi- fied, the country has been mapped out, the manners, customs, land-laws, traditions, and dialects of the people have been investigated. We owe much to the labours of Robinson and to the enthusiasm of Stanley, and still more to the work of the Palestine Exploration Fund, and to the diggings of Petrie, Bliss, and Mac- alister. The history of the land can now be traced from the time of the old Amorite in- habitants through all the ages that have followed. The Amarna tablets have been a revelation as to the politics of Canaan in the Mosaic age and as to its links with Egypt and the East. The situation of the walls and buildings of old Jerusalem is gradu- ally being elucidated ; and speaking generally, it may be said that whilst the Bible is the best handbook to Palestine, the land with all that it has to tell us is the best commentary on the Bible. The countries round Palestine have also yielded their silent testimony to the history of the past as recorded in Scripture. This is true to some extent of Egypt and Sinai, but still more of Assyria, Babylon, and Persia. The dealings of ancient Eastern kings with one another and with Israel and Judah are be- coming increasingly clear, and there is hardly a notable event in the Bible in which foreign kings are concerned from the time of Abraham onwards which is not capable of illustration or direct confirmation from modern discovery. The same is true in the case of N.T. The few difficulties which formerly existed are now removed — e.g. concerning the census (vide Ramsay's Was Christ born in Bethlehem .'') ; the narrative of St. Paul's shipwreck has been tested and confirmed in every particular {vide James Smith's Voyage of St. Paul) ; and the record of St. Paul's travels in Asia Minor has proved to be a marvel of accuracy {vide Ramsay's Paul the Traveller and other works). What remains to be done in this department is chiefly the exact de- termination of certain chronological obscurities. The want of a fixed era in ancient Egyptian history is one of the most serious hindrances to this. Old Babylonian methods of recording reigns are becoming clearer {vide King's Baby- lonian Records) ; and it seems that some of the dates assigned by Assyrian and Babylonian kings to ancient events were given through mis- understanding rather than deliberate exaggera- tion, and have to be brought down considerably lower. It should be added that whilst Oriental discoveries (often very fragmentary) furnish frequent illustrations of the truth of Scripture, the Bible itself throws considerable light on ancient history, and leads us on from the times of the earliest Babylonians and Ninevites to the age of the Roman empire, telling us by the way much about the Canaanite, Syrian, Phoeni- cian, and Egyptian kingdoms, and bringing before us the story of the rise and fall of East- ern nations in a most instructive manner. This is so strikingly the case that, were it not " a Bible, "it would be Mn?i'eysa//y accepted as the most valuable historical document which has come down to us from ancient times. — VII. Legislation. The Bible is not a book of philosophy or of ethics, but rather the record of the manifestation of God in history, no BICHRI yetj^it contains the germs of a noteworthy scheme of legislation. The laws and customs of the patriarchal age may now be compared with those of Hammurabi (Amraphel) ; while the Mosaic law"received much light from an investigation of old Arabian laws by Michaelis. The peculiarity of the law of Moses is that it is not a complete code, but was delivered piecemeal, and by divine revelation. First, there was the covenant of the Ten Words ; then the laws of Ex. 20. 22-23. 19 ; then, after the construction of the sacred tent and its accom- paniments, came the rules of ritual cleansing, marriage, purity, and land tenure (Lev.l- 25). Subsequently, the parting addresses of Moses recapitulate many of the laws with occasional slight modifications (Deut.1-30). All these acts of legislation are interspersed with portions of Israel's history. They are not the results of national discussion, but are imposed by divine authorit}^ and are regarded as authoritative, even if occasionally modified in the later books. The root of all obedience is love to God Who had brought the people out of Egyptian bondage, and all the history and life of the people was to be animated by the spirit of love. Many of the laws which seem to us almost barbarous were by no means be- hind the age when they were laid down, but quite the contrary. — VIII. A thoughtful survey of the Bible as a whole leads to the conclusion that this Divine library is unique. It cannot be regarded or studied profitably as mere " literature." Its pages point to God as related to man yet contrasted with man. Though so much of it is at first sight national history, it proves to be exceedingly personal and has a constant bearing on the spiritual side of life. It is human and sympathetic, searching, setting forth a Godlike standard of holiness, purity, justice, and lovingkindness, dealing with the depths of our nature, illustrating the divine by the human and inspiring the human by the divine. Its sublime truths are set forth in strong concrete language, and all nature is laid under contribution to supply illustrations of the ways of God. It is adapted to young and old, to men of all nations, to every phase of life. It is saturated with Salvation, national and personal, temporal and eternal. All roads in it lead to Christ, Who is its Alpha and Omega. I ts great men are living epistles. It is at once a lesson-book, a prayer-book, and a hymn-book for all the world. When it is translated into a new language it tends to conserve and also to sanctify that language. As Christ is supreme among men, so is the Bible among books. It is spiritual in its origin, and is to be read with spiritual intent and a receptive mind, as a divine message to the world and to the heart. All nations are beginning to recognize its force and its authority, and to learn through its sacred Images the love of the Father, the way of redemption through the Son, and the secret of life through the Spirit. [r.b.g.] Bichri', a Benjainite, ancestor of Sheba (2Sam.2O.1ff.). BIdkap', Jehu's " captain," originally his fellow-officer (2K.9.JS) ; who fulfilled the pro- phecy of Eiijali ( I K. 21. 19) by casting the body of J ehoram son of Ahab into the field of Naboth. Blep. [Burial.] BIRTHDAYS Big'tha', one of the seven chamberlains or eunuchs of the harim of Ahasuerus (Esth.l.io). Bigpthan' or Big-thana', an eunuch [chamberlain, A.V.) in the court of Ahasuerus, one of those " who kept the door " and con- spired with Teresh against the king's life (Esth.2.21,6.2). The conspiracy was detected by Mordecai, and the eunuchs hung. Bigvai'. — 1. " Children of Bigvai," up- wards of 2,000 in number, returned from the Captivity with Zerubbabel(Ezr.2.i4 ;Ne.7. 19), and 72 of them later with Ezra (Ezr.8.14). — 2. Apparently one of the chiefs of Zerubbabel's expedition (Ezr.2.2 ; Ne.7.7), whose family afterwards signed the covenant (Ne.l0.i6). Bildad', the second of Job's three friends. He is called "the Shuhite " (Job 2. 11), which indicates his descent from Shuah the son of Abraham and Keturah (Gen. 25. 2). [h.c.b.] Bileam' (iChr.6.70), a town in the western half of Manasseh, given with its "suburbs" to the Kohathites. Possibly Bel' ah, 12 miles N.W. of Shechem. [Ibleam.] [c.r.c] Bilgah'. — 1. A priest in the time of David ; the head of the fifteenth course for the temple service (iChr.24.i4). — 2. A priest or priestly family who returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel and Jeshua (Ne.12.5,18) ; probably = Bilgai (Ne.10.8). Bilg-ai', a priest who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah (Ne.10.8). [Bilgah, 2.] Bilhah'. — 1. Handmaid of Rachel (Gen.29. 29), and concubine of Jacob to whom she bore Dan and Naphtali (Gen. 30. 3-8, 35. 25,46. 25 ; i Chr.7.13). Reuben afterwards lay with her (Gen. 35.22;c/. 49.4;iChr.5.i).— 2. [Balah.] Bilhan' 1. Son of Ezer, i (Gen.36.27 ; i Chr.1.42). — 2. A Benjamite,sonof Jediael, i, possibly descended from Bela (iChr.T.io ; cf. 8. 3.6). Bill. [Writing.] Bilshan', one of Zerubbabel's companions in the return from Babylon (Ezr.2.2 ; Ne.7.7)- Bimhal', an Asherite, son of Japhlet (iChr.7.33)- Binea', a descendant of Saul (iChr.8.37, 9-43)- Binnui'. — 1. A Levite, father of Noadiah (Ezr.8.33). — 2. One of the sons of Pahath- moab, who had taken a foreign wife (10. 30). — 3. Another Israelite, of the sons of Bani, who had taken a foreign wife (10. 38). — 4. (Ne.7.15 ; cf. Ezr.2.ro)'= Bani, 4. — 5. A Levite, son of Henadad, who assisted in repairing the wall of Jerusalem, under Nehemiah (Ne.3.24,10.9). He is possiblv also the Binnui in 12.8. Birds. [Palestine.] Bipsha', king of Gomorrah at the time of the invasion of Chedorlaomer (Gen. 14.2). Birth. Labour among Eastern people, and indeed among all open-air or nomad tribes, is generally very easy. Cases of difficult labour sometimes occur in O.T. (Gen. 25. 26,35. 17, 88.28 ; iSam. 4.19). But the fact of circumcision being fixed for the eighth day (Gen. 17. 12) seems to point to easy parturition as the na- tural and expected course of events. For re- ferences to miscarriage, see Ex. 21. 22 ; Job 3.16; Ps.58.8; ls.26.i8. [Family, D. iv. 6.] [f.j.] Birthdays. The observation of birthdays is very ancient (Cien.40.2o; cf. Job I.4 ; Ho. 7. 5). In Persia (Herod, i. 133) and in Egypt they iSIRTHRlGHT Were celebrated with great pomp. In Mt.14.6 by TO, yeveffia (A.V. birthday), which in classical Gk. is used for a memorial feast for the dead, Herod's accession feast is probably intended, for such feasts were common in Herod's family (Josephus, 15 Ant. xi. 6). Bipthrigrht. The eldest son by a full wife had a birthright, consisting mainly of an addi- tional portion of the paternal inheritance which could be transferred by agreement be- tween the eldest son and a younger brother (Gen. 25. 3 iff.) or by the father '(48.22 ; i Chr.5. i). On Deut. 21. 15-17, see Family, E {1) (b). Precedence went by seniority (Gen. 43. 33), but the father could vary this while living (iChr. 26.10), or after his death by his Blessing (to be distinguished carefully from birthright ; Gen. 27. 36), which dealt with the family head- ship, not with property (9.25ff.,27.3ff.,49.4). [Family ; Crimes.] [h.m.w.] The term -n-puTordKia occurs only once in N.T. (Heb.l2.i6, with reference to Esau); but the birthright precedence of the firstborn is ac- corded to Christ (Col. 1.18), " that in all things [R.V. marg., or, that among all] He might have the pre-eminence." As the Firstborn He has a more excellent inheritance than His brethren (cf. Heb. 1.4,6). [Heir.] [h.h.J Bipzavith' (iChr.7.31), a place probably in Asher, of which Malchiel was the founder. The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Bishlam', apparently an officer or com- missioner (= Belemus, iEsd.2.i6) of Arta- xerxes in Palestine at the time of the return of Zerubbabel from captivity (Ezr.4.7). Bishop. The word "bishop" (cttiVk-ottos) was in common use among Greeks to denote commissioners and inspectors and magistrates and other officials. In the LXX. it occurs in Num. 4.16,31. 14 ; Judg.9.28 ; 2K.ll.i5,i8 ; 2Chr.34.i2,i7; Ne.ll.9, 14,22 ; Job20.29; Wis. 1.6; Is.69.i7; iMac.l.51. In all these places it is used to denote overseers and officials of various kinds, except in Job 20. 29, where it refers to God, and is used to translate the Heb. 'M. In N.T. it occurs in Ac.2O.28 ; Ph.l.i ; iTim.3.2 ; Tit.1.7 ; iPe.2.25. In the first four of these passages it denotes a church officer ; in iPe.2.25 it is used for our Lord. In N.T. the verb fWLaKoir^o} occurs in Heb. 12. 15 in a general sense, and in the T. R. and text of re- visers, but not in their margin or in Westcott and Hort's text in iPe.5.2 in the sense of " exercising the office of bishop." As the title of a church officer ewicTKOiros is equivalent to " elder " or " presbyter " (TrpeajSiirepos), as may be seen by comparing Ac. 20. 17, 2 8, Ph.l. I, iTim.3.1-13, Tit. 1.5-7, and, if the reading iTna-KOTrovfTes is correct, iPe.5.i,2. Hence it may be concluded against Weizsacker, who distinguished them, and Hort, who regarded t-jriaKowos not as a title of office but as meaning one in a position of oversight, that ima-Koiros and irpea^uT€pos denote the same official. For the nature of the office and the method of appointment, see Church ; Laying on of Hands ; Timothy, Epp. to. Plumptre and Gibson in Smith's D.B. (4 vols. 1893), i. 436- 439 ; Armitage Robinson in End. Bibl. i. 578- 584 ; Gwatkin in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), i. 301, 302 ; Lightfoot, Philippians, pp. 95-99; BITTERN 111 Gore, The Church and the Ministry, pp. 363-369 (4th ed.); Hatch, Bampton Lectures; Harnack, Analecten zu Hatch ; Weizsacker, Apostolic Age of Christian Church, ii. 326-331 ; Hort, Christian Ecclesia, pp. 190-194; Stone, Christian Church, pp. 278, 279. [d.s.] Bithiah', daughter of a Pharaoh, and wife of Mered, a descendant of Judah (xChr.4.i8). The Scriptures, as well as the Egyptian monu- ments, show that the Pharaohs intermarried with foreigners ; but such alliances seem to have been contracted with royal families alone. It may be that Bithiah was a captive. Bithpon' (2Sam.2.29), the " broken " slopes of Gilead W. of Mahanaim. [Bether.] Bithyn'ia. This province of Asia Minor is mentioned only in Ac. 16. 7 and iPe.l.i. Bithynia, considered as a Roman province, was contiguous on the W. to Asia. On the E. its limits underwent great modifications. The province was originally inherited by the Roman republic (74 b.c.) as a legacy from Nicomedes III., the last of an independent line of monarchs, one of whom had invited into Asia Minor those Gauls who named the central district of the peninsula Galatia. On the death of Mithridates, king of Pontus, 63 B.C., the W. part of the Pontic kingdom was added to the province of Bithynia, which again received further accessions on this side under Augustus, 7 a.d. The chief town of Bithynia was Nicaea, celebrated for the general Council of the Church held there in 325 A.D. against the Arian heresy. Bittep hepbs. The Israelites were com- manded to eat the Paschal lamb " with un- leavened bread and with bitter herbs," Heb. m'rorim (Ex. 12. 8). The Jews probably de- rived the custom of eating herbs with their meat from the Egyptians, with whom the practice was common (Aben Ezra). The m''rdrim may de- note various sorts of bitter plants, particularly such as belong to the Cruciferae, as some of the bitter cresses, or to the chicory group of the Compositae, the sow-thistles, and wild lettuces which grow abundantly in the peninsula of Sinai, in Palestine, and in Egypt. The Jews of to-day eat the Passover with horse-radish, endive, parsley, etc., to remind themselves of the bitterness of the Egyptian bondage. Bittern. The Heb. qippodh, which occurs in several passages, e.g. Is. 14. 23, 24.11, and Zeph.2.14, appears to indicate a creature inhabiting marshy or ruined situa- tions. In the first passage it is stated, " I will also make it [Babylon] a possession for the bittern, and pools of water " ; while in the other two the word is also translated bittern, whose companion in such situations is stated to be the cormorant. Some com- mentators have identified the word with the Arabic qiinfUdh, the porcupine, or hedgehog ; but neither hedgehogs nor porcupines frequent swampy situations, climb about ruins, or utter a cry (Zeph.2.13,14). The general opinion favours the view that the transla- tion of qippodh by " bittern " is correct ; this bird (Boiaurus stellaris) frequents marshy situations, which may sometimes occupy, or be near, the sites of ruined buildings. The loud booming of the bittern was formerly a familiar sound in the English fens. The 112 BITTERNESS, WATER OF BLESSIlTdt GATE OF NICAEA, THE CAI'llAL uE BITHINIA. See art. " Bithynia." bird has a wide range in Europe, W. and N. Asia, and N .Africa. [r.l.] Bittepness, Water of. [Water of Bitterness.] Bitumen. [Slime ; Salt Sea.] Bizjothjah' (R.V. Biziothiah), a town in the S. of Judah named with Beer-sheba and Baalah (Jos.15.28). Biztha', the second of the seven eunuchs of king Ahasuerus' harhn (Esth.l.io). Black. [Colours.] Blains. The word occurs once only in A.V. (Ex. 9.9) ; but boils are frequently men- tioned (Lev. 13. 18: 2K.2O.7; Is.38.2i ; Job 2.7). The Sixth Plague is apparently referred to in Deut. 28.27, 33, as " the botch of Egypt," and was probably a form of leprosy or of bubonic plague. [Leprosy ; Plague.] [f.j.] Blasphemy. The Heb. wdcd means " a mocking." The later Jews said (Mishna, Sank. vii. 5), "The blasphemer was not guilty till he uttered The Name" (of Jehovah), and the " name " is frequently connected with the word both in N.T. and O.T. {e.g. Lev.24.ii,i8 ; 2 Sam.i2.14; Ps.74.io,i8; Is.52.5 ; cf. Ro.2. 24 ; Kev.13.6). [Crimes.] In view of this it is instructive to note the application of the idea to the name of Christ by one so imbued with Jewish thought as St. James (2.7). In classi- cal Gk. the primary meaning of this word was an utterance of ill-omen, opposed to tv(pr)nia, as when one unintentionally prays for evil instead of good (Eur. Ion, 1189). It then came to have a general sense of slanderous, contumelious speech against either (iod or man. And while in N.T. this wider use is found (Mt.i5.19 ; Ko.14.i6 ; 1Cor.lO.30 ; Tit. 3. 2, etc.), the word also has a special sense of arrogating to oneself what belongs to God alone. On this charge both our Lord and St. Stci^hcn were condemned to death by the Jews (Mt.28.65 ; Ac.6.13). The Jewish punish- ment for this was death by stoning ( Lev. 24. 11- 16). According to the teaching of Christ, blas- phemy was of various degrees of sinfulness, that against the Holy Spirit being of so serious a nature as to deprive one guilty of it of all hope of pardon in this world and the next (Mt.l2. 32 ; Mk.3.29 ; see also ijn.5.i6). What blas- phemy against the Holy Ghost really implies has been a fruitful source of controversy. Those Jews were apparently in danger of committing this sin who attributed to the power of Satan those unquestionable miracles which Jesus performed by the linger of God, and the power of the Holy Spirit. But blasphemy, like lying, may be acted as well as uttered, and implies the deliberate preference of evil to good. Then, habitual and determined opposition to the in- fluence of the Holy Spirit renders repentance, and therefore forgiveness, morally impossible. Grace, like bodily nourishment, may be re- jected till the power to receive it vanishes. There is no question of the efficacy of divine grace. The obstacle lies in the wrong-doer alone, who, by persistent sin, brings upon himself, as was the case with Pharaoh, a judicial harden- ing of heart, which of itself excludes the possi- bility of jiardon. [r.s.m.] Blas'tus, the chamberlain of Herod Agrip- pa I., (.Ac. 12. 20), who was persuaded by the people of Tyre and Sidon to gain them a hear- ing from the king. [e.r.b.J Blessing-. In early times the blessing was regarded as being a real, material power, capable of influencing the future of those upon whom it was pronounced. Thus the future of the sons of Noah was decided by his blessing or curse (Gen. 9.26). So potent was it that when once spoken it was no longer under the control of the one who pronounced it, and could not be recalled (27.37). The blessing, even when obtained by guile, had the power to transfer birthright precedence fioin the elder BLINDNESS to the younger son, and was irrevocable (ft'. 29,33,41). [Laying ON OF Hands; Birth- right ; Family ; Oath.] [h.h] Blindness is extremely common in the East, purulent ophthalmia frequently occurring in Egypt and the Holy Land, especially amongst children, but also amongst adults. From what- ever cause it originated, blindness was regarded in O.T. not indeed necessarily as a direct punishment of sin (c/. Jn.9.2), but as a disqualification for the perfect service of God. Blind beasts must not be offered in sacrifice (Lev. 22.22 ; Deut. 15.21 ; Mal.1.8), nor were blind priests permitted to officiate (Lev.21.i8). Several cases of blindness as the direct result of divine interposition are recorded in Holy Scripture. Deut. 28 is specially interesting as suggesting to any one with medical knowledge the direct and natural results of moral trans- gression, esp. in vv. 22, 27, 2S, and 35. 2K.6. 18 and possibly Gen. 19. 11 may be explained as referring not to loss of physical eyesight, but to dense fog or mist in which those " smit- ten " lost their way ; but the case of Elymas the Sorcerer (Ac. 13. 11) is capable of no such interpretation. His seizure was prob- ably either glaucoma or embolus. Either of these would produce a sudden blindness, especialh' under the stress of great e.xcitement. If we accept the "fog" theory for 2K.6.18, there is no specific case of the healing of blind- ness recorded before N.T., except that of Tobit in the Apoc. Such healing, however, is con- stantly mentioned as a special prerogative of the Almightv and of the coming Messiah (see, inter alia, Ps.146.8 ; Is.35.5,42.7 ; Mt.9.27 ; Lu.4.i8, etc.). Accordingly, there are several cases recorded of our Lord's healing the blind. In some He accomplished this by simple touch (Mt.9.2g) ; in others He used ph^'sical means — clay (Jn.9.6) or saliva (!Mk.8.23). None of these are capable of reasonable explanation except on the basis of pure miracle. There is one other recorded case of blindness which is of special interest, that of St. Paul, the salient facts of which are : Saul (i) is struck blind suddenly by an intense light (Ac. 22. 11, 26. 13) ; (ii) remains blind for three days in a state of great nervous depression (9.9 — " did neither eat nor drink"); (iii) is visited by Ananias, who delivers his message and puts his hands upon him. This results in a scaly substance falling from his eyes and he receives his sight. (N.B.— In 9. 18' the word "forth- with " is omitted by R.V. and by all the best authorities.) Now, there are three diseases which might cause sudden blindness such as is here described, but one of these (retinitis of renal origin) is quite inconsistent with St. Paul's living a life of hardship for thirty years afterwards. This leaves the possibility of thrombosis (the blocking of some blood-vessel of the central nervous system by clot or foreign substance, thereby temporarily disturbing the visual centres), or of trachoma. This last (which coincides best with the story of the healing) is an acute form of purulent ophthal- mia, and would quite possibly (especially if accompanied by pannus) cause a complete breakdown of vision under the influence of the intense and miraculous light. Under these cir- cumstances the patient would remain, probably, BOHAN 113 greatly depressed and afraid of the least ray of light (photophobia), and repulsive purulent secretions would collect around the eyelids. Upon Ananias removing these ("putting his hands upon him") and encouragiiig him to use his eyes, he would find his sight slowly returning, though it would never be very strong. If we compare this theory with Gal. 4. 15, 6. II (R.V.) and 2Cor.lO.10, we get perhaps as near as is possible to a working theory as to the much-discussed " thorn in the flesh " (q.v. for other theories) of 12. 7. [Cf. Paul, I. (5), (i).] [f.j.] Blood. [Sacrifice, 2; 3, iv. «i; Unclean Meats.] Blood, Avenger of. [Goel; Homicide; Crimes.] Blood, Issue of. The phrase is used in two senses : first, of the ordinary periodical menstrual discharge which, according to the Levitical law, involved one week's unclean- ness ; and secondlv, of a permanent disease (see Mt.9.20; Mk.5!25 ; Lu.8.43). This latter meant a permanent uncleanness (Lev.i5.19ff.). It is impossible to identify absolutely the disease spoken of in the gospels, but probably it was either menorrhagia (excessive bleeding at the menstrual period) or some sort of cancer or tumour of the uterus. [f-J.] Blue. [Colours.] Boanerges, a name given by Christ to SS. James and John, Mk.3.i7 ; and there explained to mean " sons of thunder." The spelling of the Heb. name has probably been corrupted in its transliteration into Gk. ; and if so, it may represent two Heb. words : b''ne = sons, and regez, which is used Job 37.2 of the sound of the voice of God, in a passage descriptive of thunder. The name referred to the impetuosity of their character (cf. Lu.9.54). On its aptness, see Westcott's St. John, Introd. p. xxxii., and Trench, Studies in the Gospels, art. " Sons of Thunder." [e.r.b.] Boap, 'Wild. [Swine.] Boaz' {in him is strength). — 1. A wealthy Bethlehemite possibly identical with Ibzan, kinsman to Elimelech the husband of Naomi. Finding that the nearer kinsman of Ruth was unwilling to become her go'el, he had the obligation publicly transferred with the usual ceremonies to himself ; hence it became his duty to marry Ruth, and to redeem the estates of her deceased husband Mahlon (4. iff.). Being himself precluded from marriage with an Israelite, as the child of Salmon and Rahab (Deut. 23. 2 ; Mt.1.5), he gladly undertook these responsibilities ; and his obedience to the two- fold law of niamzer and go'cl was blessed by the birth of Obed, from whom in a direct line our Lord was descended. S. Cox, The Book of Ruth. — 2. The name of one of Solomon's brazen pillars erected in the temple porch. [Jachin.] It stood on the left, and was 18 cubits high (iK.7.15,21 ; 2Chr.3.i5 ; Je.52.2i). [c.r.d.b.] Boc'cas (iEsd.8.2). [Bukki, i.] Bochepu', son of Azel according to the present Heb. text of iChr.8.38 = 9.44. Bochim' (the weepers), a place on the W. of Jordan above Gilgal (Judg.2.1,5). Body. [Man.] Bo'han (Jos. 15. 6, 18. 17), a Reubenite who erected a stone on S. bank of the valley of Achor , 8 114 BOILS and N.W. of Beth-hoglah. The name has not survived in this position, nor elsewhere, [c.r.c] Boils. [Blains ; Medicine.] Bolster. [Pillows.] Bondagre. [Captivities of the Jews; Sla\"e ; Law in O.T.] Bonnet. [Headdress.] Book (Heb. sepher, a writing). Not a book of pages, but a document, whether " roll " or " tablet," or set of tablets. [Writing.] [c.r.c] Booths. [SuccoTH ; Tabernacles, Feast of.] Booty consisted of captives of both se.xes, cattle, and whatever a captured city might contain, especially metallic treasures. Within the limits of Canaan no captives were to be made ; beyond those limits, in case of war, all the women and children were to be made captives and the men put to death (Deut.20. 14.16). The law of booty was an equal division between the army and the people of Israel, but of the former half one head in every 500 was reserved to God, and appro- priated to the priests, and of the latter one in every 50 was similarly reserved and ap- propriated to the Levites (Num. 31. 26-47). David added a regulation that the baggage- guard should share equally with the troops engaged (iSam.30.24,25). Booz' (Mt.1.5 ; Lu.3.32) = BoAZ, I. Bo'pith (2Esd.l.2). [BuKKi, i.] Boscath'. [BozKATH.] Bosor. — 1. A fortified city in Gilead or in S. Bashan (i Mac. 5. 26), noticed with Casphon, Camaim, and Alema. The last may be Kefr el Md, 11 miles W. of Ashteroth Karnaim, and either Bosor or Bosora may be Busr, 5 miles S.E. of Edrei, not far from Casphon or Khisfin (5.36). — 2. Bosor, for Beor, 2 (A.V. 2Pe.2.i5), is more correctly Beor in the Sin. and Vat. MSS. (R.V. Beor). [c.r.c] Bosopa (iMac.5.26,28 ; Vat. ViS. Bosor), reached from Gilead " by the way of the wilderness," may be the later Bostra {Busrah), which is not otherwise noticed in the Bible. [Bosor ; Bozrah.] [c.r.c] Boss. [Arms.] Botany. [Palestine.] Botch. [Blains.] Bottle, (i) The skin bottle: (2) the bottle of earthen or glass ware, both of them capable of being closed from the air. (i) The Arabs and all nomads often keep water, milk, and other liquors in goatskins. When the animal is killed, they cut off its feet and its head, and draw it out of the skin, without opening its belly. In Arabia the skins are SKIN noni.i:s. (From Ihc Miisco Borbonico.) tanned with acacia-bark and the hairy part left outside. They afterwards sew up the places where the legs and the tail were cut off, and when it is filled they tic it about the neck. The effect of external heat upon a skin bottle BOZEZ is indicated in Ps.li9.83, " a bottle in the smoke" (or "vapour"), and of expansion produced by fermentation in Mt.9.i7, " new wine in old bottles." (2) Vessels of metal, pottery, or glass for liquids were in use among the Greeks, Egyptians, Etruscans, and As- syrians, and also among the Hebrews, especially in later times. In Je.19.1 " a potter's earthen bottle " is noticed. The Hebrews probably borrowed their manufacture of Glass from Egypt, which was celebrated for glass work, as remains and illustrations of Egyptian work- manship are extant at least as early as 15th cent. B.C. (Wilkinson, ii. 59, 60). Bowr. [Arms.] Bo\vl. As in the case of the Bason, the precise form and material of the bowl is un- certain. Bowls would probably be used at meals for liquids, or broth, or pottage (2K.4'. 40). Modern Arabs are content with a few INSCRIBED HITllTE liOWL. wooden bowls. In the Brit. Mus. are several terra-cotta bowls with superstitious .Aramaic inscriptions, expressing charms against sickness and evil spirits, which may possibly explain the "divining cup" of Joseph (Gen. 44. 5). The bowl was filled with some liquid which was drunk as a charm against evil. Box-tree. The Heb. f'ashshur occurs in Is. 41.19,60.13 ; Ezk.27.6. The Talmudical and Jewish writers generally consider that the box- tree is intended. The Syr. and the Arab, ver- sion of Saadias understand a species of cedar called sherbin, distinguished by the small size of its cones and the upright growth of its branches. But the evidence for the box-tree is on a better foundation than that for the sherbin. In Ezk. 27.6, a passage of great difficulty, t'^'ashshtir is rendered " the Ashurites " in A.V. R.V. reads " they have made thy benches of ivory inlaid in box-wood." The box is a native of cold cli- mates, and hardlv to be expected in the Bible ; and although it occurs in sub-.-\lpine situations in the Lebanon chalk, its mention amongst forest-trees is incongruous. However, it has always been a favourite when luxuriantly grown, and its excellent wood for engraving and carving was in use amongst tiie ancients. In 2li;sd. 14.24 "box tables" (tablets) are men- tioned; see A.V. marg., R.V. omits "box." Pliny commends it for arbours, and says the best wood for ornamental car\ing is foiuid in the root. He distinguishes three sorts, [n.c.ii.] Bozez' {shinini;), noticed with Seneh {tluini ; iSam.14.4.5) as two "teeth of the cliff," near Miciimasm and Gibeaii. Josephus (3 Wars ii. i) mentions the " valley of thorns" at Gibeah, now Wddy es .^uweinU (valley of BOZKATH small thorn-trees), and here, just E. oi J eb'a and S. of Miikhmds, are two remarkable crags, N. and S. of the gorge. The northern (called el QuVah, " the castle") shines in the midday sun, and is no doubt Bozez, on the top of which the Philistine " post " was established. The ascent on the S.W., though very steep and some 500 ft. high, is still climbable. [c.r.c] Bozkath', a city of Judah in the lowlands (Jos.15.39). It is mentioned once again (2 K. 22.1 ; A.V. Boscath) as the native place of the mother of king Josiah. Bozpah' (fortress). — 1. A town in Edom (Gen.36.33 ; Is.34.6,63.i ; Je.49.13,22 ; Am.l. 12). In Mi. 2. 12 there is a play on the name bo(rd and hacrd (sheep-fold). The site is now Buseireh, N. of Tophel, in Edom. — 2. A town of Moab [Bezer], the site of which is doubtful (Je.48.24), unless (i) is intended. This town appears in the 9th cent. b.c. as Bosor, in the list of Moabite cities rebuilt by king Mesha, as noticed on the Moabite Stone. BREAD 115 Venetian gold are still common in Egypt. In Gen. 38. 18, 25 the word rendered " bracelet " means probably " a string by which a seal-ring was suspended." Men as well as women wore bracelets. Layard says of the Ass>Tian kings, " The arms were encircled by armlets, and the wrists by bracelets." [Armlet.] Bpamble. [Thorns ; Bush.] Brass. The Heb. whosheth is improperly translated " brass," since the Hebrews were not acquainted with that compound of copper and zinc. In most places of O.T. copper would be correct, although, when a hard material is obviously intended, it must mean bronze, a compound of copper and tin which was known around the E. Mediterranean long before the Exodus. But sometimes a simple metal is obviously intended, as in Deut. 8.9, 33.25 and Job 28.2. Copper was known very early, and the invention of working it is attributed to Tubal-cain (Gen. 4.22). The same Eng. word is used for money in N.T. —3. The city called Bostra in Roman times is unnoticed in the Bible, unless it be the BosoRA or Bosor (Vat. MS.) conquered by Judas Maccabaeus, in the '"wilderness" (iMac.5.26,28). This place became important after 105 a.d., when it was made the capital of the Roman province of Arabia Prima. The ruins of Busrah, S.E. of Bashan on the desert trade route from Arabia to Damascus, are those of the Roman city, including a theatre, baths, a triumphal arch, colonnades, a cathedral built in 513 a.d., and a Moslem castle on the S. dating from the 13th cent. The extant inscriptions, in Gk. and Lat. (Waddington, Nos. 1906-1958), begin in 2nd cent. A.D., and go down to 539 a.d. or later. Some are Christian. They show a mixed population, partly of Arab pagans adoring Dhu-Sher'a (the lord of gleaming) down to 6th cent, a.d., and the Gk. Zeus Epikar- pios, or god of produce. A Nabathean text of king Malchus and Nabathean coins have also been found here. Christians paid honour to the martyrs Sergius and Bacchus in *he cathedral, and to the Virgin Mary, [c.r.c] Bracelet. Bracelets of fine twisted (Mt.10.9, etc.). [Money ; Weights, coins.] It often occurs in metaphors, e.g. Lev. 26. 19 ; Deut. 28.23 ; Job 6.12 ; Je.6.28 ; often as an emblem of strength (Zech.6.i ; Je.l.iS). The word x°'^'<^°^l^l^°-^°'' ^^ Rev.l.15,2.18 (A.V. fine brass), has excited much differ- ence of opinion. Some suppose it to have been orichalcum, which was so rare as to be more valuable than gold. It may perhaps be deep-coloured frankincense. Bpazen Sea. [Sea, Molten.] Brazen Serpent. [Serpent, Brazen Nehushtan.] Bread (lehem, a word often used also for food in general). The preparation of bread as an article of food dates from a very early period. The corn or grain employed was of various sorts ; the best bread was made of wheat, which being ground produced the "flour" or "meal" (iK.17.i2, etc.), and when sifted the "fine flour" (Gen.18.6 ; Ex. 29.2) usually employed in the sacred offerings (Ex. 29. 40; Lev. 2. 1 ; iSam.l.24; Ezk.46.i4) and in the meals of the wealthy (iK.4.22, etc.). " Bcurley " was used only by the very poor (Jn.8.9,13), or in times of scarcity lie BREAD (Ru.3.15. cf. l.i; 2K.4.38,42; Rev.6.6). "Spelt" (R.V. ; rye, fitches, A.V.) was also used both in Egypt (Ex.9.32) and Palestine (iK.19.6; Is. 28. 25 ; Ezk.4.9). Occasionally the grains above mentioned were mixed, and other ingredients, such as beans, lentiles, and millet, were added (Ezk.4.9; c/. 2Sam.i7.28) ; the bread so produced is called " barley cakes " (Ezk.4.i2, "as barley cakes," A.V.), barley being the main ingredient. The baking was done in primitive times by the mistress of the house (Gen. 18. 6) or one of the daughters (2Sam.l3.8) : female servants were, however, employed in large households (iSam.8.13). Baking as a profession was carried on by men (Ho.7.4,6). In Jerusalem the bakers congre- gated in one quarter of the town, as we may infer from the names " bakers' street " (Je.37.21), and "tower of the ovens " (Ne.3.11,12.38; furnaces, A.V.). The bread taken by persons on a journey (Gen. 45. 23 ; Jos. 9. 12) was usually unleavened bread. In the process of making bread the flour was first mixed with water, then kneaded with the hands (in Egypt with the feet also) in a small wooden i:(;yptians knkauing ihk dough with thiuk i-i:Kr. bowl or " kneading-trough " until it became dough (Ex. 12. 34, 39; 2Sam.l3.8; Je.7.i8; Ho. 7.4). When the kneading was completed, leaven was generally added [Leaven] ; but when the time for preparation was short, it was omitted, and unleavened cakes, hastily baked, were eaten, as is still the custom among the Bedouin (Gen. 18. 6, 19-3 ; Ex.i2.39 ; Judg.6. 19 ; iSam.28.24). The leavened mass was allowed to stand for some time (Mt.i3.33 J Lu.l3.2i). The dough was then divided into round cakes (Judg.7.13), not unlike flat stones in appearance (Mt.7.9; cf. 4.3), about a span in diameter and a finger's breadth in thickness. The cakes were sometimes punctured, and hence called halld (Ex. 29. 2, 23 ; Lev. 2. 4,8. 26,24.5; Num. 15. 20 ; 2Sam.6.i9), and dipped in oil. Sometimes they were rolled out into wafers (Ex. 29. 2, 23 ; Lev. 2.4 ; Nuin.6.15-19), and merely coated with oil. The cakes were now taken to the oven, having been first, according to the practice in Egypt, gathered into baskets (Gen. 40. 16, cf. R.V.) which were placed f)n a tray and carried on the baker's head. In the towns, where professional bakers resided, there were no doubt fixed ovens ; but more usually each household possessed a portable oven (tanniir), consisting of a stone BREAD or metal jar about 3 ft. high, which was heated inwardly with wood (iK.17.i2 ; Is. 44.15 ; Je.7.18) or dried grass and flower- stalks (Mt.6.30). Other modes of baking were AN EGVPTIAN CARRYING CAKUS TO THE OVEN. (Wilkinson.) specially adapted to the migratory habits of the pastoral Hebrews, as of the modern Bedouin Arabs ; the cakes were either spread upon heated stones, or they were thrown into the heated embers of the fire itself, or they were roasted on a fire of cakes of dried dung, which is specially suitable as it burns slowly (Ezk.4.12,15). The cakes required to be carefully turned during the process (Ho. 7. 8). Other methods were used for other kinds of bread : some were baked on a pan and AN hAbll.KN u\ l.N (Ml.S.jO). appear to have been chiefly used as sacred offerings (Lev. 2. 5. 8. 15.7.9 ; iChr.23.29)- A similar cooking utensil was used by Tamar (2Sam.l3.9). A different kind of bread, probably resembling the fa(ireli of the Bedouin .Arabs, a pasty substance, was prepared in a saucepan (frying-pan, .\.V.) ; this was also reserved for sacred offerings (Lev. 2.7,7. 9). PLATE VI I' EGYPTIAN BRICKS. (JJrit. .Mu;. '-.P». m--"^' p. ii6] ,^' '^:-ir'. BABYLONIAN BRICK, Inscribed with titles of Nebuchadnezzar II. (604-561 b.c. BREAST-PLATE Bpeast-plate. [Arms ; Ephod.] Breeches (Ex.28.42, etc.). The descrip- tion of Josephus (3 Ant. vii. i) doubtless ap- plies to the garment mentioned in the Bible : " He [the priest] puts on that which is called Machanase [Heb. mikhn''se], which means somewhat that ties fast, it is a girdle com- posed of fine twined linen, and is put about the privy parts, the feet being to be inserted i.ito them in the nature of breeches, but above half of it is cut off, and it ends at the thighs, and is there tied fast." [vv.o.e.o.] Bpethren of Jesus. [James.] Brick. The earliest mention of brick in O.T. is in Gen. 11. 3, where it is stated that at the building of the tower of Babel they had brick for stone and bitumen for morter. Herodotus (i. 179), describing the mode of building the walls of Babylon, says that the clay dug out of the ditch was made into bricks as soon as it was carried up, and burnt in kilns. The bricks were cemented with hot bitumen, and at every thirtieth row layers of reeds were inserted. This account agrees with the de- scriptions of what was actually found by the BROTHER 117 intervals to act as binders. A brick pyramid is mentioned by Herodotus (ii. 136) as the work of king Asychis. The Hebrews practised brick- making in Egypt, and the brick-kiln was com- mon in David's time (2Sam.i2.31). A com- plaint is made by Isaiah that the people built altars of brick instead of unhewn stone as the law directed (Is.65. 3 ; Ex.2O.25'. Bpide, BpidegTPOom. [Marriage; Family, D, II.] Bpidge. This word occurs only in a late work (2Mac.i2.13), and even in this case either refers to a bridge from a siege tower or to a bridge of boats used against the city Caspis. The oldest known bridge in Palestine was the arched causeway from the upper city to the temple, destroyed by Pompey in 65 b.c, and rebuilt by Herod the Great. The arch stones of the latter lie on a pavement, underneath which one voussoir of the older bridge was discovered by Sir C. Warren. [c.r.c] Bpiep. [Thorns.] Bpig'andine. [Arms, Defensive, (2).] Bpimstone, formerly the common name for sulphur. The Heb. word {gophrith) is con- FOREIGN CAPTIVES EMPLOYED IN MAKING BRICKS AT THEBES. (Wilkinson explorers. Babylonian bricks were either kiln -burnt or sun-dried like the Egyptian. They are usually from 12 to 13 in. square, and 35 in. thick, and most of them bear the name, in- scribed in cuneiform character, of the king who caused the structure to be erected. They thus resemble excessively thick tiles (Ezk.4.i). They were sometimes glazed and enamelled on one side with patterns of various colours, which, when built into a wall, produced those mural decorations for which the Babylonians and also the Persians were noted. As brick-stamps of the time of Sargon of Agade exist, it is certain that brick-making is an exceedingly ancient art, going back perhaps to 4,000 b.c or even earlier. The Israelites, in common with other captives, were employed by the Eg\'ptian monarchs in making bricks and in building (Ex. 1.14, 5. 7). Egyptian bricks were not generally dried in kilns, but in the sun, and even without straw are as firm as when first put up in the reigns of the Pharaohs whose names they bear. When made of the Nile mud, they required straw to prevent cracking ; and crude brick walls had frequently the additional security of a layer of reeds and sticks, placed at nected with gopher, "gopher-wood," A.V., Gen. 6.14, and probably signified first the gum or resin that exuded from that tree, and was hence transferred to all inflammable substances, espe- cially to sulphur, which is found impregnating springs on the shores of the Dead Sea (Gen. 19.24). [Gopher-wood. ] Bpook (Heb. y'or and 'dphtq). [River.] Bpothep. The Heb. and E.V. use this term also of any kinsmen or member of the same clan [Family (a)], or tribe, or people ; or of kindred peoples, e.g. Num. 20. 14 ; of cove- nant brothers or allies f2Sam.l.26 ; Ara.l.9), or royal brother (1K.9.13, etc.) ; as salutation of strangers (Gen. 29.4). [h.m.w.] In N.T., besides the literal sense, one of the same nation (Mt.5.47 ; Ac. 2.29,3. 17,22, 7.2, 23, etc.). A kinsman — e.g., according to some, the brethren of Jesus (Mt.i2.46ff., 13. 55 ; Jn.7.3 ; .\c.l.i4). One of the same order, an equal (Mt.23.8 ; Rev.6.11, 19.10,22.9). A disciple, follower, beloved as a brother (Mt. 12.50,25. 40; Heb.2.ii,i2). One of the same faith (Ac.9.30,10.23,11.29 ; Ro.8.29 ; iCor.5.11 ; Eph.6.23 ; Ph.1.14 ; iTim.6.2 ; Rev.l.9). A colleague (iCor.l.i ; zCor.l. 1,2.13, etc.). In 118 BTTBASTIS direct address, one beluved as a brother (Ac.6. 3 ; iTh.5.1 ; C.al.4.12,28 ; etc.). [h.h.] Bubastis. [Pibeseth.] Buckler. [Arms.] Building-. [Handicrafts, (3).] Bukki . — 1. Son of Abishua and father of Uzzi, fifth from Aaron in the line of the high- priests (iChr.6.5,51). In iEsd.8.2, Boccas, corrupted to Borith in aEsd.t.a. Whether Bukki ever filled the office of high-priest we are not informed in Scripture. Josephus (8 Ant. i. 3) mentions him as the first of those who lived a private life, while the sacerdotal dignity was in the house of Ithamar. — 2. Son of Jogli, prince of the tribe of Dan, one of the ten men cht)sen to apportion the land of Canaan be- tween the tribes (Num. 34.22). Bukkiah', a Levite-musician in the temple, one of the sons of Heman (iChr.25.4,13). Bui. [Months.] Bull, Bullock. [Cattle.] Bull, Wild (Heb. to or Z-'o). In Deut.14.5 the Heb. is rendered " wild ox," while in Is. 51. 20 we read, " They lie at the head of all the streets, as a wild bull [to] in a net." Were it not the opinion that the wild ox, or aurochs, is indicated by the word r^'em [Unicorn], that animal might stand for to. As it is, there is no possibility of any satis- factory identification. Tristram was, indeed, of opinion that the white or sabre-horned oryx [Oryx leucoryx, or O. algazal) is the animal denoted by to ; but, in spite of his statement that he had seen it in the desert and noted its horns in the bazaar at Damascus, the species apparently does not occur anywhere out of N. Africa. The horns seen by him doubtless belonged to the rather smaller Beatrix oryx (Oryx beatrix) of Arabia and the deserts near Baghdad. It is a white animal with brown patches on the face, brown legs, and long, cylindrical, slightly curved black horns. There is no evidence that bison or buffalo ever oc- curred wild in Syria. [r.l.] Bulrush. [Reed.] Bunah', son of Jerahineel of the family of Judah (iChr.2.25). Bunnl'. — 1. A Levite in the time of Nehemiah (Ne.9.4) ; possibly the same as the Bunni in 10. 15. — 2. Another Levite of earlier date than i (Ne.ll.15). Bupial. Customs. The first act in refer- ence to the departed was the closing of the eyes (Gen. 46. 4). It is probable that the dead were, in early times, buried in the clothes they wore when living (cf. 1Sam.28.14; I'>.14.i9 ; Ezk. 32.27) ; recent Palestinian research con- firms this. " Grave cloths " belong to a later time (Jn. 11. 44, 20. 5,7). Objects of various description were placed in tombs ; sucli were, vessels with food which was believed to be required after death ; objects which the de- parted had been accustomed to use when living, e.g. swords for warriors, trinkets for women, etc., the idea being that these would comfort their possessors ; amulets, designed as safeguards against evil spirits, who were believed to be specially active near dead bodies. In each of these cases corroboration is afforded by reient excavations in Palestine. The underlying idea regarding the above was that no separation between soul and body BURIAL took place until long after death. In the case of kings, and possibly also those in high estate generally, incense was burned in the presence of the body (2Chr.l6. 14,21. 19 ; Je.34.5); this was perhaps a remnant of ancestor-worship. In early Israel embalming was not practised (it is an Egyptian custom that is referred to in Gen. 50. 2, 26) ; in later times it was in vogue among those who could afford it (cf. Jn.i9.39, 40). The burning of dead bodies was reserved for especially wicked criminals (Lev. 20. 14; Jos.7.25), it being regarded as a terrible aggra- vation of the death-sentence already inflicted. Very awful, too, was the thought of being buried outside one's native country, i.e. in an "unclean" land (Am. 7. 17) ; scarcely less ab- horrent was the idea of non-burial (iK.14.ii, 16.4,21.24; 2K.9.10; Je. 7.33,8. 2, etc.), this was on account of the belief that the spirit of an unburied body wandered about, a theory which entailed a twofold evil, for not only was it a cruel hardship to the departed, since he could not rest, but also it constituted a grave danger to the living, because of the harm to be apprehended from a wandering spirit who would resent such neglect. The corpse was generally buried on the day of death, or not later than the day after ; the hot climate demanded this {cf. Deut.2i.23 ; J n. 11. 39), as it still does in the East. The use of any form of coffin was unknown in early Israel (cf. 2K.I3. 21 ; see supra as regards that in Gen. 50. 26) ; the body was carried to burial on a bier (tnittd, 2Sam.3.3i, cf. Lu.7.14), as at the present day in the East. — The Place of Burial. In pre-Exilic as well as in later times it was a matter of su- preme importance that the departed should rest in the family tomb ; hence the oft-recurring expressions, "going to his fathers," "gathered to his fathers, or people," " sleeping with his fathers" (Gen. 15. 15, 47, 30 ; 2Sam.l7.23,21.i4 ; iK. 14.31,15.8, etc.); the belief was that the spirits of the fathers were present in or about the tomb, and that the dead man joined their company if buried in the same tomb. The tomb was usually constructed in the plot of land belonging to the family (cf. Gen.23.4ff. ; iSam.28.3), most likely in close proximity to the house — at all events in early times ; Naboth's refusal to part with his land (iK.21. 3) was mainly due to the belief just mentioned. Recent excavations on the site of ancient Gezer have shown that in some cases people were buried in their houses ; thus iSam.25.i is evidently to be taken in a literal sense. This is further borne out by the fact that the kings of Judah, uji to the time of .-Miaz, were buried in the city of David ; from the death of Manas* sell onwards they were buried in the garden of Uzza, which was close to the king's palace (2 K. 21. 18). — Structure of Tombs. Natural caves, which exist in great quantities in Pales- tine, were utilized for the purposes of burial ; tombs hewn out of the rock were, however, also abundantly constructed. Examples of both have been discovered within quite recent years ; these have proved that, besides the tombs which were cut out of the face of the rock, it was also the custom to make caves for burial purposes under the surface of the ground ; the still \isil)le marks of the tools used iu chiselling out the rock, or in digging BURNT-OFFERINa out such caves, prove that these were curtifici- ally constructed in some cases, even in the very earliest times. These tombs were closed with large stones — in one case the stone was found in situ over a burial cave constructed underground — with the object, primarily, of keeping out the wild animals with which Palestine abounded in days gone by. The O.T. gives us few, if any, details as to the construction of tombs, but the Gospels, and more especially archaeological research, enable us to form accurate ideas on this subject. As far as the Hebrews were concerned, they were entirely lacking in originality in this respect ; the term architecture cannot be ap- plied to their sepulchres any more than to their buildings generally ; wherever signs of architecture, in the real sense of the word, appear, it is always due to foreign influence. [Temple.] Thus in every casein which tombs in Palestine partake of an ornate character, it is owing to external, mostly Greek, in- fluence ; the very conception of a tomb hewn out of the face of the rock (as distinct from subterranean tombs) is Phoenician, while the highly ornamental facades of these — such as those of the so-called tombs of the judges and tombs of the kings, as well as the built tombs in the Kidron Valley — all show the marks of Greek influence ; even the really ancient " monolith of Siloa " shows distinct Egyptian design. Generally speaking, tombs were con- structed in the following ways : (i)They were dug or hewn out of the ground (c/. Jn.ll.38). In these large numbers of bodies were some- times deposited ; indeed, one of the burial caves of this kind excavated on the site of Gezer would seem to have been a public place of burial. (2) They were cut into the face of the rock (cf. Lu.23.53). These usually con- tained 8 bodies placed in loculi, 3 on either side and 2 opposite the entrance ; sometimes, however, a considerably larger number of loculi are found. (3) They were built above the ground. These are practically all of, compara- tively speaking, late date, and they were of an exceptional character, as they belonged only to the rich. Cemeteries, in the more modern sense of the term, belong to later times ; they were always, unlike older tombs, outside the city. [Tomb.] [w.o.e.o.] Bupnt-ofTeping-. [Sacrifice, esp. 3, ii. b, V. b ; Crimes.] Bush. The Heb. word s''nS occurs only in passages which refer to Jehovah's appearance to Moses " in the flame of fire in the bush " (Ex. 3.2,3,4 ; Deut.33.i6). The Gk. word is pdros both in the LXX. and in N.T. (Lu.2O.37 ; Ac. 7.35 ; see also Lu.6.44, where A.V. correctly renders it " bramble bush "). Celsius (Hierob. ii. 58) a.xg\ied.mi3iV0\\T oithe Ruhus vulgaris, i.fi. R. fruticosus, the bramble or blackberry bush, representing the s'7ie, and traces, but without justification, the etymology of Mt. " Sinai " to this name. Sprengel identified the s'ne with what he terms the Rubus sanctus, and says it grows abundantly near Sinai. It is quite impossible to say what kind of thorn bush is intended by s''ne ; but Sinai is almost beyond the range of the genus Rubus. [Thorns.] Bushel. [Weights and Measures.] Butchep, As among the Bedawin Arabs BUZ 119 and Fellah in of the present time, the slaughter- ing of animals for food was usually (for an exception, see iSain.28.24) done by a male member of the household, and for sacrifices by the offerer (Lev.l. 5, 1 1,3.2,4.29, etc.). That all slaughtering was not connected, as has been alleged, with sacrifice is clear from Joseph's employing " the steward of the house " in Egypt (presumably a non-Israehte) to " slay " in preparation for his feast to his brethren (Gen. 43. 16), and from the fact that Gideon first slew a kid and afterwards, at the command of the angel, offered the same kid as a sacrifice (Judg.B.igff.), thus involving, as Wiener points out [Btbliotheca Sacra, Jan. 1908, p. 115), the offering of the same sacrifice twice to God if the slaying had been in itself a sacrificial act. For other evidences of non-sacrificial slaughter see Ex.22. 1 (a stolen ox), iSam.25.ii (Nabal's refusal of hospitahty), 28.24 (witch of Endor). Later Jewish custom has made all slaughtering a sacred act, though not necessarily " a sacri- fice," and therefore only to be undertaken by a specially selected " Slaughtering Board " (the Shehitd), a practice which may have arisen soon after the destruction of the temple. To fulfil what are supposed to be the legal require- ments, the practice of Jewish butchers in the present day is to exercise great care that the throat of every animal killed for food is cut ; the pharynx, oesophagus, and main blood- vessels (carotids and jugulars) must be at least partially severed, and minute ritual directions are laid down — e.g. the knife must be drawn across the throat without any pause, without any pressure save its own weight, etc., etc. In the case of birds it is sufficient that either wind- pipe or gullet is severed. The animal being killed and allowed to bleed thoroughly, it is then, provided all the ritual directions alluded to above have been complied with, fit for sale. But it is not yet " kosher" — i.e. "right" for food. The housewife or cook must further prepare it by soaking it for a considerable time in water, allowing it to drain, plentifully sprink- ling it with salt and then washing the salt off in more water. It is then considered to be thoroughly cleansed from blood, and may be cooked and eaten. See also Thigh. Butlep. More correctly " cup-bearer," i.e. one who gives drink, as the Heb. root implies (Gen. 40. i ; see Ne.l.ii). [w.o.e.o.] Buttep (Heb. hem'd, " curdled " milk ; Geu.18.8 ; Deut.32.i4 ; Judg.5.25 ; Job 20.i7). In one instance a curd cheese seems to be intended (Pr.3O.33). It is twice noticed with honey (2Sam.i7.29 ; Is.7.15,22). The drink offered by Jael (Judg.5.25) was no doubt, as Josephus supposes (5 Ant. v. 4), the sour clotted milk, now called leben, which is offered to guests by nomad Arabs. It has a remarkably soporific effect, especially upon a tired man. It was presented in a " bowl of princes," or perhaps more probably, a " shepherd's bowl." Butter (zibdeh) of a very soft kind is made in springtime by the Arabs : the women churn it in goatskin bags swung from poles ; but this is not very generally used. [c.r.c.] Buz. — 1. The second son of Nahor and Milcah, and nephew of Abraham (Gen.22.2i). — 2. A name occurring in the genealogies of the tribe of Gad (iChr. 5. 14). 120 BTJZI Buzi', father of Ezekiel (Ezk.l.3). Buzite. Barachel, the father of Elihu, is called the Buzite of the kindred of Ram — i.e. Aram (Job 32. 2, 6) — and was therefore probably a descendant of Buz, whose family seems to have settled in Arabia Petraea (Je.25.23). An alternative suggestion, rejecting the emen- dation of Aram for Ram, is that Barachel was a descendant of Ram (Ru.4.19) and only a dweller with the Buzite. Byssus. [Linen.] Cab. [Weights and Measures.] Cabbon', a town in the low country of Judah (Jos. 15. 40). Cabul', a place named as one of the land- marks on the boundary of Asher (Jos. 19. 27, where we should read " goeth out N. of Cabul," which lay in Zebulun). It was included among 23 cities of Galilee (1K.9.11-14) given by Solomon to Hiram of Tyre. Now Kabul, a village 9 miles E. of Accho, which latter was a Phoenician city. [c.r.c] Caddis'. [Joannan.] Cades (iMac.ll.63,73). [Kedesh.] Ca'des-bap'ne (Jth.5.14). [Kadesh- BARNEA.] Cad'miel (iEsd.5. 26,58) = Kadmiel. Cae'sap, always in N.T. the Roman em- peror reigning at the time. It was the family name of C. J ulius Caesar, and when his dynasty became extinct, was assumed by successive emperors as a title for themselves, and after- wards for their heirs. Caesar in Mk.i2.14 and Jn.l9.i2 is Tiberius; in Ac. 25. 11, 21 and Ph. 4. 22 Nero. [.\UGUSTUS.] [e.r.b.] Caesape'a, the seaport city (now Qaisd- rieh) built by Herod the Great (19 b.c.) on the site of the old " Strato's Tower " ; where Philip the deacon settled and made converts (Ac. 8. 40, 21. 8, 16). Hence St. Paul embarked for Tarsus (9.30), and hence Cornelius the cen- turion sent for St. Peter at Joppa (10. 1,24, II. 11). It was the seat of government under Herodians and procurators (12.19,25.1,4,6,13), and the centre of an early church (18. 22). It was more than a day's journey from Jerusalem (23.23,33). Herod named it after Augustus Caesar, to whom he erected a temple with statues of Rome and of Caesar. He made an artificial harbour, with a mole, a theatre, and on the S. an amphitheatre ; these works occupied 10 or 12 years till 9 b.c (15 Ant. ix. 6; 16 Ant. V. 1). The chief tower on the walls was called after Drusus, Caesar's son-in-law (I Wars xxi. 5-8). This city, which remained CAESAR'S HOUSEHOLD a fortress till Bibars destroyed it (in 1265 a.d.), is now a ruin, with a few cottages of Bosnian exiles. The walls of the Roman town included a space 1,600 yds. N. and S. by 900 E. and W. (300 acres). The harbour is much smaller than Josephus supposed, measuring 180 yds. N. and S. across the entrance, the S. reef and mole being 160 yds. long. The remains include a theatre (covered with earth and sand) on the S. ; foundations of a temple, over which a 12th cent, cathedral was built, the walls of which remain ; a hippodrome onE. (1,056 by 264 ft.), with remains of a large granite goal-post ; and 2 aqueducts, the low level from the Croco- dile River 3 miles N., and the high level from springs 6 miles N. The mediaeval walls were built in 1218, and restored by St. Louis in 1251 A.D. They enclose an area 600 yds. N. and S. by 250 yds. E. and W. (30 acres) close to the port. Caesarea lay within Samaria, and was reckoned as outside the Holy Land. It had a Samaritan population until 12th cent. A.D., mingled with Jewish traders. It was the see of a bishop, and afterwards of a patriarch (Snrv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 13-29). [c.r.c] Caesape'a Philip'pi, the city whence our Lord ascended a " high mountain " (Mt.l6. 13,17.1 ; Mk.8.27,9.2), which was no doubt Hermon. This city, originally Paneas, and called Caesarea by Herod Philip (Josephus, i?> Ant. ii. i), was at the " fountains of Jordan." Herod the Great had already built a temple of white stone, called Panion, near the cave whence the river springs (15 Ant. x. 3) ; the name Paneas applied to the district also (2 Wars ix. i). The city lay on the E. border of the Holy Land (Tal. Jer. Shebiith vi. i). The cave has now partly fallen in, and the great stream, swelled by the Hermon snows, rushes out from under a cliff, and dashes be- tween poplars and bushes to the village of Bdnids hard by — a place with mediaeval walls, but now only holding 350 Moslem inhabitants. The great fortress on the hill to E. was built about 1130 A.D. At the source of the Jordan the cliff is carved with three niches for small statues, one inscribed to " Pan and the nymphs," in Gk. : another to " the goddess " ; a third Gk. text in honour of the emperors was carved by Valerius Titiaiuis. " priest of the god Pan " ; and a fourth by Agrippa, son of Marcus, " archon " in the year 222 a.d. (Waddington, Nos. 1891-1894). [c.r.c] Caesap's household (Ph. 4.22, oi e'/c t^j Katcrapos oiKiai, qui df Cacsaris domo sunt). Members of Caesar's household send saluta- tions to the church at Philippi. It has been supposed that these must have been persons of high importance, or even members of the royal family. .At the end of the ist cent. Flavins Clemens and his wife Pomitilla, cousin of the emperor Domitian, were charged with " athe- ism," by which was meant Christianity. But the members of Caesar's household referred to in Philippians were probably slaves or freed- men. The domus or faniilia Cacsaris included a very large number of people. Lightfoot gives a list of thevaritnis offices in the imperial househ-!<. "west"), (b) More commonly restricted ^to the lands W. of Jordan (Num.13. 2, 17,33.40,51 ; Jos.21.2 : Judg.21. 12). (c) Limited to the sea-coast and the Jordan Valley, the Canaanites being distin- guished from the Amorite inhabitants of the mountains (Num. 13. 29). (d) Applied to the inhabitants of Phoenicia proper. As the Phoenicians were, above all, traders, and the great trade routes were in the plains, " Canaan - ite " came naturally to mean a " merchant," and is so translated in Job 41. 6; Pr.3i.24; Is.23.8,ii ; Ho.12.7 (cf. R.V. marg.); and probably should be in Zech.l4.2i (see R.V. marg.). In N.T. the word is used for Phoenician, so ywr) Xavavaia (Mt.15.22) is the equivalent of yvvrj 'E\\r]vis, "ZvpofpOLVLKiffsa toj yevei (Mk.7.26). For "language of Canaan" (Is. 19. 18), see Semitic Languages, [f.j.f.-j.] Canaanite, properly Cananaean (R.V.), the name of a turbulent Jewish sect (cf. Jo- sephus, 18 Ant. i. i : 4 de Bell. Jud. iii. 9, etc.) headed or revived by Judas of Gamala in pro- test against the Quirinian census [Taxing ; Cyrenius], and conspicuous for its excesses CANDLESTICK 1S5 during the final siege of Jerusalem. The T.R. had Kai'oj'trTjs, which A.V. wrongly renders " Canaanite," i.e. descendant of Canaan ; nor does it mean an inhabitant of Cana, which would be " Canite." Kafavalos, as used in Mt.10.4 = Mk.3.i8, is the additional name of the apostle Simon, to distinguish him from St. Peter, and represents qan'dnayyd, signify- ing " jealous " (cf. Ex.20.5 ; Deut.4.24, where 'el qannd, " jealous God," is rendered in LXX. 9e6? ^riXojTTjs). In a general sense it would signify zeal for the Law and for the king- ship of Jehovah ; in a particular sense it was applied to the sect which so violently re- sented the Roman rule as derogatory to that kingship. St. Luke gives Zelotes (the Zealot) as its equivalent (Lu.6.15 ; Ac.l.13). This need not necessarily imply Simon's actual membership of the sect. Possibly the name merely suited his character. [e.h.p.] Canda'ce (Ac. 8. 27), a queen of Ethiopia (now the Egyptian Soudan). The name was not that of an individual, but of a dynasty of Ethiopian queens. Their capital was Napata, in the district now known as Bakariwya (Murray's Guide to Egypt). [e.r.b.] Candlestick (Heb. n^nord, lampstand), always referring to the " holy candlestick " (Ecclus.26.17), except in 2K.4.10. (i) In the tabernacle. Made by Bezaleel (Ex. 31. 2, 37.17), after the pattern shown Moses in the mount (25.40). Directions for making (25.30-40, cf. 37.17-24) : of pure gold, hence called the " pure candlestick " (31.8,39.37 ; Lev.24.4) ; not cast by fusion but wrought by hammer (Ex. 25.31) ; a talent of gold was used for the candle- stick and its utensils (25.39). It consisted of a pedestal ; a shaft, from which sprung three branches on each side ; and seven lamps, one on each of the branches and one on the shaft. [Lamp.] The branches probably curved up- wards to the height of the shaft, so that the lamps were on a level. Three kinds of orna- ment are mentioned, cup, knop, and flower (Ex. 25. 31), but their form is uncertain. If the candlestick was intended to represent an almond-tree (for symbolism, see Je. 1.11,12), the ornaments may respectively have re- sembled bulb, opening bud, and blossom. There were four cups on the shaft and three on each of the branches, with their knobs and flowers. The candlestick was 6 ft. high (Men. 28b) ; the spread of the branches and of the base was 3 ft. (Shilte ha-Gibborim xxxi.). It stood in the holy place, on the S. side, opposite the table of shewbread (Ex. 26.35). When the tabernacle was moved, the candlestick with its lamps, tongs, snuff-dishes [Censer], and oil vessels was covered with a blue cloth, and over this a covering of sealskin, and then slung on a pole for carrying (Num. 4.9, 10). (2) In Solo- mon's temple there were ten golden candle- sticks, five on the N. and five on the S. of the holy place (iK.7.49). These are not described, but were probably of the same design (iK.7. 49, "flowers"; 2Chr.4.7). They were carried to Babylon (Je.52.19). (3) Zerubbabel's tem- ple had only one candlestick (iMac. 1.21,4.49, 50 ; Josephus, 14 Ant. iv. 4). This was in the Herodian temple (Josephus, 5 Wars v. 5 ; 7 v. 5), and was taken to Rome after the fall of Jerusalem. The representation on the arch of 126 CANi! Titus can scarcely be correct in all details ; i.g. the figures on the base are improbable (cf. Josephus, 7 Wars v. 5). Reland, De Spoliis Templi Hierosolymitani. [h.h.] Cane. [Reed.] Canker, probably any sort of spreading tumour or growth is referred to in 2Tim.2.i7, not necessarily that particular form which we call cancer. R.V. gives " gangrene." [f.j.] Cankepw/'opm. [Locust; Palmer- worm.] Canneh' (Ezk.27.23), a contraction of Cal- NEH (Calno), which is the reading of one MS., or else the Kannu' of certain Assyrian contract- tablets, in which case it was probably in N. Syria. [t.g.p.] Canon of O.T. \. Definition. By "canon" we understand the collection of the holy writings recognized by the Christian Church, writings given by God, and therefore the Church's rule of faith and life. The word, which is bor- rowed from the Semitic language (Heb. qdni, "a reed"), signifies anything straight {e.g. an horizontal beam, a rule, a measuring rod), in which inflexibility is the pervading idea. From this original meaning is easily derived the metaphor of a standard, measure, hence a re- gulative precept or directive principle in the philosophic, grammatical, ethical, or ecclesias- tical senses, e.g. as applied to the baptismal creed, or to the decisions of synods. Hence, likewise, our idea of a canon of Scripture must be in accord with the foregoing significations, despite the fact that Zahn, an acknowledged authority on the canon, has revived the old opinion of Semler, viz. that it meant merely a " list " or " catalogue," an opinion which had long become obsolete, though a tendency to put it forward in the interests of Rationalism had at times existed. The use of the word " canon " and its derivatives in this connexion dates back to c. 350 A.D. We find it (367 a.d.) in the preamble to the festal epistle of Athanasius (lix.), in a canon of Laodicea, and in Amphilo- chius. The Latins adopted the word, but call the Bible itself canonical, in the sense which we have assigned to it. — II. The Formation of the O.T. Canon. The treatment of this subject is much more difficult and much more important than it was formerly, when more certainty and more agreement prevailed as to the composi- tion of the several books. Our estimate of the beginning and close of the canon unquestion- ably depends largely on our attitude towards each separate problem of scientific introduc- tion ; as is shown by, e.g., the hypothesis of Wellhausen, the critical handling of the Psalms, or the late dating of parts of the prophets. But assuredly scientific introduc- tion is not the only factor in our decision as to the canon. If it is possible by other argu- ments to show its close at a time before that at which criticism postulates the origin of many parts of it, it will become necessary to revise and modify the supposed results of scientific introduction, the methods of which are often in a high degree arbitrary and des- potic. Hence it is necessary to note the limits within which scientific introduction rightly has free play, but which it must not over-pass. We will begin from the conclusion of the canon and trace it back. A. The Close of the Canon. Joseph us (Con/ra Apian, i. 7, 8) gives us a clear CANON OF O.T. account of the credibility of the Heb. his- torical writing in contrast with the Gk. Its composition was not due to the personal pre- dilections of any individual writer, but to the instrumentality of inspired prophets. " We have not," he continues, " an innumerable multitude of books among us, disagreeing from and contradicting one another, but only 22 books which contain the records of all the past times, which are justly believed to be divine " (whether or no " divine " is a possible addition of Eusebius is immaterial). He further specifies that the historic records which were valued as having prophetic authority ended with the reign of Artaxerxes, and con- tinues, " How firmly we have given credit to those books of our own nation is evident from what we do ; for during so many ages as have already passed, no one has been so bold as either to add anything to them, to take any- thing from them, or to make any change in them ; but it becomes natural to all Jews, im- mediately, and from their very birth, to esteem those books to contain divine doctrines, and to persist in them, and, if occasion be, willingly to die for them." Although this account dates from c. 100 A.D., and although we may be un- able to accept every detail of his account in- discriminately, yet this testimony of Josephus has undoubted importance, since he gives no mere private opinion, but expresses the general judgment of his times — that since the time of Artaxerxes nothing had been added to the canon, because the prophetic succession was wanting, without which no one would have ventured to admit new books to the canon. Passing over Philo, whose only relevant writ- ing (De Vita Contemplativa, § 3) is held to be spurious, and the N.T., where in Lu. 24.44 we find the well-known threefold di\^ision, and where in Mt.23.35 (Abel to Zacharias — i.e. from the first murder to the last in the last book of the Heb. canon; see 2Chr..24.2off. and Zechariah, i) the present order (Genesis at the beginning and Chronicles at the end) of the Heb. canon is implied, we come to the prologue of J esus the grandson of Sirach, which was com- posed 132 B.C., where the threefold division and the close of the canon as early as the time of Sirach himself is implied (Prol. to Ecclus. ; three times). This witness carries us back at least to 180 B.C., if the author of the book was the grandfather of the writer of the prologue. But if it were Simon I., " the Righteous," and not Simon II., who was contemporary with Sirach, then we must not translate TrAiriro^ " grandfather," but " ancestor," and the date of the composition of the book would be c. 290 B.C. (sec Halevy, and possibly Baudissin). As in Ecclus. 48. 20-25, 49.6,8, 10 there is a distinct testimony to three major and twelve minor pro- phets, it is superfluous to discuss Marti's dating of Zech.9-14in 160 b.c. It does not follow from the varying and indefinite designations of the third group that this was only just begun, for a better explanation is found in tiie heterogene- ous contents of the collection {cf. " Psalms " in Lu. 24.44) : and the definite article, which oc- curs in all tliree sentences, requires that we should recognize that the Hagiographa was closed, just as much as was the second group, the name of which also varies (" the prophets ' ' eAi;fON OF o.f . ot " the prophecies "). It follows that whatever date we assign to the composition of the book of Daniel, it did not first see the light as late as 164 B.C., a conclusion founded merely upon the assumption that so accurate a prediction is impossible, and which has against it the fact that Daniel's prediction of the future extends far beyond the times of Antiochus Epiphanes (see, e.g., all that is prophesied concerning the fourth kingdom). All other conclusions of criticism, which date any canonical book later than 290 B.C., or at latest 180 e.g., are pmrely arbitrary, and in contradiction to the evidence already set forth. In earlier times no analo- gous literature is extant. It is possible, how- ever, to adduce very important indirect testi- mony to support the afiirmations of Josephus. That " no man has ever yet hated his own flesh " (Eph.5.29) is as true of nations as of individuals. Now, it is a fact that none of the literary fragments, which are stated to be so late, ever date themselves, or are dated by tradition, beyond the period which Josephus assigns as the latest period of canonical authorship ; and it is also a fact that the general feeling regards the time after Nehe- miah as a period of spiritual destitution in comparison with the older history (see iMac. 14.41,9.27,4.46). These facts are an insoluble puzzle, if the time after Nehemiah was fruitful in striking and valuable literary productions, as modern critical science takes it to be. Further, it is surely inconceivable that a generation which preserved the stones of a desecrated altar for burnt-sacrifice till a prophet should arise (iMac. 4.44-46), and thus showed that in the very smallest particulars it felt itself without any power of initiation, should have ventured to settle the canon. It is also unnecessary to put Nehemiah and the Chronicles later than the period assigned by Josephus ; for iChr.S.igf. carries us down no farther than to Zerubbabel's grandson, since the posterity of Rephaiah, who seem to be later, stand without any congruity with what goes before. In Ne. 12.22, 23, we may have to do with supplementary information made at dif- ferent times {cf. the statement in Baba Bathra about Ezra, that he wrote the genealogies of Chr. up to his own time, as below), or it may be a contemporary notice that four generations of high-priestly descent were then alive — as we Germans used to speak of a famous picture as representing "Four Kaisers " ! It is pos- sible that Nehemiah himself, who in 430 B.C. was acquainted with a married grandson of Eliashib (13.28), may have lived to see his great- grandchildren. We cannot here treat in detail the notorious mistakes of Josephus with regard to this period. It is clear, however, that in Ne. 12.22, Darius III. (Codomannus) is not meant (336-331 B.C.), but Darius II. (Nothiis; 423-404 B.C.). It is, moreover, a fact not without import- ance that not one of the many genealogies is continued beyond the time given by Josephus. It is further to be remarked that this date is from all points of view intelligible in itself. The exiled people had learned to value their ancient religious documents ; they felt that inspiration was on the point of passing away, just as was the use of the old Hebrew language. On the other hand, the close and selection of the CANON OF 0.1?, 127 canonical writings was a need of the times, es- pecially if they were to be put into the temple for safe keeping (Josephus, Arch. v. and De Bella Jud. vii.) ; they possessed in Ezra (" the scribe," Ezr.7.6) and in Nehemiah command- ing personalities ; and the much more limited range of interests which presented themselves to the little colony of Jews after their Return left them leisure to collect all that they now treasured, and sufficiently explains the general acceptance of the canon which we meet with in later times. These conclusions enable us to extract what there is of truth from the medley of confused notices of the canon which have come down to us, and at the same time to find support in them for results which have al- ready been assured by other modes of reason- ing, (i) To such notices belongs 2Mac.2.i3. This passage is generally held to be spurious, and it stands in an apocryphal context, and also on the face of it only speaks of the collec- tion of books into a library. Yet, neverthe- less, Strack (e.g.) has a high opinion of its value, and it is, in any case, worthy of atten- tion, because the singular nature of its affirma- tions is quite inexplicable, unless a true re- miniscence, afterwards lost in obscurity, of the twofold division of the first two main parts of the canon is here reflected. The notice also follows the distinctive features of the third part — viz. the Psalms and (which had special weight as regards Nehemiah) the Ezra docu- ment, (ii) A similar account maybe given of 2Esd.i4.44f. God says to him with regard to the 94 books (according to the right reading) imparted to him by inspiration, " The former things that thou hast written appoint for pub- lic reading both for the worthy and the un- worthy, but the last 70 books preserve that thou mayest hand them on to the wise amongst the people." From this passage in itself no- thing can be argued, because of its mechanical idea of inspiration and because it puts a higher value upon the 70 apocryphal books than upon the 24 canonical ; yet, when it is taken with what has already been proved, there is light thrown on its possible origin. Most passages in the Fathers which present us with similar notices either refer directly to 2Esd. or arise probably from the same source. Only Irenaeus {Adv. Haer. iii. 21), where the state- ment has a simpler form, has the appearance of being independent, (iii) The tractate Baba Bathra (xiv. 2 ; xv. i) states that " Moses wrote [kdthabh] his book, the section about Balaam and Job. Joshua wrote his book and eight verses in the law. Samuel wrote his book, the book of Judges and of Ruth. . . . Jeremiah wrote his book, the books of the Kings, and Lamentations. Hezekiah and his colleagues wrote JMSK. [i.e. Is., Pr., Can., and Ec.]. The men of the great synagogue wTote KNDG. [i.e. Ezk., 12 prophets, Dan., and Esther]. Ezra wrote his book and brought down the gene- alogies of the Chronicles to his own times." Since the time of Kuenen the men of the Great Synagogue have been definitely held to have been banished to the kingdom of legend, though doubts as to their existence were ex- pressed much earlier. But we may use this passage as a witness to the genuineness of the underlying fact of the close of the canon 128 CANON OF 6.T. from the times of Ezra and Nehemiah which is reflected in it. (iv) Is not the threefold division itself yet another reason for the view that the canon was closed in the days of Nehemiah ? It is true that this division has often been represented as haphazard, but the older positive investigators maintained that in it is discovered a principle, which postulates the closing of the canon at a definite date. This brings us, however, to our next section. B. The Beginning of the Canon. We believe that it is true that there is an underlying prin- ciple, but one that has been in part historically evolved, (i) The work of Moses forms the foundation. We must quite certainly set his in- spiration yet higher than that of the prophets (see Ex. 33. II ; Num.l2.6f. ; Deut.5.5,34.io). See the present writer's Are the Critics right ? and the articles in this volume on the Pentateuch and on the several books for evidence that views which do not refer Deut., the priestly Codex, and the book of the Cove- nant in their main fundamental elements to Moses, must lead to inextricable contradic- tions and enigmas. We must therefore re- cognize in Deut. 31. 9, 26,17.18 the beginnings of the formation of the canon (cf., further, Ex.17. 14,24.4,34.27 ; Num.33. 2). Jos.24.23f. is an analogous instance ; for the early exist- ence of written laws (Toroth), see Ho. 8. 12 (Heb.) which mentions "innumerable" pre- cepts of the Law as "written" (cf. R.V. marg. ; the "though" in R.V. text is not in the Heb., and destroys the vivid balance of the sentence). How much of the Law, and what also in its historical parts was canonical, is, as to details, the problem of the science of introduction, and different answers to it are given. 2K.22.8f. is concerned with canoniza- tion, or rather recanonization, and is generally referred to Deut. In Ne.8-10 the Pentateuch is, according to Wellhausen, given canonical status ; according to his school, who con- tradict the statements of the text, only the priejtly Codex. The conclusion of the Torah (Law) is then assigned arbitrarily to c. 400 b.c. How, in this case, would the adoption of the Pentateuch by the Samaritans be conceiv- able ? What it is that is referred to in Is.34. 16 and Ps.40.7,8 is not certain, (ii) An early collection of the prophetical books must also have existed ; otherwise the cross-references to one another, which are everywhere numer- ous, and which reach tlieir climax in Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and Zechariah, remain unintelli- gible. Je.36 throws interesting light upon the way in which the several parts of the canon originated. Cf. further, Dan. 9. 2, and tiie ex- pression " the earlier jirophets " in Zech.l.4, 7.7,12. We must therefore conclude, from the authoritative official position of the pro- phets, that as a rule their writings received canonical recognition as soon as they ap- peared, so that the proplietical collections were continually growing. Whether these were in earlier times complete, or how far complete, we are no longer in a position to say. But may we not have, in the way in which the waio consecu- tive stands at the beginning of Jonah and Ezekiel, a clear indication that they were con- sciously connecting themselves with the pro- phecies of their immediate predecessors (in CANON OF O.T. the order of Heb. Bible) Obadiah and Jeremiah respectively ? That this " accurate succes- sion " (Josephus) ceased with Malachi follows at once from the facts. Moreover, Zech.7. 12 seems to know of an incorporation of the law with the prophets as already in existence. Rightly, in any case, does the canonical collection of the historical books (Joshua-Kings) as " former prophets " connect itself with the identical designation " latter prophets," not because prophetic passages occur in them, or because their authorship was ascribed to individual prophets (as in later times Joshua was ascribed to Joshua, Samuel to Samuel, Kings to Jeremiah), but because it belonged to the prophetic office to set forth the revelation of God as fulfilling it- self in history. Even profane historians have thus been called " prophets who face back- wards." Whether the canon of the " former " prophets arose successively one by one, like that of the " latter " (see, for a special instance, iSam. 10.25), or at some time in the Exile, we have at present no means of deciding. The joining with the " latter " prophets may well have taken place at the time of the closing of the canon, (iii) Since parts of the Hagiogra- pha also were certainly collected at an early period (see Pr.25.i), it follows that the three- fold division of the canon does not correspond simply to the historical succession in time, but that here a definite principle of division has been in reality the ruling factor. This alone explains why the order of the individual books in the Heb. Bible varies, while yet each book is always placed in the same section. This principle arises objectively from the different status of the writers in the theocracy, sub- jectively from their differing degrees of inspira- tion. Often both these reasons are taken into account, but at other times one or other is pre- dominant. Abarbanel and Maimonides push the matter further into what are often very subtle distinctions, with which we may com- pare the right distinction of Witsius between the prophetic donum and the prophetic munus by which Daniel's place in the Hagiographa beconaes intelligible. In any case, however, a principle implies the (onclusit)n of the canon at some definite time. The later Jewish discus- sions, which concern Pr., Ec, Esther, Ezk., Can., have nothing to do with their reception into the canon, whicli, indeed, those discussions assume ; still less witli any later exclusion from it, whicli ct)uld not be reconciled with the de- monstrably high estimation in which listher was held ; but are concerned with tiieir exclu- sion from public reading in divine service, which, liowexer, was not carried out. The reason for them was not critical impeachment of their genuineness, but arose from their con- tents, e.g. Ezekiel was supposed to be inconsis- tent with the law. Critics in earlier times cited the .Alexandrian canon against the Hebrew, but this is not justified. For as re\'elation in the Alexandrian view had a wider scope, they allowed themselves additions (cf. the many ajiocryphal additions ami see under III.) and alterations, i )cspite thi s;', the L.\ X. canon is in the main the same as the Hebrew. Vet Philo, according to Strack, ()Uotes from all the Biblical writings with the exception of Ezekiel, CAN6N OP O.*. Daniel, and the five Megilloth, and gives only one citation from the Apocrypha. What J ose- phus thought, though he makes frequent use of the LXX., and favours Alexandrian views, we have already seen. The computation of 24 books, which is the total of the Jewish tradi- tion (2Esd.l4'. 44-48, see supra, and Talmud) as far as it is uninfluenced by the LXX., is to be held, with Strack against Zahn, to be original, i.e. 5 books of the law, 4 + 4 {i.e. Jos., Judg., Kings, Sam. ; -fis., Je., Ezk., and the book of the 12 minor prophets) of the prophets, and 11 of the Hagiographa; that of Josephus, the Hel- lenists, and the Christian writers, which makes them 22, is conformed to the alphabet, and is only obtainable by uniting Ruth with Judges and Lamentations with Jeremiah ; yet if this were originally so, their present position in the Hagiographa would be hard to explain. Equally artificial is the number 27, favoured by Epiphanius and Jerome, which arises from the final letters of the alphabet being added. With regard to the varying order, which we find in the LXX., in the Fathers, in the Vulg., Talmud, Rabbis, and German and Spanish MSS., see Strack, Introduction, or Hertzog, Real-encyc. edd. 2 and 3. The LXX., e.g., gives us a division into historical, poetic, and pro- phetical writings, and gives the five first lesser prophets in the order of their size. Because Baba Batlira and the larger number of German and French MSS. make Isaiah follow Jeremiah and Ezekiel, it does not follow that we are to see in this a remmiscence of the origination of Is.40tf. in the Exile. Jewish antiquity did not trouble itself with such criticism, and, long before, Jesus Sirach (Ecclus.4!8.22ff., esp. 24) had held these chapters to be genuine. The Jews themselves give a different explanation of this order — viz. that threatening should follow threatening, and comfort, comfort. It is often difficult to discover a principle in the varying order of the Hagiographa ; though that the five Megilloth follow the order of the feasts, at which they were read, is intelligible enough. Even in the names a constant tradi- tion is wanting. The abbreviations ~\l {i.e. Torah, Nebiim, Ketubim), JIDN {i.e. books with special accents; Job, Proverbs, and Psalms), and the denomination of the books of the law by the first word or one of the first words in them, are weU known. — III. Histoyy of O.T. Canon in the Christian Church, {a) The Early and Middle Ages. The most important point for us is that Christ and the apostles recognized our O.T. as canonical, for only passages from it are quoted as Holy Scripture, and only very occasional reminiscences of the Apocrypha are to be found {e.g. Heb.ll.35ff. refers to 2Mac.6f.). Of the canonical writings, references are wanting only to Ezra, Ne- hemiah, apparently to Esther, and probably to Ecclesiastes. For the attitude of Christ and His apostles towards the O.T. or to its several parts, the following passages may be especially noted: Mt.5.i7,15.3ff. ; Lu.24.25,44ff. ; Jn.5. 39,10.34 ff.; Ro.3.2 ; 2Tim.3.i5,i6 ; Heb. l.i ; iPe.l.ioff. ; 2Pe.l.i9ff. Even the apos- tolic Fathers are still far from quoting the Apocryphal writings as Holy Scripture, though they use them and have clear allusions to them. Clem. Rom. refers to Wisdom, Ecclus., CANON OF O.T. l2§ Tobit, and Judith ; Justin Mart. {Ap. i. 46) to the additions to Daniel, and in the Dia. with Trypho {c. 120 a.d.) even to the Ascensio Isaiae. As Christian converts from paganism were often unable to read the O.T. in the original, and could only use the Gk. transla- tion, the distinction between canonical and apocryphal writings was soon obliterated, since in the LXX. the two were blended, and it was an accepted opinion that, by the instru- mentality of the Logos, inspiration had a wider scope. In this way the Apocrypha succeeded in obtaining a transient recognition in the Greek Church, and a lasting recognition in the Latin. We give in the table on the next page a synopsis, which, though it makes no pretension to completeness, may serve to give at a glance the general position taken on this question by the Church of the Early and Middle Ages. It is desirable to add that as soon as the Fathers observed the difference of their Bible from the Hebrew, Melito and Origen set about inquiries into the limits of the Jewish canon. Notwithstanding the opinion of Origen that canonicity was to be defined as the Church had received it and that so the Apocrypha was to continue to be used as Holy Scripture, from the times of the Laodicean Council, which (Canon lix.) forbade the public reading of books "not received into the canon," and of Athanasius, who distinguished between " what was canoni- cal, what was read, and what was apocryphal," the Hebrew canon came into currency in the Greek Church ; but the writings incorporated with Jeremiah in the LXX. (Baruch and a letter) were still regarded as canonical. (For the change in the meaning of the word " apoc- ryphal," see art. Apocrypha.) The Apost. Can. (Ixxxv. ), dating from the 5th cent., introduced a position which was at that time abnormal in the East, and for this reason Canon Ixxxv. is put in brackets. The attitude taken up in the Latin Church from the end of the 4th cent, onwards is different. The Councils of Hippo (393 a.d.) and of Carthage (397 a.d.), in the name of Augustine, pronounce ecclesiastical tradition to be authoritative, in default of fixed criteria by which to judge canonicity. Here and there, indeed, we find isolated learned ecclesiastical writers who, following Jerome, recognize the Hebraica Veritas, but they are the exceptions, and are consequently bracketed in the table. The last column refers to the book of Esther, the only canonical writing which (certainly on account of its contents) was generally misliked or of which the canonical authority was ques- tioned, and that almost without exception by the Greeks. It is only necessary, further, to mention the critical position of Theodore of Mopsuestia, who recognized Baruch and Ec- clus., but, on the contrary, did not regard Job, Can., Chron., Esther, Ezra (Nehemiah), or the superscriptions of the Psalms as canonical ; upon him Julius Africanus is certainly depend- ent (see Strack). The oldest Syrian Church did not recognize the Apocrypha. On the con- trary, the conception of what was canonical in the Ethiopic Church seems to have been even more comprehensive than that of the LXX. itself, {b) The course of opinion since the Reformation. The Reformed Churches mainly agree with the judgment of Luther, who intro- 9 130 CANON OF O.T. CANON OF N.f . Greek Fallieis, including Tertullian and Cyprian. Irenaeus {Adv. Haer.) Clemens Alex. Tertullian Cyprian {De Oral. Dotii.) . . Melito Origan The Council of Laodicea (Canon 59)' Athanasius (Ep.Fcst.) Synopsis Script. Sacr. Cyril fluctuates Epiphanius, uncertain and fluctu- ating Gregory Naz Amphilochius (Canons A post. \xxT.\.) Table of I lie 60 Canonical Books. . Nieephorus The Latin Cliitrclt. Can. Mommsen, Council of Hippo, "j 393 A.D., and of Carthage, with \ Augustinian authority . . J Innocent I. (Ail Exsiiperitun) ( lerome) Hilary (Rufinus, ecclesiastical in contrast with canonical) Theodore of Mopsuestia . . Baruch and the letter of Jeremiah. en • B E 0 •0 1 IS in 0 i Esther. + + + + + + + + + + + + + 1 + + + + 1 1 + ■> 1 + + + 1 + + 1 1 ■> + 1 + + + 1 + + + 1 1 +? 1 + + + + ? 1 7 1 +'? 1 + + + + ? 1 + + 1 + (+) + 1 1 + ? 9 r? + signifies canonical acceptance ; — rejection ; | a middle po.sition ; ? uncertain. * Distinguishes " books not canonized" from those "of the new and the old covenant which are canonical." duces the Apocrypha in his first publication of the entire Bible in 1534, with the words, " Apocrypha, that is a collection of books which are not held on an equality with the Holy Scriptures, and yet are useful and good to be read." He did not, however, accept i and aEsdras, and he expressed himself freely about Esther. He followed the order of the Vulg., but placed the Apocrypha at the end. The same valuation of the Apocrypha is shown in the symbols of the reformed Churches : e.g. Conf. Gall. (1559), art. iv. ; Conf. Belg. (1562), art. iv.- vi. ; Conf. Anglic. (1562), art. vi. ; Conf. Helv. (after 1566), ch. i., Declar. Thortin {164^). The table in the book of Common Prayer appoints lessons from the Apocrypha for All Saints' Day and other days. Much more cautious and tentative was the Synod of Dordrecht, 1618, which markedly separated 2F,sdras, Tobit, Judith, and the Story of Bel and the Dragon from the canonical writings. For the Roman Church the Council of Trent (session iv.) pro- nounced all the Apocrypha in veteri vulgata Latina to be canonical, and anathematized every one that should think otherwise. The (ire.ek Church has rejected the confession of Metrophanes Kritopulos (1625) and of Cyrillus I.iikaris (1620), which onlyreceive the Hebrew Canon, and at the Synod of Jerusalem (1672), in the confession of liositheus, designates mt)st of the Apocrypha as " genuine parts of Scrip- ture " ; whereas the catechism of I'hilaret (1850) returns pretty much to tlie opinions of Athanasius. Hcrzog, Real-encyc.\ s.v. (Oehler) ; ib. 2 and 3 (Strack). The Introduc- tions of Keil, Strack, Baudissin, Cornill, Driver, and Konig ; Hengstenbcrg, Beitrdge, i. 23 ff., 237 ff. ; Zahn, Geschichte des N.T. Kanons ; Her- zog, Keal-encyc.'\ art. "Canon des N.T."; Grund- riss der Geschichte des N.T. Kanons. [w.m.] Canon of N.T. [The article by Bp. West- cott in Smith's D.B. (4 vols. Murray, 1893) is still acknowledged by the general consent of scholars to be unaffected by recent controver- sies, and the historical facts are necessarily un- changed ; hence the present article is, in all es- sentials, and with but slight additions, a con- densation of that scholarly production. A final paragraph, referring to the discussions since Bp. Westcott's time, has been added. — Ed.'\ The history of the N.T. Canon may be conveniently divided into three periods. The 1st extends to the time of Hogcsippus (c. 170 A.D.), and includes the era of the separate cir- culation and gradual collection of the apostolic writings. The 2nd is closed by the persecution of Diocletian (303 a.d.), and marks the separa- tion of the sacred writings from other ecclesias- tical literature. The 3rd closes with the 3rd Council of Carthage (397 a.d.), at which a cata- logue of the books of Scripture was formally ratified by conciliar authority, (i) The history to 170 A.D. The writings of N.T. themselves contain little more than faint, perhaps uncon- scious, claims to tlic position which they were destined to occuj^y [but see Simkit, Hoi v, 4]. The mission of the apostles was essentially one of preaching, not of writing : of founding a CANON OF N.T. present Church, not of legislating for a future one. The prevailing method of interpreting O.T., and the peculiar position which the first Christians occupied, as standing upon the verge of " the coming age," seemed to preclude the contemplation of putting forward a " New Testament." Yet a public use (Col.4.i6 ; i Th.5.27 ; Rev.22.i8), and an authoritative power (Lu. 1.1-4 ; Jn.2i.24 ; 2Th.3.6 ; iTim. 4.6; Rev. 22. 19) is claimed for their writings; and, at the time 2 Peter was written, which on any hypothesis is extremely early, the epistles of St. Paul were placed in significant connexion with " the other Scriptures." The transition from the apostolic to the sub- apostolic age is essentially abrupt and striking. An age of conservatism succeeded an age of creation, but in feeling and general character faithfully reflected it. The writings of the Apostolic Fathers (c. 70-120 a.d.) were called forth by exceptional circumstances, and seldom necessitated the quotation of the earlier writings. In apologetic and missionary treat- ises especially the appeal would naturally be rather to O.T. At the same time they show that the canonical books of N.T. supply an adequate explanation of the belief of their age, and must therefore represent completely the earlier teaching on which that was based ; and Clement of Rome {Ep. 47), Ignatius (ad Eph. 12), and PoLYCARP (Ep. 3) — the latter of whom (t 155 A.D.) was a personal disciple of St. John — refer to apostolic epistles written to those whom they were addressing. The casual coincidences of the writings of the Apostolic Fathers with the language of the epistles are much more extensive. With the exception of the epp. of Jude, 2 Peter, and 2,2john, with which no coincidences occur, and i.aThes- salonians, Titus, and Philemon, with which the coincidences are questionable, all the epistles were clearly known, and used by them, though not quoted with the formulas which preface citations from O.T. ; nor is the famous phrase of Ignatius (ad Philad. 5) sufficient to prove the existence of a collection of apostolic records as distinct from the sum of apostolic teaching. The coincidences with the gospels, on the other hand, are numerous and interesting, but not such as can be referred exclusively to our pre- sent gospels. The details of the life of Christ were still matters of general knowledge ; and the sense of the paramount authority of O.T. was too powerful (even among Gentile converts) to require or admit the immediate addition of supplementary books as Scriptures. Neverthe- less, the sense of the unique positionoccupied by the apostles, as the original inspired teachers of the Christian Church, was already felt in the sub-apostolic age. The Teaching of the XII. Apostles clearly assumes a recognized body of evangelic tradition, and its language sug- gests acquaintance with the gospels of SS. Luke and John, i Corinthians, i Peter, Jude, and possibly Ephesians, 2Peter, and the Apocalypse. The next period (120-170 a.d.), which may be fitly termed the age of the Apologists, carries the history of the formation of the Canon further. The facts of the life of Christ acquired a fresh importance in con- troversy with Jew and Gentile. The oral tradition was more distant, and therefore less CANON OF N.T. 131 authoritative, and a variety of written docu- ments claimed to occupy its place. Then it was that the canonical gospels were definitely separated from the mass of similar narratives. Other narratives remained current for some time ; but whenever the question of authority was raised, the four gospels were ratified by universal consent. The testimony of Justin Martyr (f 165 a.d., or earlier) is in this respect most important. An examination of his evan- gelic references shows that they were derived, certainly in the main, from St. Matthew ; but each gospel is distinctly recognized by him, and he frequently quotes the prologue of St. John's gospel. Of other books of N.T. he mentions by name the Apocalypse only, and attributes it to " a certain . . . John " (Dial. c. Tryph. 81), and offers some coincidences of language with the Pauline epistles. The evidence of Papias (c. 140-150 A.D.), who was traditionally connected with St. John, goes back still earlier. It seems clear that he was acquainted with our present gospels of SS. Matthew and Mark, the former of which he connected with an earlier Heb. original ; and probably also with the gospel of St. John, the former epistles of SS. John and Peter, and the Apocalypse. Mean- while various mystical teachers made the apostolic writings the foundation of strange speculations, which are popularly confounded together under the general title of Gnosticism, whether Gentile or Jewish in their origin. The need of an authoritative Canon made itself felt during the Gnostic controversy ; and the wit- ness of Gnostic heretics has its special value in the case of some books — e.g. Basilides and Valentinus base an important part of their teaching on St. John's gospel. The Canon of Marcion (c. 140 A.D.) contained both a gospel ("the gospel of Christ"), which was a mutilated recension of St. Luke, and an " apostle " or apostolicon, which contained ten epistles of St. Paul — the only true apostle in Marcion's judg- ment— excluding the pastoral epistles and that to the Hebrews. The narrow limits of this canon were a necessary consequence of Mar- cion's heretical position, but it offers a clear witness to the fact that apostolic writings were thus early regarded as a complete original rule of doctrine. The Diaiessaron of Tatian (c. 166 A.D.), the pupil of Justin Martyr, proves the early and exclusive acceptance of " a fourfold gospel," as it was undoubtedly a harmony of the four canonical books. The close of this period is marked by two important testimonies to N.T. as a whole. The Muratorian Canon in the W., and the Peshitta in theE., deal with the collection of Christian Scriptures as such. Thus far 2Peter is the only book of N.T. not recognized as an apostolic and authoritative writing ; and in this result the evidence from casual quotations coincides exactly with the lists of the two express catalogues. (2) From 170 A.D. to 303 a.d. From the close of the 2nd cent. Christian writers take a foremost place intellectually as well as morally ; and the powerful influence of the Alexandrine church widened the range of Catholic thought, and checked the spread of speculative heresies. From the first the common elements of the Roman and Syrian Canons form a Canon of acknowledged books, regarded as a whole, 132 CANON OF N.T. authoritative and inspired, and co-ordinate with O.T. ; as is proved by the testimony of contemporary Fathers of the Churches of Asia Minor, Alexandria, and N. Africa. Irenaeus (c. 177 A.D.), disciple of Poly- carp, speaks of the Scriptures as a whole, without distinction of the O. or N. T., as " per- fect, inasmuch as they were uttered by the Word of Ciod and His Spirit." " There could not be," he elsewhere argues, " more than four gospels or fewer." Clement of Alexandria (c. 189 A. D.) regards " the apostle" as a collec- tion definite as " the gospel," and combines them as " scriptures of the Lord " with the law and prophets. Tertullian (c. 202 a.d.) notices particularly the introduction of the word Testament for the earlier word Instrument, as applied to the dispensation and the record, and appeals to the New Testament, as made up of the " gospels " and " apostles " ; and in his Adv. Marc, analyses ten of St. Paul's epistles. This comprehensive testimony ex- tends to the four gospels. Acts, i Peter, ijohn, 13 epistles of St. Paul, and the Apocalypse; and, except the Apocalypse, no one of these books was ever afterwards rejected or, until modern times, even ques- tioned. But this important agreement as to the principal contents of the Canon left several points still undecided. The E. and W., as was seen above, each received some books which were not universally accepted; and in other cases apocryphal or unapostolic books obtained a partial sanction or a popular use before they were finally excluded. Generally it may be said that of the " disputed " books of N.T. the Apocalypse was received by all the writers of theperiod, with the single exception of Dionysius of Alexandria, who questions its authorship rather than its canonicity ; and the Hebrews was accepted by the churches of Alexandria, Asia (?), and Syria, but not by those of Africa and Rome. The epp. of SS. James and J udc, on the other hand, were little used, and 2 Peter was barely known. (3) From 303 A.D. to 397 a.d. The persecu- tion of Diocletian was directed in great measure against the Christian writings, and was partly successful. Some were found who obtained protection by surrendering the sacred books, and, later, the question of the read- mission of these " traitors " (traditores), as they were emphatically called, created a schism in the Church. The Donatists, whose Judgment on their crime was the sterner, maintained in its strictest integrity the po]iular judgment in Africa on the contents of the Canon of Scrip- ture ; and Augustine allows that they held in common with Catholics the same " Canonical Scriptures," and were alike " bound by the authority of both Testaments." The list of the 59th Canon of the Council of Lagdicea (c. 363 a.d.) omits the Apocalypse, but our present Canon of N.T. exactly agrees (//. 0/ Thcol. Studies, i. 558) with that of the Council OF Rome (382 a.d.) and of the 3rd Council OF Carthage (397 a.d.), from which time it was accepted throughout the Latin Church, though occasional doubts as to the Hebrews remained. Meanwhile the Syrian churches, representing the conservative East, retained the Peshitta Canon. Chrysostoh (t 407 CANON OF N.T A.D.), Theodore of Mopsuestia (t429 a.d.). and Theodoret, who represent the church of Antioch, furnish no evidence in support of the epp. of Jude, 2Peter, 2,2john, or the Apocalypse. Junilius, in his account of the public teaching at Nisibis, places the epp. of James, Jude, 2,-iJohn, zPeter in a second class, and mentions doubts in the East as to ihc Apo- calypse ; and though Ephrem Svrus was ac- quainted with ihQ .Apocaly pse, yet his genuine Syrian works exhibit no habitual use of the books not contained '.i the Syrian Canon. The churches of Asia Minor seem to have oc- cupied a mean position as to the Canon between the E. and W. With the exception of the Apocalypse, they received generally all the books of N.T. contained in the African Canon. A festal letter of Athanasius (f 373 a.d.) bears witness to the Alexandrine Canon. This contains a definite list of the books of N.T. as received at present ; and the judgment of Athanasius is confirmed by the practice of his successor Cyril. One important catalogue yet remains. After noticing in separate places the origin and use of the gospels and epistles, EusEBius (c. 315 A.D.) sums up the results of his inquiry into the evidence on the apostolic books furnished by the writings of the first three centuries (H.E. iii. 25). In the class of acknow- ledged books he places the 4 gospels, 14 epp. of St. Paul, I John, i Peter, and, in case its authenticity is admitted (such seems to be his meaning), the Apocalypse. The class of disputed books he subdivides into two parts, the first consisting of such as were generally known and recognized, including the epp. of James, Jude, zPeter, 2,j,John ; and the second of those which he pronounces spurious, i.e. either unauthentic or unapostolic, as the Acts of Paul, the Shep- herd of Hernias, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Apocalypse of John (if not a work of the apos- tle), and, according to some, the gospel accord- ing to the Hebrews. These two classes contain all the books which had recei\'cd ecclesiastical sanction, and were in common distinguished from a tliird class of heretical forgeries {e.g. the gospels of Thomas, Peter, Matthias, etc.). At the era of the Reformation the subject of the N.T. Canon was again freely discussed; but though Erasmus, Calvin, and Luther, the latter from a purely subjective standpoint, expressed their doubts as to certain books, the reopening of the question resulted in the general accept- ance of the old Canon. The language of the Articles of the Church of England with regard to N.T. is, however, remarkable. In the Articles of 1352 no list is given ; but in the Elizabethan Articles {1562, 1571) Holy Scrip- ture is defined as the " canonical Books of the Old and New Testament, of whose authority was never any doubt in the Church" (Art. vi.). This is followed by an enumeration of the books of the O.T. and Apocrypha ; and then it is said sum- marily, without a detailed catalogue, " All the Hooks of the New Testament, as they are com- monly received, we do receive and account them Canonical." 1 1 seems, therefore, possible thatthe framers of the .\rticles intended, as in so many other matters, to leave a freedom of judgment on a point on which opinions were then divided. [Recent N.T. criticism does not call for much remark under this head, and is dealt with in the CANOPY articles on the several books. Harnack has taken the place of Paulus, Strauss, and Baiir as the hero of the moment. His conclusions are different, but his methods are the same. It is true that in his latest work he condemns " the impressionalism that is the ruling fashion of the day." But his own works are conspicuous examples of this " impressionalism." He has been forced, indeed, to admit that, in the matter of dates, at least, criticism is "gradually returning to the traditional standpoints." But he still disputes the authority of the N.T. writers, though on purely subjective grounds. His- torical testimony, among writers of his school, is ignored or evaded. They depend on the in- genious invention of difficulties and contradic- tions in the subject-matter of the writers with whom they deal. Harnack promises us fur- ther " startling discoveries " by methods of this kind. We are confident that they will prove, as previous discoveries of a like kind have proved, but a "nine days' wonder." The principle on which we may dismiss them is, that a societ^^ such as the Christian Church was not likely to be neglectful of its title-deeds. And of the genuineness of those title-deeds we have evidence such as no other records in the world can show. On the traditional side the fullest account of the Canon will be found in West- cott's Canon of N.T. ; Salmon's Introduction to the N.T. ; Scrivener's Introduction to the Crit. of N.T. ; and Lightfoot's Essays on Super- natural Religion. On the side of modern criticism there are a vast number of recent books, bearing more or less on the subject ; but those which have found the widest accept- ance are the works of Harnack. J.J-L-] Canopy {Jth.lO.21. 13. 9,16. ig). The cano- py of Holofernes is the only one mentioned, although, perhaps, the " pillars " of the litter described in Can. 3. 10 may indicate that its equipage included a canopy. It probably re- tained the mosquito nets or curtains which gave it its name (KLOvwTrelov, from KiJjv(j3\p, "gnat"), although its description (Jth.lO.21) betrays luxury and display rather than such simple usefulness. Canticles, or Song of Solomon ; Vulg. Can- ticum Canticorum, from Heb. shir hashshirim, " Song of the Songs," i.e. the best or most beautiful of songs. It was apparently not without some hesitation that the Jews placed this exquisite but obscure poem in the Hagio- grapha. Once admitted to the sacred canon, however, it became invested with peculiar sanctity, for, like the book of Ezekiel, it was not allowed to be read by any before the age of thirty; and it gained the dignity of being included in the five Megilloth (or Rolls) read liturgically on the great Jewish festivals. The Song was read thus on the 8th day of the Passover (c/. the use of 2. 10-17 as the 1st lesson at Evensong on Easter Monday in the Anglican Calendar). Passing with the other books of the Hebrew canon into the service of the Christian Church, the Song became a favourite study of mediaeval devo- tion. St. Bernard of Clairvaux left 86 sermons on Can.l-3.i. St. Thomas Aquinas even on his deathbed was besought by the monks of Fossa Nuova to undertake a commentary on it. — Authorship and Date. The title (l.i) CANTICLES 133 need not of necessity have more authority than the titles of the Psalms. It expresses only an ancient tradition, which perhaps the allusions in the Song to Solomon and the fact of the " one thousand and five " songs attri- buted to Solomon by iK.4.32 maybe sufficient to account for. Modern scholars have as- signed widely different dates. Deane believes it to be the work of some prophet con- temporary with Solomon, and intended for that king's reformation. Driver (so also Stickel and Oettli) considers it to belong to a time not long after the division of the kingdoms. On the other hand, many {e.g. Graetz, Roth- stein, Cheyne) consider it post-Exilic. The scenery is mostly that of the northern kingdom (see frequent allusions to Lebanon in ch. 4,5,7 ; to Tirzah, 6.4 ; to Baal-hamon, 8.11 ; and to vineyards generally). Some of its peculiar words are usually explained as be- longing to the northern dialect. The fresh- ness and vigour of its imagery, the glow of its passion, might naturally suggest an early period of literature, and would fit in well with the age of Solomon ; but whether the king himself could possibly have been its author will depend considerably on the view taken of its literal meaning and purpose. — Scheme. The Song has been regarded by some {e.g. Herder, Budde, Cheyne) as without dramatic unity, being rather a loose collection of love and marriage lyrics. But the prevailing view is that the Song is a dramatic poem, having pure wedded love for its theme. Here again agreement ends, and not unnaturally, for little is known of Hebrew dramatic poetry. There are no external divisions of speeches, nor any names of characters prefixed. There is, how- ever, a distinction in the Heb., which cannot be represented in an Eng. version, between the speeches of the "bride" and "bride- groom," made by the use of the 2nd pers. poss. pronoun masc. and fem., and in some MSS. of the LXX. the dramatis personae are inserted throughout the book. Hence it is possible to divide the Song in various ways, and even to construct entirely different plots. At present there are two main schools of literal interpreta- tion, (i) (Supported by Delitzsch and Orelli.) Two principal characters, Solomon and a country maiden of great beauty and simplicity, called Sulamith or " the Shulammite." [SnuLAMiTE.] The court ladies form a sort of chorus, which comments on the course of events. Solomon is assumed to have discovered the Shulammite and won her love, while dis- guised as a shepherd. The play opens with her introduction to his haritn at Jerusalem ; the dialogue describes the course of their courtship, the purpose being to glorify monogamy, in contrast with the polygamy of Solomon. The speeches of the king are said by some to show a gradual elevation of tone, as he learns more of the maiden's character. The royal wedding takes place between ch. i and 5, and they re- turn together to the old scenes of rural beauty, where among the vineyards and the flocks they had first loved each other. The poem ends with a panegyric upon the pure wedded love of one man for one woman (8.6,7). (2) (Originated by Jacobi in 1771, though partly suggested by Ibn Ezra in i?th cent., and 134 CANTICLES supported by Ewald, Driver, and most modern scholars.) There are three characters in addition to the chorus, Solomon, the Shu- lammite, and an unnamed shepherd-lover, to whom the maiden remains faithful in spite of the entreaties of Solomon, and to whom she is eventually allowed to return. This view has much to recommend it from the dramatic point of view. Instead of a marriage with the king in 4. 1 6-5.1, the drama leads up to a tri- umphant consummation in ch. 8 in the meeting of the separated lovers (ver. 5), the praise of faithful love {vv. 6, 7), and the vindication of the maiden's chastity (vv. 8-12). The ethical value of the drama is much clearer than in (i). True love triumphs over fear and the seduc- tions of the court. A parallel has been pointed out in the Arabic story of the loves of Hamda and Habbas (Wetzstein, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenldndischen Gesellschaft, xxii. [1868], p. 74); the former is on the point of marriage with her cousin All, when the real state of her affections is disclosed, and she returns to her true lover. It has also been sug- gested that the starting-point of the story may be found in that of the fair Shunammite Abishag, who preserved her purity at the court of David and Solomon, and disappears from the history after iK.2.22, presumably re- turning then to her old home. Yet (2) is not without great difficulties. To some its very completeness and its modern flavour will be arguments against a too ready acceptance, and 5.1 is still very obscure. A marriage certainly seems to be assumed here. On the shepherd-lover theory, however, Solomon at this point discovers the truth, and retires from the stage. On the other hand, there is a curious unreality about the whole movement of the drama on theory (i) ; and the supposed conversion of Solomon to a purer love is by no means clear. The literal interpretation of the Song cannot yet be regarded as satisfactorily solved. — Spiritual Interpretation. It was uni- versally believed by the later Jews that the poem was a designed allegory of the love of Jehovah and His people Israel, conceived in the spirit of the prophetical imagery of Is.SO.i ; Je.2.2 ; Ezk.16 ; Ho.2, etc. It was even explained as an allegorical account of the whole history of Israel from the Exodus onwards. Origen introduced this conception into the Christian Church, and it dominated all the primitive and mediaeval Catholic inter- pretations. Theodore of Mopsuestia was even condenmed by the 5th (ieneral Council (353) for denying that the Song had any but a literal meaning. Most modern scholars reject any allegorical purpose in the Song, and assume that its ethical motive is its sufficient justifi- cation. It certainly cannot be pr<)\ed that any allegorical meaning was in the mind of the writer, nor does it seem prima facie at all necessary or even likely. Nevertheless, the practically universal feeling of both the Jewish and Christian Churches ought not to be dis- regarded. .•\nd the controversy between allegorists and literalists does not touch the real question. To the mind of the Church all the O.T. is typical of and i^reparatory to the Incarnation. IJut it is not necessary, in order to justify this, either to allegorize or ignore CAPERNAUM: the plain literal meaning of the text. The original purpose of the Song, the glorification of pure wedded love, in accordance with God's creation, is a sufficient starting-point for a higher and " mystical " interpretation. For marriage is " a great mystery," whose inner meaning, revealed to the Christian conscience, is the union of God and man in the Incarnation. That this meaning may legitimately be read in the Canticles is implied in St. Paul's use of its language in application to the Church (cf. Eph.5.27 with Can. 4. 7). Thus in either Solomon or the shepherd-lover may be seen a type of the Son of God [cf. 2. 8-10) ; and in the Shulammite a type (a) of the Church of God in every age, her desires, her dreams, her struggles, and her triumphs ; [b) of the B.V. Mary, the epitome and flower of the Church ; (c) of the Christian soul, living over in itself the Church's experience. Thus the great poem of love and spring-time not only rightly finds its place in the Canon, which has room for every side of human nature, but is also eloquent of God's great purpose of the restora- tion of human nature and of the second spring of the Resurrection. To deny the possibility of spiritual interpretation would be tantamount to denying the connexion of the O.T. with the Incarnation, or indeed its general inspiration. Ginsburg, Song of Songs (1857); Ewald, Dichter des A.B.'s (1867) ; Renan, Le cant, des cantiqnes (4th ed. 1879) ; R. F. Littledale, Comm. on Song of Songs (1869) ; Graetz, Shir ha-Shirim (1871) ; Delitzsch, Bib. Comm. (1875); Driver, Intro, to Lit. of O.T. (1891); H. Deane, Smith's D.B. (vol. i. new ed. 1893) ; Rothstein, Hastings's D.B. (vol. iv. 1902); Cheyne, Encvcl- Bib. (vol. iv. 1903). [a.r.w.] Canticles of N.T. [Hymns.] Capep(Heb. 'dbhiyyond). This word occurs only in Ec. 12.5, where the A.V. reads " desire shall fail " {concupiscence, Geneva version), but in Wyclif it stands " the crbe capcris shal be scattered," or " and capparis schal be dis- tried." This meaning has been restored by R.V. The caper was regarded as a stimulant to the appetite, which was no longer of service when man was about to die. The word " caper-berry " of R.V. introduces an old blunder, since the part made use of as a condi- ment or pickle is the unopened flower-bud, not the berry. Capparis spinosa is a small, prickly, trailing shrub, usually clinging to walls, ruins, and dry rocky places. It may be seen near Jerusalem and in the Jordan Valley, and often in the Sinaitic peninsula (Wadv el '.\in, etc.). Some writers lia\e eiidea\iiured to prove that hyssop {q.v.) was the caper; chiefly, perhaps, because it grows on a wall. [n.c.ii.| Capernaum (Sinai M.S. Capharnaum), apparenth- " \ illagc rder of Nebuchadnezzar in 582 b.c. (Je.52.30). There is some obscurity in the two accounts of the number of exiles given in 2K. 24. 14, 16 and Je. 52. 28-30. According to the former there were 10,000 in 597 b.c, andaccordingto Je. only 3,023, with 832 in the deportation in 5S6 b.c, and 745 in 582 b.c, making a total of 4,600. The smaller numbers probably count men only, but even then seem far too small to account for the denudation of the land. — III. Duration of the Captivity. The exiles from the northern kingdom never returned as a com- munity. The beginning of the restoration of the Jews was in the year 536, when they re- turned under the leadership of Zerubbabel and Jeshua, in accordance with the permission given by the Edict of C>tus (Ezr.l). The number of those who returned is gi%'en as 42,360 (2.64). If the period of the Exile is reckoned from the deportation in 597 it was 61 years, but if from the destruction of Jerusalem, in 586, then only 50 years. No system of computation gives a complete 70 years (Je.29.io) ; but see CHRONOi.or.v for another view. — IV. Condition of the Exiles. It is not known how the exiles were distri- buted in the province of BaViylon — i.e. whether they were scattered or permitted to live in defined districts or towns icf. Esth.3.8). They were regarded rather as colonists than captive slaves, and were permitted to build their own houses, cultivate their land, and live the family life (Je.29.5-7). They might attain to the highest offices of state (Dan. 2. 48). or discharge functions which brougjit them into close con- tact with the king (Ne.l.u). They observed fast-days (Is. 58. 3), and their religious laws and customs generally (Esth.3.8). [h.ii.1 Caraba'sion, a name to which it is diffi- cult to find anything corresponding in the Hebrew text (iEsd.9.3 0- Carbuncle represents in .\.V. two Heb. words, (i) 'eqddh occurs only in Is,54.i2, ii> CARCAS the description of the beauties of the new Jerusalem. The term may be a general one for any bright sparkling gem, but it is impossible to identify it with certainty from this single occurrence. (2) bareqeth, bdr'^qath, the third stone in the first row of the sacerdotal breast- plate (Ex. 28. 17,39. 10), also one of the mineral treasures of the king of Tyre (Ezk.28.13). Braun supposes that the smaragdus is meant. This name generally, but not invariably, means the Emerald. Pliny states that Nero, who was short-sighted, used an ej'eglass of smarag- dus, from which some have thought the term must include other minerals, such as the rock- crystal. But it seems clear [Nat. Hist, xxxvii. 16) that he means the emerald, so it was probably a pale variety approaching beryl. The carbuncle (Gr. dvdpa^ ; Lat. carbiincnlns) is properly the Ruby, but the name is applied to blood-red varieties of the spinel and garnet. The first named was known to both Theophras- tus and Pliny, but is not likely to have been seen b}' O.T. writers, and its hardness would then have baffled the engraver. [t.g.b.] Capcas', seventh of the seven " chamber- lains " {i.e. eunuchs) of king Ahasuerus (Esth. t.io). Capchamis'. The form in A.V. of lEsd. 1.25 of Carchemish, though some editibns here read Charchamis. Capchemish' (2Chr.35.20, R.V. ; Is.lO.g ; Je.46.2), a Hittite city on the Euphrates, W. of Haran. It is now the ruin Jerdblus (Hiera- polis), where G. Smith found Hittite monu- ments now inthe British Museum. The famous temple of the Dea Syria described by Lucian stood here. It was the scene of the decisive battle (607 B.C.) in which Nebuchadnezzar defeated Pharaoh Necho. The ruins lie W. of the river, and Hittite monuments still lie among them. In the 12th cent. b.c. Tiglath- pileser I. passed Carchemishafter swimming his soldiers over the Euphrates on inflated skins, or small rafts such as are still used. In 870 B.C. Sangara, the Hittite king of Carchemish, submitted to Assur-nazir-pal of Assyria. In 744 B.C. Pisiris of the same city was tributary to Tiglath-pileser III. In 717 b.c. Sargon attacked Pisiris, and took the city, carrying the Hittites away as captives. The fall of the fortress opened the way for Assyria to Pales- tine. Hittite princes in this region are, how- ever, mentioned in a text of Nebuchadnezzar as late as 600 b.c. [c.r.c] Capeah' (2K.25.23), elsewhere Kareah, as R.V. here. Ca'pia, the S. part of the region which in N.T. is called Asia, and the S.W. part of the peninsula of Asia Minor. In the Roman times the name of Caria was probably less used than previously. In 139 b.c it is mentioned as a separate district (1Mac.i5.23) ; it was then en- joying the privilege of freedom, granted by the Romans. A little earlier it had been assigned by them to Rhodes, and a little later was incorporated in the province of Asia. Capmanians (2Esd.i5.30). As referring to conditions about 100 a.d. (see 10. 45), this probably alludes to the Parthians of Kerman or E. Persia, the Germanoi of Herodotus (i. 125). The Parthians opposed Trajan on the Assyrian frontier in 116-117 a.d, [cr.c] CARRIAOE 137 Cap'me (iEsd.5.25) = Harim, 2. Cap'mel (forest or wood). — 1. A city of Judah in the Hebron mountains (Jos.i5.55) near Maon and Ziph. Now the ruin Kurmul, with a conspicuous mediaeval tower, 7 miles S. of Hebron. Saul, on his way from the S. desert to Gilgal, here erected a " hand " or monument (iSam.l5.i2) as a memorial of victory. It was a grazing country (25.2,5,7, 40), as it still is, and had vineyards also (2Chr. 26.10). It is noticed in i6th cent, b.c by Thothmes III. (No. 96), and a century later in one of the Amarna letters (Berlin 199). — 2. Mount Carmel is the ridge running S.E. for 15 miles, from Haifa and the promontory which it forms at S. end of the bay of Accho. It rises from about 400 ft., at this promontory, to 1,800 ft. near its S.E. limit, where the ground falls rapidly to a lower plateau. The spurs on N.E. side are very steep, and the Kishon runs at the foot of the mountain on this side. The S.W. spurs are much longer, stretching to the sea plain. The sea is visible from all parts of the ridge. The mountain is densely clothed with copse of mastic, dwarf oak, hawthorn, and stunted firs {Finns carica). The hair of Solomon's queen was luxuriant as Carmel, and dark as the " purple " fished in its bay (Can. 7.5). The scene of Elijah's sacrifice is sup- posed to be at the Mahraqah {place of burning), a cliff near the S.E. end of the ridge, 1687 ft. above sea level, and about 1500 ft. above the Kishon which flows close below. There is a well just below the clif¥, whence water might have been drawn high up on the mountain ; and the prophet's servant ascending thence to the cliff top saw the sea (iK. 18. 19, 33, 40,42, 43). Carmel was by the sea (Jos.19.26) : the retreat also of Elisha (2K.2.25) ; a mountain (4.25) with a forest (19. 23) or copse. It was celebrated for the luxuriance of its growth (Is. 33. 9, 35. 2, 37. 24 ; Je.46.i8,50.i9 ; Am.l.2,9.3 ; Mi. 7.14 ; Na.l.4), and a natural hiding-place (Am. 9. 3). Jok- NEAM (Jos.12.22) lay near its foot. The "nations of Carmel" are noticed in Jth. 1.8. Tacitus says that a god called Carmel was adored on this mountain, at an altar without a temple {Hist. ii. ). Pliny says it was the name of the god and of the shrine {Hist. Nat. xxxi. 2). [c.R.c] Capmelite, a native of Carmel. Applied to Nabal (iSam.30.5; 2Sam.2.3,3.3) and to Hezrai or Hezro (2Sam. 23.35 ; 1Chr.ll.37). Capinelitess, a woman of Carmel. Applied only to Abigail, wife of David (iSam.27.3 ; iChr.3.i) and formerly wife of Nabal. [Carmelite.] Capmi' — 1. The fourth son of Reuben and progenitor of the family of the Capmites (Gen. 46. 9; Ex.6. 14 ; Num. 26. 6 ; iChr.5.3). — 2 A man of Judah, father of Achan (Jos. 7. 1,18 ; iChr.2.7,4.1), the son of Zabdi, i. Capnaim, Capnion. [Ashteroth Kar- NAIM.] Cappentep. [Handicrafts, (3).] Cap'pus, a Christian at Troas (2Tim.4.i3). Cappiag-e. This word occurs ten times in thetextof A.V. for what we now call "baggage," and represents three Heb. and three Gk. words, (i) kelim {iS2im..\l .22 bis; Is.lO.28), generally translated " stuff " or " vessels" j = Gk. ).orCasphop (5.2f)), one of a grou)) of fortresses in (iilead and S. Bashan (including Carnaim in Bashan) taken by Jud.is Maccabaeus about 164 B.C. The (ik. probably represents a Semitic name Khasfyhon, and the most i)r()bable site is K his/in, a ])lace important in mediaeval Instory, 9 miles 1'^ of the sea of (ialilee and 20 miles VV. of Carnaim (7V// 'Ashtarah). [c.r.c] Caspis {Kacrwiv, 2Mac.i2.13), a city with a lake or marsh (ver. 16), described between Januiia and Ciiaraca, and as being nearly 100 miles from the latter. The passage seems to refer to the war of J udas Maccabaeus in Edom. CASTOR AND POLLUX He made a " bridge " (Schedia, 3 Mac. iv. 11) to attack Caspis. The ruin Kuseifeh, 4 miles S.W. of Arad, is a possible site — if the plain was marshy in spring — and the road thence to Kerak (50 miles in a direct line E.) might be estimated at 100 miles. [c.r.c] Cassia, the representative in A.V. of two Heb. words, (i) qiddd occurs in Ex.3O.24, as an ingredient in the "oil of holy ointment " ; and in Ezk.27.19. The accounts of cassia as given by ancient authors are confused. It is clear that the Lat. writers understood by the term casia both the Oriental product now under consideration, and some low, sweet, herbaceous plant ; but the Gk. word is limited to the East- ern product. Dioscorides mentions several kinds of cassia as produced in Spicy Arabia. One kind is known by the name of mosyletis, or, according to Galen, of mosyllos, from the ancient city and promontory Mosyllon, on the coast of Africa and the sea of Bab el Mandeb. This fact probably suggested the " Meuzal " of A.V. marg., but the names are not equiva- lents. In this wonderful account of the trade of Tyre in Ezk.27.19 there is considerable variety of reading, but perhaps " both Dan and Javan " ( = Ionia) belong to ver. 18, and we should then read " From Uzal [in Sheba ; LXX. f^ 'A(Ti]\; cf. R.V. marg.], they occupied thy fairs," etc. The R.V. (text) " with yarn " is not probable. The cassia would be brought from India to Sheba, and thence exported to Tyre and elsewhere. Cassia is not produced by any trees now found growing in Arabia. Gk. authors sometimes mistakenly regarded products imported into Arabia, and thence exported northwards to other countries, as the natural productions of that country. Such may be the case here, though that cassia may have grown there formerly is the more probable if the moselytis was grown on the shore of Somaliland opposite, and not merely imported to Mosyllon. Cassia may be regarded as inferior cinnamon, chiefly obtained from the bark of Cinnamomum casta, and known as Casia or Casia lig)u'a. It is native in Cochin China, and belf)ngs to a family including also the bay-tree and the camphor. Harris quotes the opinion of Scacchus, " that by qiddd we are to under- stand that fragrant composition extracted from a plant which the ancients called costus . . . and it appears from Propertius (lib. iv. eleg. 5) that it was used on the altars, together with frankincense." Pliny describes " Casia or Canell " at length. He says " the blacke is most employed in sweet perfumes and oyntments. There is no drugge that varicth more in price than the Canell ; for whereas the best will cost fiftie deniers Komane a pound ; all the rest a man may buy for five " (xii. 19). His account of their transport and preparation is full of interest. Herodotus (iii. 107, no) and Diodorus (iii. 3) say that cassia came from the shores of Arabia. (2) q-fi'oth (Ps.45.8 only) is generally suiiposed to be another term for cassia. The old versions, as well as the ety- mology of the Heb. word, fa\'our this inter- pretation, [h.c.h.] Castop and Pollux. The Dioscuri, as the Cireeks called them, were, according to a later legend, the twin sons of Jupiter and CAT Leda, and the guardians of sailors. They ap- pear among the signs of the Zodiac as the Gemini. On coins and other objects of art they are represented as stars shining above a ship, or as youths on horseback, wearing CATERPIIiLAR 139 SILVER COIN OF BRUTTII. O^. : Heads of Castor and Pollux to right. Rev. : Castor and Pollux mounted, advancing to right. In the exergue, BPETTIfiN. conical caps with stars above their heads. Their sign was sometimes seen on ships, as in Ac. 28. II, where a ship of Alexandria is mentioned as bearing the sign of the Twin Brothers. [a.r.] Cat, mentioned but once in Scripture (Ba.6.22). The Gk. word aiXovpos, which refers to a domesticated animal and is com- monly translated " cat," really indicates the marten, or marten-cat ; and it is not till By- zantine Gk. that we meet with the word kolttos, or Karra, used to designate domesticated cats imported from Egypt, where the African wild cat (Felis ocreata, or maniculata), was tamed, worshipped, and eventually embalmed, as at Bubastis. Possibly this cat may occur in Syria, where a variety of the European wild cat {Felis cattis morea) is met with. The general opinion is that the passage in Baruch relates to wild cats. [r.l.] Catechizing-. The word Karrixiu occurs 8 times in N.T : twice in the ordinary sense of giving information (Ac. 21. 21, 24), elsewhere of instruction (Lu.l.4 ; Ac. 18. 25 ; Ro.2.i8 ; iCor. 14.19 ; Gal.6.6). In Lu.l.4, Ac.l8.25, R-V. marg. translates " taught by word of mouth " ; and it evidently has that meaning, as distin- guished from the common word 5t5d(r\'a>. Teach- ing cannot help beginning with catechizing, which no doubt underlay the whole system of education in O.T. and N.T. [Education.] Cf. Herbart, Science of Education : " From first to last, that form of preparation in which the teacher alone takes part, which subjects the pupil to discourses by him, and which the pupil must silently follow, must be declared in- admissible." The catechetical method, how- ever, was not methodized by those who first used it. It is commonly called the Socratic Method ; but " we must understand that, in contrast to what is now called ' method,' it rose not in the consciousness of Socrates formally as method — and in abstraction, therefore, from every concrete case — but that it had spontane- ously grown up with the very mode and manner of his philosophizing " (Schwegler, History of Philos. xii. 6). The incessant questioning of Socrates has been divided into (i) irony, an as- sumed ignorance which evokes from the person questioned statements by which he is event- ually overthrown; (2) the maieutic method: Socrates likened himself to his mother Phae- narete, a midwife, because he '" helped to birth his pupils' intellectual throes." The subject of the philosophy of catechizing is of import- ance, because it is the foundation of the " me- thod " of a greater teacher even than Socrates. Our Lord was continually asking questions, He catechized more than any other teacher, and His " method " — though entirely unconscious, as in the case of Socrates — may be systematized to a limited extent, (i) Yie too overthrew His enemies by questions, so that they were afraid to meet Him. "The baptism of John, whence was it ? " " Why did David call him Lord ? " " Whose is this image, etc. ? " " For which of those (good) works do ye stone me ? " The whole passage is a condensed account of an inductive " Socratic" discourse (Jn.12.32-38). Also it is to be noticed (2) that our Lord enforced the most important doctrines by questions. His first recorded words are two questions, and assert the most important doctrine of all^His divinity. Cf. "Whom do men say that I am? " '.'Whom do ye say that I am ? " "What think ye of Christ ? " " Of whom do the kings of the earth take tribute ? " " Why callest thou Me good ? " " Whether is easier to say, etc. ? " Also that remarkable discourse on the way to Emmaus — the record of which one longs for more than for anything else unrecorded — began with the question " Ought not Christ to have suffered these things?" (Lu.24.26) Cf. " Dost thou believe on the Son of God ? " (3) Our Lord used the catechetical method, more than any one else has ever used it, to draw people to Himself. This category begins with the first words to the disciples, " What seek ye ? " ; it develops to the " Whom seek ye ? " of the Resurrection morning, and the " I.ovest thou Me ? " to His chief apostle; and is not complete till the ascended Christ asks His final question, " Saul, Saul, why per- secutest thou Me ? " Cf. " Will ye also go away ? " (4) It is to be noticed too, that our Lord at times asked for information which was of use not to Him but to the person questioned. In one such question we have the purpose stated : " Whence shall we buy bread ? — This He said to prove him ; for He Himself knew what He would do " (Jn.6.5,6). Similar questions were asked concerning the lunatic, " How long is it ago since this came upon him ? " and Lazarus, "Where have ye laid him?" The catechetical method of our Lord's teaching is equally recorded in all four gospels ; the psychology of His teaching is a subject which repays study, and proves that He spake as never man spake. It is not without purpose that the cry of the heathen world was ex- pressed to Him, by the most important representative of it whom He ever met, in a question, "What is truth? " [b.r.j Cateppillap. The translation in the A.V. of the Heb. hdsil and (in three pas- sages) veleq. The former occurs in iK.8.37; 2Chr.6.28 ; Ps.78.46 ; Is.33.4 ; Jl.l. 4.2.25 ; in most cases in connexion with " locust." From this association it has been suggested that the term, which signifies " the consumer," refers to immature locusts, or locusts in the pupal and larval conditions, when, although wingless, they are even more destructive to 140 CATHUA vegetation than the adult insects. For yeleq, see Locust. [r.l.J Cathu'a (iEsd.5.30) = Giddei., i. Cattle. In ancient Heb., as in mod. Eng., several terms were used to designate domesti- cated cattle, according to sex, age, etc. Al- though each appears to have had a more or less definite meaning, they are frequently translated indifferently in A.V. as bull, cow, ox, bullock, heifer, calf, etc. Among the more important of these terms, bciqdr (derived from a root signifying to cleave, and hence to p]f)Ugh ; or perhaps referring to their cloven hoofs) seems to be properly used for adult cattle of either sex, especially those suitable for ploughing. It is translated bullock in Is. 65. 25, cow in Ezk.i.is, and oxen in Gen. 12. 16. sh6i\ although occasionally used collec- tively, denotes a single individual, whether bull, cow, ox, or bullock. Its Aramaic equivalent tor (from the same root as Gk. ravpos and Eng. sieer) occurs in the later books of O.T. , Ezr.6.9,17,7.17 ; Dan. 4. 24. par, huW, and pcird, cow, are generally used respectively for a young bull or bullock, and for a heifer or young cow used for sacrifice. In Judg.6.25, however, par may signify a much older bull. 'cghel, on the other hand, denotes a calf of either sex, properly of the first year, although it may be used occasionally for older animals. Fin- ally, the word 'abbirim (the strong ones) is used in a few passages for bulls, as in Ps.22.i2, Is. 34. 7, and Je.50.ir. No animals in the rural economy of the Israelites were held in higher esteem than cattle, on whose labours depended the ordinary operations of farming. Oxen were used for ploughing (Deut.22.io ; 1Sam.i4.14, etc.) ; for treading out corn (Deut.25.4 ; Ho. 10. II, etc.) ; for draught pur- poses, when they were generally yoked in pairs (Num.7. 3 ; iSam.6.7, etc.) ; and as beasts of burden (1Chr.i2.40). Their flesh was eaten (Deut.14.4 ; 1K.I.9, etc.); they were used in the sacrifices ; and the cows supplied milk, butter, etc. (Deut.32.i4 ; Is. 7. 22 ; 2Sam.i7.29). Connected with the im- portance of oxen in these respects arc the laws enacted by God for their protection and pre- servation. The ox that threshed the corn was not to be muzzled, and was to enjoy its rest on the sabbath (Ex. 23.12 ; Deut.5.14). The law prohibiting the slaughter of any clean animal, except as " an offering unto the Lord before the tabernacle," during the time that the Israelites abode in the wilderness (Lev. 17. 1-6), contributed to the preservation of oxen and sheep. It seems clear from rr.l5.i7 and iK.4.2.3 that cattle were sometimes stall- fed, though this was probably not the rule. Humped cattle, or zebu (Bos indicus), were kept in Syria, where there were also breeds of ordinary humpless cattle (Bos taunts), one of which was " polled," or hornless. The long- horned humpless cattle of ancient I'-gyiit have been referred to a distinct species by the present writer, under the name of Bos aegyp- tiacus. The domesticated Indian buffalo (Bos [Bubaliis] bubalis), now common in Syria and Palestine, appears to have been unknown there in early Biblical times. For a full ac- count of the various breeds of cattle kept in Syria and the neighbouring conntricsin Biblical CAVE times, see Dr. J. U. Diirst's Die Kinder von Babylon ien, Assyrian, Aegypten (Berlin, 1899). Diirst considers that the expression " bulls of Bashan" indicates the extinct wild ox, or aurochs, elsewhere probably denoted by " unicorn," the A.V. translation of r^'ew. [Calf ; Unicorn.] [r.l.] The law, by providing five-fold restitution for a stolen ox that had been killed or sold as against four-fold for a stolen sheep (Ex. 22.1 [21.37]), plainly shows the superior relative importance of the ox, which was used for agri- cultural purposes. See Maine, Early History of Institutions, 147 ff. ; Post, Grundriss der Ethnologischen Jurispriidenz, ii. 421-422 ; Encycl. Bibl. s.v. ; and cf. the use of mikneh for cattle. [Crimes; Firstlings.] [h.m.w. ] Caul (shdbhis). Only used in Is.3.i8 (in plur.). It was a little glass ornament (strictly speaking an amulet) worn at the neck, like a locket. A.V. also renders the Heb. yothereth by "caul." This was a fatty substance which hung to the liver, and is referred to in connex- ion with the sacrificial animals (Ex. 29. 13 ; Lev.3.4,10,15, etc.). A.V. also thus translates segor in Ho. 13. 8, where it is figuratively used, and means the covering of (lit. something that encloses) the heart. [w.o.e.o.] Cave, (i) nf'drd. The chalky limestone of which the rocks of Syria and Palestine chiefly consist contains, like all limestone formations, a vast number of caverns and natural fissures, many of which have been arti- ficially enlarged and adapted to purposes both of shelter and defence. This has given rise to the use of a large number of words in the Scrip- tures to denote caves, holes, and fissures, some of them giving names to places in their neigh- bourhood. Of these we may mention : (2) hiir, or hor. " a hole." From this come (a) the name of the Horites of mount Seir, a Tro- glodyte race spoken of by Strabo, and of whom remains have been found in recent excavations in Palestine (Gen. 14.6,36.21 ; Deut.2.i2 ; Job30.6). (6) //fl!(ran(Ezk.47.i6,i8). (c) The two towns of Beth-horon (Jos. 16. 3, 5). (rf)The town Horonaim (Is. 15. 5). (3) Mghdwtm, " places of refuge in rocks " for birds (Can. 2. 14 ; Ob. 3 ; A.V. clefts). (4) minhdrd (A.V. den), a ravine through which water flows (Judg.6.2). The most remarkable caves noticed in Scripture are: (i) That in which Lot dwelt after the destruction of Sodom (Gen. 19.30). (2) Machpelah (23.17)- (3) Makke- dah (Jos.10.i6). (4) AduUam (iSam.22.i). (5) En-gedi (24.3). (6) Obadiah's cave (iK. 18.4). (7) Elijah's cave in Horeb(19.9). (8,9) The rock sepulchres of I,azarus and of our Lord (Jn.11.38 ; Mt.27.6o). The existing caverns near the N.F.. end of the Dead Sea serve fully to justify the mention of a cave as the place of Lot's retirement ; as those on the W. side agree both in situation and in name with the caves of ]vn-gedi. There is also fre- quent mention in O.T. of caves generally as places of refuge. Thus the Israelites are said to have taken refuge from the Philistines in "holes" (iSam.l4.ii), and in the time of Gideon from the Midianites in dens and caves and strongholds, such as abound in the mountain region of Manasseh (Judg.6.2). Cf. Heb. 11. 38. Nor is Adullain the only CEDAR cave in Palestine where banditti made their accustomed haunt. Josephus (15 Ant. x. i ; I Wars xvi. 2-4) speaks of the robber in- habitants of Gahiee and of Trachonitis, who lived in large caverns, and were put down by Herod. The caves which lie beneath and around so many of the Jewish cities formed also the last hiding-places of the Jewish leaders in the war with the Romans; and in modern and ancient times alike, the rock caverns of Palestine and the adjacent regions were the customary burial-places. The rocky soil of so large a portion of the Holy Land almost forbids interment, except in caves either natural or hewn from the rock. Accordingly, numerous sites are shown in Palestine and adjacent lands of reputed sepulchres of saints and heroes of O.T. and N.T., venerated both by Christians and Mohammedans. Cedap. There is little doubt that the Heb. 'erez, invariably rendered "cedar" by A.V., is, in most passages, a correct rendering. The 'efez (Arab, eyz), from a root signifying "■ firmly rooted and strong tree," is the cedar of Lebanon {Cednis libani) ; but the word is used in a wider sense to denote other Coniferae in some passages. E.g. " cedar wood " (Lev. 14. 6) can hardly be the wood of the Lebanon cedars, as the Cedrus libani could never have grown in the Sinai peninsula. In Ezk.27.5, 'ey^z perhaps denotes some fir ; probably, as Dr. Hooker con- jectures, the Pinus halepensis, which grows in Lebanon, and is better suited for ship-masts than the Cedrus libani. Probably both these trees, and also the Juniperus excelsa, were in- cluded under the term ^erez ; but undoubtedly it especially denotes the cedar of Lebanon, the firmest and grandest of the conifers. The cedar is found in various parts of Syria [Lebanon], but the best -known grove is in a valley of the Lebanon range, viz. that of the Kedisha River, which flows W. from near the highest point of the range to the Mediterranean at Tripoli. This grove is at the very upper part of the valley, about 15 miles from the sea, 6,500 ft. above that level, and above all other cirboreous vegetation. The cedars are confined to a small portion of a range of low, stony, rounded hills, perhaps 60 to 100 ft. above the flow of the valley. These hills Dr. Hooker be- lieved to be old moraines. A true Juniper ■(/. phoenicea?) occurs in Edom in several places, e.g. close to the summit of mount Hor (Jebel Haroun) ; and the present writer has seen groves of small trees of it in more than one place along the brow of the Edomitic escarpment above the 'Arabah. No doubt it was incomparably com- moner in Biblical times, since all available wood disappears before the Arabs for fuel in S. Pales- tine and Sinai. This juniper was probably the cedar wood " cast into the midst of the burn- ing " for purification, in Num. 19. 6. Juniper was held in the highest repute amongst woods for biurning to purify the air of all corruptions and infections. Vergil is supposed to mean juniper in " Disce et odoratum stabulis accen- dere cedrum " (Georgics). It was biumt among the ancients, to expel evil spirits, as it still is in many countries. Pliny says, "TheJJuniper hath the same propertie that the Cedar has as a preservative against rottenness, if its oil be CENSER 141 rubbed on any wood " — thus recognizing their distinctness. [h.c.h.] Ce'dpon. — 1. A place fortified by Cende- baeus under the orders of Antiochus (Sidetes), as a station from which to command the roads of Judaea (iMac.15.39,41,16.9). It was not far from Jamnia (Jabne), and was probably the modern Qatrah, 5 miles E. of Yebnah.^2. Jn.18.1 only. [Kidron.] Ce'ilan (iEsd.5.15). Sons of Ceilan and Azetas returned with Zerubbabel from Babylon. The lists of Ezra and Nehemiah have no names corresponding to these. Celling-. [CiELiNG.] Celosypia. [Coelosyria.] Cen'chpea (R.V. Cenchreae) was the E. harbour of Corinth (i.e. its harbour on the Saronic Gulf), and the emporium of its trade with the Asiatic shores of the Mediterranean, as Lechaeum (Lutrdki) on the Corinthian Gulf was with Italy and the W. St. Paul sailed from Cenchreae (Ac. 18. 18) on his return to Syria from his second missionary journey ; COLONIAL COIN OF CORIN'TH. On the obverse the head of Antoninus Pius ; on the reverse the port of Cenchrea, with C.L.I. COR., that is, COLONIA LAVS JVLIA CORINTHUS. and when he wrote his epistle to the Romans in the course of the third journey, an organ- ized church seems to have existed here (R0.I6.1). [Phoebe.] The distance of Cen- chreae from Corinth was 70 stadia or about 9 miles. The modern village of Kikries re- tains the ancient name, which is conjectured by Dr. Sibthorpe to be derived from the millet [Keyxp'-)- which still grows there. Cendebe us, accurately Cendebaeus (as R.V.), a general left by Antiochus VII. in com- mand of the sea-board of Palestine (iMac.15. 38, etc.) after the defeat of Tryphon 138 e.g. He fortified Kedron and harassed the Jews, but was defeated by Simon the Hasmonaean, with great loss (iMac.l6.i-io). Censep. A bowl-shaped vessel for burning incense. It was filled with live coals from off the altar, and on this fire was put the incense. The censer was then carried to the altar of incense and placed upon it. This appears to have been its general use, since incense was to be burned night and morning on the altar of incense (Ex. 30.7,8,40. 26,27). Censer is the rendering of two Heb. words, (i) miqtereth (2Chr.26.19; Ezk.8.11). The form ni'-qaft/- roth occurs 2Chr.3O.14, and is rendered " altars for incense " (R.V. marg. vessels ; Oxf. Gesenius, " incense altars "). These censers probably had a stand or flat base. (2) mahtd, rendered [a) censer (Lev.l0.i,16.i2 [ritual for 142 CENSUS Day of Atonement] ; Num.l6.6,i7,i8,3?-39, 46). These were of brass, except the one for use on the Day of Atonement, which was of gold, and had a handle (Yoma iv. 4). Also (6) firepans, of brass in the tabernacle and of pure 1J.\ !■! IAN ci;.NSi;u. gold in the temple. The word occurs in this sense in lists of utensils intended for the ser- vice of the altar of burnt-offerings (Ex. 27. 3, 38. 3; Num. 4.14; iK.7.50; cf.2ChrA.22; 2K.25. 15 ; Je.52.19). Also (c) snuff-dishes of pure gold, " into which the snuffings of the lamps were put " (Keil, Bib. Arch.) ; mentioned in connexion with the golden candlestick (Ex.25. 38,37.23 ; Num. 4.9). In Heb.9.4, ev/jLiarripiov is rendered "censer" (R.V. marg. altar of incense). The former is probably correct. dvfuoLT-qpiov is the LXX. for miqtereth in 2Chr. 26.19, Ezk.8.11. [H.H.] Census. I. Moses laid down the law (Ex. 30.12,13) that whenever the people were num- bered, an offering of half a shekel should be made by every man above 20 years of age, by way of atonement or propitiation. — Instances of num- bering recorded in O.T. (i) Under the express direction of God (Ex. 38. 26), in the 3rd or 4th month after the Exodus during the encamp- ment at Sinai, chiefly to raise money for the tabernacle. The numbers then amounted to 603,550 men. (2) In the 2nd month of the 2nd year after the Exodus (Num. 1.2,3). This census was taken to ascertain (a) the number of fighting men from the age of 20 to 50 ; (b) the amount of the redemption offering due on account of all the firstborn both of persons and cattle. The Levites, numbering 22,000, were taken in lieu of the 22,273 firstborn males of the rest of Israel, and for the surjilus of 273 a money payment of 5 shekels each was made to Aaron and his sons (3.39,51). (3) Thirty- eight years afterwards, previous to the en- trance into Canaan, the total number, excejit- ing the Levites, amounted to 601,730 males — a decrease of 1,820. (4) The first formal num- bering of the people as an established nation took place in the reign f)f David. This was probably necessary because the protracted campaigns of David's foreign wars made it impossible for the whole male population cap- able of bearing arms, who formerly acted as the army of Israel, to serve for so long away from home. The military nature of this census is shown by its execution being entrusted to Joab and his captains; but it was no doubt intended also as a basis for the taxation re- quired for an organized government. This measure was viewed with susijicion, and its instigation is accredited to evil influence — " Satan stood up to provoke Israel " — whilst the ])estilence which followed was regarded both by David and the people as a sign of di- vine displeasure. The Chronicler presupposes | CHAIN (iChr.23-27) records of numbers and divisions of the people, such as show an elaborately organized system of religious, civil, and mili- tary officials, which some consider far in ad- vance of the time of David, though fragments of old records may be incorporated in his work ; but we may well assume that the system of taxation under later kings followed upon the registration inaugurated by David. The num- bers given are : men of Israel above 20 years of age 800,000, Judah 500,000, total 1,300,000. iChr. gives Israel 1,100,000, and Judah 470,000, total 1,570,000 ; but adds that Levi and Benjamin were not numbered (iChr.21.6, 27.24). (5) The census of David was com- pleted by Solomon, by the numbering of the foreigners and remnants of the conquered nations resident within Palestine. They totalled 153,600, and were employed in forced labour on his great architectural works (Jos. 9. 27; iK. 5. 15, 9.20, 21 ; iChr.22.2 ; 2Chr.2.i7, 18). Between this time and the Captivity mention is made of the numbers of armies under various kings of Israel and Judah. [Number ; Palestine.] For N.T. references to the Roman census (Lu.2.i ; Ac.5.37), see Taxing. [s.n.s.] Centupion. [Army.] Cephas. [Peter.] Ce pas (iEsd.5.29) = Keros. Ce'tab. Sons of Cetab were Nethinim who returned with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.30). Ni) corresponding name is found in the lists of Ezra and Nehemiah. Cha'bpis, son of Gothoniel, and an "ancient" lirpecrfivrepos) of Bethulia (Jth. 6.15,8.10,10.6). Cha'dias, an unknown place in Judaea. Perhaps Hadid, but the text is very corrupt. " They of Chadias and .A.mmidoi " (iEsd.5.2o) returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel. There are no corresponding names in Ezra and Nehemiah. [c.r.c] Chaff. The Heb. words rendered chaff in A.V. lia\e not precisely the same meaning : lidshash (Arab, hashish), "grass" withered by heat, occurs twice only (Is. 5. 24, 33. 11). tnof is chaff separated by winnowing from the erain — the husk of the wheat, tebhen, ren- dered straiii in Ex. 5. 7, 10, 11, etc., and stubble in Job 21.18, means straw cut into short portions, in which state it was mixed with the mud of which bricks were made to give it consistency ; as the Arab, tibn is still used, as well as for fodder with barley. In il\.4.28 mention is made of a mixed fodder for horses and camels of barley and tebhen. The word 'lir (Arab. 'Aic'dr) occurs in Dan. 2. 35 for "chaff of the summer threshing-floors." [c.r.c] Chain. Chains were used ( i ) as badges of office ; (2) for ornament ; (3) for confining prisoners, (i) The gold chain placed about Josejih's neck ((ie11.4i.42), and that promised to Daniel (Dan. 5. 7), are instances of the first use. In I*2gyiU it was one of the insignia of a judge, who wore an image of truth attached to it ; it was also worn by the prinio minister. In Persia it was considered not only as a mark of royal favour, but a token of investiture. In Ezk.i6.ii it is mentioned as the symbol of sovereignty. (2) Chains for ornamental pur- poses were worn both by men and women in PLATE VIII NECKLACE OF GOLD, CARNELIAN, LAPIS-LAZULI, AND FELSPAR BEADS, COWRIE SHELLS, AND SYMBOLIC FIGURES. (Brit. Mus.) jaQQia^lli^'^^aQLi^BC^a.. NECKLACE OF CARNELIAN, AMETHYST, JASPER, AND QUARTZ BEADS, INCLUDING TWO SYMBOLIC EYES. (Brit. Mus.) GOLD NECKLACE OF AN EGYPTIAN QUEEN OF ABOUT THE TIME OF JOSEPH, p. 142] CHALCEDONY CHALDEA 143 CHAFF DRIVEN BY WIND (Ps.l.4). See art many parts of Europe and Asia, and probably among the Hebrews (Pr.l.g). The necklace consisted of pearls, corals, glass beads, metal discs, etc. Besides the necklace, other chains were worn (Jth.lO.4), hanging down as far as the waist, or even lower. Some were adorned with pieces of metal, shaped in the form of the moon (" rotmd tires like the moon," A.V. ; " crescents," R.V. ; Is. 3. 18). The Midianites adorned the necks of their camels with these (Judg.8.21,26), and camels in Palestine may still be seen with bone crescents tied to their necks. Step-chains were attached to the ankle-rings, which shortened the step and pro- duced a mincing gait (3. 16,18). (3) The means adopted for confining prisoners among the Jews were fetters similar to our handcuffs (Judg.l6.21; 2Sam.3.34 ; 2K.25.7 ; Je.39.7). Among the Romans, the prisoner was hand- cuffed to one, and occasionally to two guards (Ac.12.6,7,21.33). Chalcedony (Rev. 21. 1 9 only). The name is applied in modern mineralogy to minutely crystalline silica, of a milky or very pale brown colour, in fact a variety of Agate, gener- ally of little value as a gem, but often used, after classic times, for carvings, like some other kinds of agate. Pliny does not speak of it as a separate stone, but mentions Calche- donii smaragdi (Nat. Hist, xxxvii. 18) as an impure variety of emerald obtained from copper-mines in Chalcedon. This, also re- ferred to by Theophrastus (De Lapid. § 25), was evidently (King, Precious Stones, p. 157) dioptase, a crystalline hydrous silicate of copper, green in colour. [t.g.b.] Chalcol'. [Calcol ; Darda.] Chaldea (Chaldaea). This was properly the southern portion of Babylonia, without the tract through which the Shatt al-'Arab (which did not anciently exist) passes. It was known to the Babylonians as " the Land of the Sea," but was sometimes called mat Kaldu, on ac- count of the numerous Chaldean (and Ara- mean) tribes which had settled there ^(Bit- Dakuri, Bit- A dim, Bit-Amnkkdni, Bit-Sildni, Bit-Sa'alli, BU-Sdla-Larakki, Bit-Yakin to which Merodach-baladan [2 K. 20. 12, etc.] be- longed). The important position which the Chaldeans attained, however, caused the na- tions around to extend the name to the whole of Babylonia. In this sense it embraced the alluvial plain formed by the deposits of the Euphrates and the Tigris, which extends, nearly N.E. and S.W., about 400 miles along the coiurses of those rivers, with an average width of about 100 miles. In consequence of its alluvial nature, the country is exceedingly fiat, and the monotony of the landscape is only broken by the towns built here and there, and the ruins of ancient settlements. Everywhere are to be seen the remains of ancient canals, pointing to a much more extensive system of irrigation than exists at present. Above Chaldea proper, which was occupied by the tribes, the country was divided into provinces, named, seemingly, after the chief cities (the province of Babylon, Sippar, etc.). The capi- tal of the country was Babylon, after which the chief cities were Sippar (Abu-habbah) ; Calneh or Nippur (AV^f/-); \Jr (M nqeir) ; Ex ech (Warka); Larsa, the Biblical Ellasar (Senqdra); Agade, the city of the Babylonian Sargon ; Kis [Hai- mar); Lagas (Tel-loh), with many others. To these may be added Cuthah (Ibrahim); Chil- mad (Kalwadha); Larak (Gk. Larancha); Is (Hit); Surippak, ^the city of the Babylonian Noah (IFara); Endvi (Abu-Shahrein); Deru; Dur-Kuri-galzu, etc. Among the canals which were such a remarkable feature of the country were the Nahr Malka (Ndr Sarri) or " Royal Canal," the Ndr Kutu or "canal of Cu- thah," the " New Canal," the Pallukatu or Palacopas, the canal of Borsippa, the canal of Pekod, and many others. These ancient waterways can still be traced, and some at least will ultimately be identified. Chaldea has one natural feature worthy of note — viz. the great inland fresh-water sea of Nejef, a permanent lake of considerable depth, ex- tending in a south-easterly directly for 40 miles, with a maximum width of 35 miles. From the site of Babylon extend, in a south- easterly direction, the famous Chaldean marshes, where Alexander was nearly lost. The extreme fertility of the Chaldean soil has been noticed by various writers. It is said to be the only country in the world where wheat grows wild ; and Herodotus states (i. 193) that grain returned 200-fold, and occasionally 300- fold, to the sower. The date-palm has been from remote ages one of the principal objects of cultivation, its fruit being a staple food of the country. The soil is rich, but ill-cultivated, 144 CHALDEANS, CHALDEES much of the land being dry and waste for want of a proper system of irrigation, which would probably also drain the marshes. [Babel ; Chaldeans.] [t.g.p.] Chaldeans, Chaldees. These words, like the word Chaldea, do not occur in the Heb. of O.T. (which always has kasdim; 77 times altogether, of which 46 are in Jere- miah), and the Eng. trans, comes from the LXX. The term is used for the people of the S. portion of Babylonia, but designating, in later times, the inhabitants of Babylonia in general, including the tract anciently called Shinar. In Dan. 5. 30,9.1 they are classed with magicians and astrologers, and seem also Kir.URIiS SUPPI5SED TO I!E CHALDEANS. {Layard's MoHumenti. o/ ?Ji}icz'€h.) to form a kind of priestly class, with a " tongue " and " learning " of their own (I.4). The Gk. authors make the same distinction. In the Assyrian inscriptions, " Chaldean " is the ordinary designation of certain S. Baby- lonian tribes associated with the Aramcans, and it is thought that Ur of the Chaldees, if it be the modern .Muqcir, was so called from its southern position on the Euphrates (it lies near its junction with the Shatt al-Hai). To all appearance this district was also referred to by the Babylonians and Assyrians as " the Land of the Sea," because of its position at the head of the Persian Gulf. This tract seems to have attained prominence about 2000 b.c, when Hammurabi's son and successor, Samsu- ilima, with his son Abi§i (AbeSu', EbiSu'"), came into conflict with llu-ma-ilu (Anman), who apparently ruled tliere. The name mat Kaldu, "the country Chaldea," is first men- tioned by the Assyrian king Adad-nirari III., c. 810 B.C. Merodach-baladan, whose tribe was Bit-Yakin, and who belonged to " the Land of the Sea," is described by Sargon as a Chaldean, the nationality given by Sennacher- ib to Suzub, the Nergal-uSezib (Rhegebelos) of the Babylonian Chronicle. The name Chal- dean soon spread to the whole of S. Babylonia, and thence to the nortiiern provinces also. The Chaldean kings of Babylon bear names indistinguishable from those of the true Baby- lonians, so that the suggestion that Nebuchad- nezzar was of Ciialdean origin may be correct, and may account for the term being applied to the whole Babylonian nation. The language of the Chaldeans seems to have been similar to CHAMELEON Biblical "Chaldee." The use of Chaldean to indicate one learned in Babylonian lore must have been due to its application to the in- habitants of Babylonia in general. According to Strabo, the chief seats of Chaldean learning were Borsippa and Ur, and Pliny speaks of Babylon and Sippara. These towns were not within the boundaries of Chaldea in its re- stricted sense, and Babylonian scribes or priests must be intended. Their special tongue was, therefore, the ancient Sumerian language, and their learning that derived from its literature. To the centres of learning mentioned may be added Nippur, Erech, and probably other towns. " Chaldeans " with the meaning " wise men " does not occur in Assyro-Babylonian literature. The period being taken into consideration, this Baby- lonian reputation for learning was well de- served. [Semitic Languages.] [t.g.p.] Chambeplain. Erastus, " the. chamberlain [R.V. treasurer] of the city " of Corinth (Ro. 16. 23), held an office which was apparently that of public treasurer, or arcarius, as the Vulg. renders his title. These arcarii were in- ferior magistrates, who had the charge of the public chest [area publica), and were under the authority of the senate. They kept the ac- counts of the public revenues. The office held by Blastus, " the king's chamberlain " (Ac.l2. 20), was entirely different ; it was a post of honour which involved great intimacy and influence with the king. The marg. of A.V. reads " that was over the king's bedchamber." For " chamberlain " in O.T., see Eunuch. Chameleon. The translation of the Heb. koah, used in Lev. 11. 30, as the name of some unclean creature, is generally regarded as incorrect. It has been suggested — and Tristram accepts the view — that the large Syrian and Egyptian lizards known, from a misconception of the meaning of their Arabic name waran or I'lran, as monitors (Varanus) are those indicated. One species {V. griseus) common in Egypt attains a length of 3 or 4 ft., but a second (V. salvator) grows to at least 6 ft., and is, in fact, the largest of all lizards. These lizards are often incorrectly called iguanas. The chameleon itself may perhaps be the animal indicated in Lev. 11. 30 by the name tinshemeth, there translated THE CHAMELEON. "mole" in the A.V., although another Heb. word is elsewhere rendered as that animal. The reason for believing that tinshemeth indicates the chameleon is that the meaning of this word is " to breathe," in allusion, it is suggested, to the old fable that this reptile lives on air. Nothing more definite can be affirmed in either case. [Mole.] [k.l.] CHAMOIS Chamois (Heb. zemer). In the list of animals allowed for food (Deut.14.5) is the zemer, a term translated in the LXX., Vulg., and some other versions " camelopard " or " giraffe," and in A.V. " chamois." If, as is believed, the word is related to the Arab. zamar, it indicates some leaping animal. As the chamois is unknown E. of the Taurus and Caucasus, it cannot be the species in- tended. It has been suggested that the N. African wild sheep, or udad (Ovis lervia), is CHARIOT 145 THE NORTH AFRICAN WILD SHEEP, OR UDAD. the animal referred to ; but against this is the fact that this species is unknown in Asia. The udad is an aberrant, foxy red sheep, with a fringe of long hair on the throat and chest ; and in some degree serves to connect the more typical wild sheep with the goats, zemer might indicate the wild goat, or possibly the gazelle, but other Heb. words have been as- signed to those animals. [Palestine.] [r.l.] Cha'naan, the form in which Canaan ap- pears in A.V. of Apoc. and N.T. (Jth.S-sff. ; Ba.3.22 ; Sus.56 : iMac.9.37 ; Ac.7.ii,13.r9). Chanaanite for Canaanite (Jth.5.i6). Channune'us {iEsd.8.48) perhaps = Merari (Ezr.8.19). Chapiter, the capital of a pillar. The A.V. so renders three Heb. words. ( i ) kothereth, " crown " or " circlet." applied to pillars (iK. 7.16-20,41,42 ; 2K. 25.17 ; 2Chr.4.i2,i3 ; Je. 52.2 2), and also to the ornamental rims of the temple lavers (1K.7.31). (2) cepheth, "adorn- ment " of a pillar (2Chr!3.i5). (3) rosh, " head" (Ex.36. 38, 38. 17,19,28), applied to the pillars of the tabernacle ; the word is other- wise rendered top in connexion with pillars (iK. 7. 16-19, 22). The capitals of Solomon's bronze pillars were adorned with '" checker work" or "net work" (s'bhdkhd) probably in low relief [Lattice. 3], and these designs were finished above and below by rows of pome- granates (iK. 7.17-20,41, 42). [c.R.c] Chapaath'alap (R.V. Charaaih' alan) is given in iEsd.5.36 as the name of a leader under Zerubbabel ; but is probably a corruption of two place-names, Cherub and Addan (c/. Ezr.2.59)- Chapaca (2Mac.i2.17). Perhaps Kerak, E. of the Dead Sea. [Caspis.] [c.r.c] Chapashim, Valley of (iChr.4.14), mentioned with Lod and Ono (Ne.ll.35). The R.V. has " Ge-harashim " in iChr.4'.i4, " Valley of Craftsmen " (marg. R.V. Ge- harashim) in Ne.11.35, or perhaps " of ploughmen," or " wood-cutters." Probably the town is represented by the ruin Hirsha, 12J miles S.E. of Lydda, 4J E. of Ydlo (Surv. W. Pal. iii. p. 36). [c.R.c] Chapchamis'. [Carchamis.] Chapchemish' (2Chr.35.20) = Carche- MisH (as R.V.). Chap'cus (iEsd.5.32 ; R.V. Barchns) = Barkos. Cha'pea (iEsd.5.32) = Harsha. Chapgep. A vessel used in the taber- nacle for presenting offerings of fine flour with oil (Num. 7. 79). The " chargers " mentioned in Numbers are said to have been of silver, and to have weighed each 130 shekels, or 87 oz. Judging from the analogous word inSyriac, the vessel was deep, acorn-shaped. Quite different was the charger mentioned in Mt.14.8, which was probably a shallow dish, yet deep enough to contain the blood that must have been dripping from the head of the Baptist. [w.o.e.o.] Chapiot. (i) rc/5/t£6/t, sometimes including the horses (2Sam.8.4,10.i8). (2) r'khuhh, a chariot or horse (Ps.104.3). (3) merkdbhd is the most usual word, occurring 42 times in O.T. ; it is used, e.g., of the chariots of the Egyptians (Ex. 14.25, 15.4), of the Canaanites (Jos.ll. 6,9), and of the Ass>T:ians (Na.3.2). (4) merkdbh (only in Lev.15.9 [E.V. saddle], iK.4. 26, and Can.3.io) does not differ radically from merkdbhd, but a distinction may be discerned in their use in that merkdbh represents rather the seat in the chariot, merkdbhd the chariot itself. (5) 'dghdld (Ps.46.9[io]). (6) 'appiryon (Can. 3. 9). Chariots were used mostly for war- like purposes. [Army.] The earliest mention of them in Scripture is in Egypt, where Joseph, as a mark of distinction, was placed in Pharaoh's second chariot (Gen.4i.43), and went later in his own chariot to meet his father on his way from Canaan (46.29). In the funeral proces- sion of Jacob chariots also formed apart (SO.g). The next mention of Egyptian chariots is for a warlike purpose (Ex. 14.7). Pharaoh in pur- suing Israel took with him 600 chariots. The Canaanites of the valleys of Palestine success- fully resisted the Israelites in consequence of the number of their chariots of iron (Jos. 17.18 ; Judg.1.19). Jabin. king of Canaan, had 900 chariots (Judg.4.3). David took from Hadadezer, king of Zobah, 1,000 chariots (2Sam.8.4), and a little later 700 from the Syrians (10. 18), who in order to recover their ground collected 32,000 chariots (iChr.19.7). Up to this time the Israelites possessed few or no chariots. But Solomon raised and main- tained a force of 1,400 chariots (1K.IO.26) by taxation on certain cities, agreeably to Eastern custom in such matters (iK. 9. 19, 10. 25 ; Xen. Anab. i. 4, 9). The chariots and the horses were both imported chiefly from Egypt, and each chariot cost 600 shekels of silver, and each 10 146 CHARITY CHEDOiRLAOMER HGVPTIAN I'KINCKS IN THEIR CHARIOTS. (Wilkinson.) horse 150 (1K.IO.29). From this time the possession of chariots was regarded as most important, and they, as well as horses, appear to have been still supplied mainly from Egypt (iK.22.34 ; 2K.9.i6,2i). Commonly two per- sons, sometimes three, rode in the chariot (2 K.9. 20,24 ; I K.22.34 ; Ac. 8. 38), the third being em- ployed to carry the state umbrella. A second chariot usually accompanied the king to battle to be used in case of necessity (2Chr. 35.24). Chariots are frequently alluded to as typical of power (Ps.20.7, 104-3 ; Je.51.2i ; Zech.6.1). Chariots of other nations are men- tioned, as of Assyria (2K.I9.23 ; Ezk.23.24), ASSYRIAN LII.XKliir. Syria (2Sam.8 and 2 K. 6.14, 15), Persia (Is.22. 6), and Antiochus Eupator is said to have had 300 chariots armed with scythes (2Mac.l3.2). In N.T., the only mention of a chariot, except in R('v.9.<), is that of the Ethiopian or Abys- sinian eiimich of queen Candace (Ac.8.28). Charity. (The Ivng. word is derived both from Old !•>. charilet and Vulg. caritatem.) In A.V. this word is confined to the epistles. While it always represents ayairy). the latter is often translated " love," and it is difficult to trace any principle by which the A.V. translators distinguishcdtheir useof the two terms. "Char- ity " was used in the Vulg. of the love of man for God, but had degenerated in the i6th cent, into the sense of love from man to man. Its somewhat technical connotation of giving to the poor is of late acquisition, and quite con- tradicted by St. Paul, who considers the possi- bility of bestowing all one's goods on the poor, and yet being destitute of this virtue. It is from iCor.13 that all our ideas of this " great- est of gifts " are derived. This charity is more important than eloquence, prophecy, know- ledge, faith, philanthropy, or the martyr's zeal ; because it is a motive, in the absence of which all these things are destitute of merit. This is quite in accordance with modern Ethics. Its manifestation is set out in vv. 4-8. It is long-suffering, patient, hopeful, enduring ; neither envious, proud, nor cynical. It is the one thing which shall never fail, but shall be able to endure the searching and perfect light of heaven. 2Pe.l.7 bids "charity" be added to "brotherly kindness," and iPe.4.8 speaks of it as " covering a multitude of sins." [b.f.s.] Chap'mis, son of Melchiel, an " ancient " (7rpe(r/3iyTepos)of Bethulia(Judg.6.i5,8.io,10.6). Chap'pan (Ac.7.2,4) = Haran. Chas'eba, named in iEsd.5.31 only among those whose sons returned with Zerubbabcl. Chebap,' a river or canal in " the land of the Chaldeans" (Ezk.l.3), on the banks of which Jews were located during tiic Captivity, and where Ezckiel saw his earlier visions (Ezk. 1.1,3.15,23, etc.). It is often idi'iUificd with the Habor, or river of Gozan, whither Israelites were removed by the Assyrians (2K.17.6). The Chebar of Ezekiel, however, must be looked for in Babylonia, and is probably the nahr Kabari, a canal near Niffcr (Calneh, Gen. 10. 10), as suggested by Hilprecht. Its course has still to be deterniiiicd. See Hilprecht and I Clay, Business-Documents of Mnrashd Sons, Pennsylvania Expedition, vol. ix. p. 28 ; Clay, ' I.if;lit on O.T. from liabel, p. 405. [t.g.p.] Chedoplaotner, king of Eiain in the time of Abraham, who with three vassal princes suppressed a rebellion of the Canaan- ites in the neighbourhood of the Dead Sea (Gen.l4.i-i6). Babylonia had been con- quered by the Elamites, northern Babylonia CHEESE with its capital Babylon being left to the young king Hammurabi or Ammurapi [Am- raphel], while southern Babylonia with its capital at Larsa [Ellasar] was handed over to the Elamite prince Eri-Aku or Arioch, whose father was appointed governor of Canaan. Canaan had long been considered a Baby- lonian province, and was therefore claimed by Elam after the conquest of Babylonia. The name of Chedorlaomer appears as Kudur- Lagamar, "the servant (?) of the goddess Lagamar," in the cimeiform texts — an import- ant confirmation of the Biblical story of ; Abraham. Some time after the Canaanite j campaign Hammurabi succeeded in shaking off the Elamite yoke. [a.h.s.] Cheese. In Palestine cheese is still made, ; and also a sour curd cheese when milk is i plentiful in spring. The latter may be in- ^ tended in Pr.3O.33. [Butter.] The three Heb. words rendered " cheese " by A.V. are g''bhtnd, the .Arab jibn, "cheese" (Job 10. 10); \ hdrice hehdldhh (iSam.l7.i8), or "slices of milk " — perhaps curd cheeses ; and sh'-photh bdqdr (2Sam.i7.29), " strainings of cows," < which might mean cream, or curds, or the dried buttermilk of the Arabs. (Burckhardt, i Notes on the Bedouins, i. 60.) [c.r.c] Chelal', one of those who put away their foreign wives (Ezr.lO.30). Chelei'as (Helkias, R.V.). — 1. Ancestor of Baruch (Ba.l.i). — 2. = Hilkiah, father of Joachim, the high -priest in the time of Josiah (Ba.1.7). — 3. Father of Susanna (Sus.2,29,63). Chel'lians, The (Jth.2.23), inhabitants of Chellus. Chelluh', one who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.35). Chellus (xeXXoL's ; Jth.l.g), mentioned with Betane, Kades, and the "river of Egypt." Apparently, as Reland suggests (Pal. Illust. ii. p. 717), the later Elusa (now Khalasah), 8 miles S.W. of Beer-sheba, named after an Arab goddess still adored there in 4th cent. A.D. (See Robinson, Bib. Res. i. pp. 201, 202.) [c.r.c] Che'lod. " Many nations of the sons of Chelod " were among those who obeyed the ;ummons of Nabuchodonosor to his war with Arphaxad (Jth.1.6). The word is appar- ently corrupt. Variant readings are Clieleoul, Cheslaiouda, Chelcoud ; Syr. Chaldeans. Chelub'. — 1. A descendant of J udah ( iChr. 4.11).— 2. The father of Ezri (iChr.27.26). Chelubai', son of Hezron, of one of the chief families of J udah. The name occurs in iChr.2.9only, and comparing this with 2. 18, 42, it appears to be but another form of Caleb. Chemapims' (Zeph.1.4, cf. margin of 2K. 23.5 ; Ho. 10. 5), probably a word of foreign origin, always used in a bad sense of priests who conducted false worship. In Syriac the corresponding word is used in Judg.l7.5,i2 of Micah's priest, in Is. 61. 6 of the priests of the true God, and in Heb.2.i7 of Christ Himself. Kimchi derived it from a root meaning " to be black," because the idolatrous priests wore black garments ; others take the root to mean " to be sad," as if the monk or priest were an ascetic. The versions of Ezk.3i.15 show how these two ideas run together : Pesh, kemird, CHERETHITES 147 LXX. ia-Kdraaev, Vulg. contristatus est, E.V. caused to mourn; cf. art. Mourning, [c.r.d.b.] Chemosh', the national deity of the Moab- ites (Num. 21. 29 ; Je.48.7,13.46). In Judg. 11.24 he also appears as the god of the Ammonites. Solomon introduced, and Josiah abolished, the worship of Chemosh at Jerusa- lem (iK.11.7 ; 2K. 23.13). In the inscription of the Moabite king, Mesha, language is applied to him not unlike that used of Jehovah in O.T. [MOAB.] [A.H.S.] Chenaanah'. — 1. Head of a Benjamite house (iChr.7.io). [Jediael, i; Bilhan.] — 2. Father or ancestor of Zedekiah the false prophet (iK. 22.11, 24 ; 2Chr.l8. 10,23). Chenani', a Levite who assisted at the solemn purification of the people (Ne.9.4). Chenaniah', chief of the Levite singers (but see R.V. marg.) when David carried the ark to Jerusalem (1Chr.i5.22) ; also described as an Izharite officer and judge (26.29). Chephap-haammonai' (R.V. Chephar- ammoni; Jos. 18. 24), a town of Benjamin. Now the ruin Kefr 'Ana, 3 miles N. of Bethel, on the extreme border of the tribe, [c.r.c] Chephipah', a town of Benjamin (Jos. 18. 26), a Hivite citv (9.7,17). mentioned also after the Captivity (Ezr.2.25 ; Ne.7.29). Now the ruin Kefireh, 8 miles N.W. of Jerusalem. Called Caphira in iEsd.5.19. [c.r.c] Chepan', one of the sons of Dishon the Horite "duke" (Gen.36.26 ; iChr.l.41). Che'peas, governor of Gazara, slain there by the Hasmonaeans (2Mac.l0.32,37). Chepethims' (Ezk.25.i6). The plur. form of the word elsewhere rendered Cherethites. Chepethites and Pelethites, the life- guards of David (2Sam.8.i8,15.i8,20.7,23 ; iK. 1.38,44 ; 1Chr.l8.17). The Cherethites are mentioned separately in 1Sam.3O.14 ; Zeph.2. 5 ; Ezk.25.i6 ; twice in connexion with the Philistines. From this it has been inferred that " Pelethites " is another form of " Philis- tines." As the original home of the Philistines was Caphtor (? Crete ; Am.9.7 ; Je.47.4), it is possible that the form " Cherethite " = Cretan. For Cherethites the Heb. of 2Sam.2O.23 has kdri, and in 2K.II (the account of the ac- cession of Joash and the death of Athaliah) the body-guard of the later Jewish kings consisted of kdri (A.V. captains). The Cherethites and Pelethites were, according to Gesenius, the executioners and runners of the kings of J udah ; but linguistic and other considerations seem fatal to this theory, though the "runners," rdrUn, occur after kari in both passages. [Foot- man.] Most probably the names are gentilic, as the Cherethites are a nation dwelling on the S. coast of Palestine, in proximity to the Philistines. The commander of the foreign mercenaries of David, who is quite distinct from David's captain of the host, was Benaiah, the son of Jehoiada (2Sam.8. 18,20.23). He was promoted to the latter office by Solomon on the death of Joab (iK.2.35). David evi- dently relied greatly on the fidelity of his non- Israelite troops, and the Cherethites and Pele- thites remained ever faithful to him and his designated successor Solomon, both in the re- bellions of Absalom and Sheba (2Sam.l5,20), and in the troubles concerning the accessiou of Solomon (iK.l.ii). The Cherethites and Pe- 148 CHERITH, THE BROOK lethites are apparently distinguished from the Gittite troops of David, commanded by Ittai of Gath(2Sam.l5.i8), andfrom the "mighty men" (2Sam.20.7). This alien body-guard was pro- bably continued by the kings of Judah, since (in the days of Athaliah) Jehoiada is able to rely on the fidelity of the kdri to the dyn- asty in the restoration of Joash (2K.II.4). Perhaps they guarded the temple, for their presence in the sanctuary (2K.II) seems to ex- cite no comment ; but see the parallel passage in 2Chr.23. It has been supposed that " those that leap on the threshold " (Zeph.l.9) were Philistine guards of the temple (c/. iSam.5.5); and that Ezekiel (44.6ff.) alludes to their pre- sence there. After the return from captivity the guards of the temple were Levites. The Egyptian kings of the 20th and 21st aynasties had in their service mercenaries of a nation conquered by Ramses III., called Shayretana of the sea, whom some writers have identified with the Cherethites. See Cappadocia, Crete, and Peleth for another view which would make the Cherethites and Pelethites Israelite troops. [f.j.f.-j.] Chepith', The bpook, or " torrent " which " dried up " ; described as " facing the Jordan" (iK.17.3,5,7). This term often means " west of." The site is unknown. In 1 32 1 (Marino Sanudo) it was shown at Phasaelis {Fusdil), 11 miles N. of Jericho, where a spring exists. In the Onomasticon it is placed "beyond Jordan," but does not appear to have been known to Eusebius or Jerome in 4th cent. [c.r.c] Chepub, Chepubim. These were looked upon, in the Hcb. view, as celestial beings whose function it was to attend upon the divine presence of the Most High God, and to whom certain tasks were allotted. It has been usual to connect them, in the religious sym- bolism of the sacred writings, with the crea- ture-forms which find expression in the art and sculpture of Assyria, Egypt, and Persia. From such sources, doubtless, certain notions may have been derived ; yet it is not easy to say definitely what conception the Hebrew mind had of the form of the cherubim. The sphinx had probably been seen by Jacob's descend- ants in Egypt, and the Assyrian winged bulls, having human heads, would suggest might, wisdom, and the power of flight, together with other attributes of the deity. " Both name and thing," it is alleged, " were derived from a I)rimitive stage of religious thought in western Asia." If so, it is easy to appreciate the Hebrew reluctance to describe definitely citlier the duty or the appearance of the cherubim. In Gen. 3. 24, cherubim were placed at the E. of the garden of Eden, to keep the way of the tree of life. In Ps.l8. 10 we read, " He rode upon a cherub, and did fly ; yea, he did fly upon the wings of the wind." The chonih in this passage has been described as " the mighty winged spirit of the storm." The kingofTyrus is, in lvzk.28.14, compared thus : " Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth " ; or, as one uiKiii th(; holy mountain, in the very Presence of the divine. I'^.k.lO contains tlie mysteri- ous description of the i)ro|ihct's vision (jf the cherubim : " The sound of the cherubim's wings was heard even to tho outer court, as the CHESNUT-TREE voice of the Almighty God when He speaketh." Some of the Rabbis regarded the cherubim as being youthful angels, and the author of Heb- rews speaks (9.5) of " the cherubims of glory shadowing the mercy-seat," alluding to their figures placed on the ark, where, however, no minute description is given of them. There were also figures of cherubim fashioned upon the veil which hung before the holy of holies; in Solomon's temple two large figures of cheru- bim, overlaid with gold, were placed ; the brazen sea and other parts of the interior of the temple were also similarly ornamented. In all these instances the precise form of the cheru- bim is left undescribed. Like the seraphim, they formed one of the ten groups of angels recognized in the Egyptian system. They ever symbolized, to the Hebrews, the near presence of God. Papers by Bp. Ryle ; Cheyne's Isaiah ; Budge's Gods of the Egyptians. [a.h.p.] Chepub', apparently a place in Babylonia from which some persons of doubtful extrac- tion returned to Judaea with Zerubbabel (Ezr. 2.59 ; Ne.7.6i). It has been identified with Chiripha, mentioned by Ptolemy. Chesalon' (Jos.15.io), a place important as fixing the line of N. border of Judah. It was known in 4th cent. a.d. as a large village in the vicinity of Jerusalem, and is now Kesla, 10 miles W. of the city, on a high ridge N. of the valley of Sorek, and 2 miles N. of KiRjATH-jEARiM {'Emui), which is immedi- ately S. of the valley. From the latter town the border " compassed westward to mount Seir " (or " the rugged hill "), and " went over mount Jearim's shoulder, north of which is Chesalon, and went down to Beth-shemesh." Thus Chesalon lay in Benjamin, and the boundary between the tribes, from Kirjath- jearim to Beth-shemesh (on the border of Dan), was the valley of Sorek. [c.r.c] Che'sed, fourth'son of Nahor (Gen.22.22). Chesil' (Jos.15.30). [Bethul.] Chesnut-tpee (Heb. 'armon, LXX. styrax and pine), mentioned in Gen. 30. 37 and Ezk. 31.8. The balance of authority favours the Oriental plane. The context indicates a tree which thrives best in low and rather moist situations, whereas the chestnut-tree prefers dry and hilly ground. Platamis orientalis ranges from Europe across .A.sia to Cashmere. Its value for shade in the East is well known, and it was exceedingly prized by early writers. Pliny says it was first brought over the Ionian Sea " to beautify the tomb of Diomedes. From thence translated into Sicilie, and so bestowed at Icngtii upon Italic, and there planted as a most singular, rare, and special tree . . . who would not marvel that our pecjjile should fetch a tree . . . only for the shade that it giveth ? " (xii. i). He gives accounts of m.iny famous and royal plane-trees. In l'>.clus.24.i6. Wisdom praiseth herself, and says she " grew up as a plane-tree [platan in VVyclifJ by the water." This accords with the K.V. rendering of plane-tree in Gen.3O.37 and Ezk. 31. 8. Tra- vellers in the East will remember the gigantic plane-tree at Damascus, still standing in 1883. It was then 13 or 16 ft. in diameter, and said to be the largest tree in Syria, and as old as the times of Abraham ! But " the fame of the plane-tree fills all antiquity, east and CHEST west," as Hehn concisely puts it. It is men- tioned only once by Homer. Wyclif's reading is planes in Gen. ; in Ezk. platanes (plane- trees). The Arab 'ardm is, however, a Rham- nus or thorn-tree. [h.c.h.] Chest. The exceptional translation inA.V. of two Heb. terms : (i) 'dron, the word used only for the Ark of the Covenant, except in two places, la) the "coffin" in which the bones of Joseph were carried from Egypt (Gen. 1. 26); CHITTIM 149 EGYPTIAN CHEST OR BO.X FROM THEBES. (Wilkinson.) and (b) the "chest" in which Jehoiada the priest collected the alms for the temple repairs (2K.12.9,io = 2Chr.24.8-ii). (2) g'ndzim, Ezk. 27.24 only ; elsewhere " treasuries." Chesulloth'. [Chisloth-tabor.] Chet'tiim (iMac.l.i) = Chittim. Chezib'. [Achzid, i.] Chidon' (iChr.lS.g), the owner of the threshing-floor at which the accident happened to the ark, on its transport from Kirjath-jearim to Jerusalem (2Sam. 6.6 ; Nachon). TheLXX. omits the first name, and reads Nahor for the latter. Chief of Asia. [Asiarchae.] Childnen. [Family.] Chileab. [Abigail ; Daniel, i.] Chilion' (Ru. 1.2,5, 4. 9), the husband of Orpah. [Mahlon.] Chilmad', a place or country mentioned with Sheba and Assur (Ezk. 27. 23). Probably Kalwadha near Baghdad The Targum sub- stitutes Media (Madai) ; therefore, Mez amends Chilmad to kol Madai, " all Media." Other identifications have been made, but are un- satisfactory. [T.G.P.] Chimham', a follower, probably a son, of Barzillai the Gileadite, who returned from be- yond Jordan with David (2Sam. 19.37,38, 40). David seems to have given him a possession at Bethlehem, on which, in later times, was an inn or khan (Je.41.i7). In 2Sam.i9.40 the name in the Heb. text is Chimhan. Chinne'peth, Chinnepoth' (Jos.i9.35), a city of Naphtali near Hammath and Rakkath. It is called Keneratu in the list of Thothmes III. (No. 34). The Jerusalem Talmud (Megilla, 1. i) makes its later name Guinosar. The " sea of Chinnereth " (Num.34.ii : Jos.i3.27). or of Chinneroth (Jos. 11. 2, 12. 3), was the lake of Gennesaret, and the name applied to the region generally (Deut.3.17, and R.V. iK.15.20 for Cinneroth). It is remarkable that while Gennesaret has been reudered " garden of princes " as a Semitic word, the old name, in the Akkadian language — Gin-nir-ta — would also mean " enclosure of the king." It may have been the name given by Canaanites of the Akkadian race. [c.r.c] Chi'os. The position of this island in re- ference to the neighbouring islands and coasts could hardly be better described than in the account of St. Paul's return voyage from Troas toCaesarea. Having come from Assos toMit}'- lene in Lesbos (Ac.2O.14), he arrived the next day over against Chios, the next day at Samos and tarried at Trogyllium, and the following day at Miletus (ver. 15 ) ; thence he went by Cos and Rhodes to Patara (21.1). At that time Chios enjoyed the privilege of freedom, and it is not certain that it ever was politically a part of the province of Asia, though only a strait of 5 miles separates it from the mainland. It is about 32 miles long, and its breadth varies from 8 to 18. It is mountainous and bold, and has always been celebrated for beauty and fruitfulness. In the last century it was well known, under its modern name Scio, for the sufferings of its inhabitants in the Greek war of independence. Chisleu. [Months.] Chislon', father of Elidad (Num.34.2i). Chisloth'-tabop' (loins of Tabor; Jos.l9. 12), a place W. of Daberath, on S.E. border of Zebulun, = Chesulloth (19. 18), a town of Issachar. Now Iksdl, a village at the foot of the hills of Zebulun, 2 miles S.E. of Nazareth. Josephus calls it Xaloth, the S. limit of Lower Galilee (3 Wars iii. i). Chittim', Kittim', a people descended from Jav an (Gen. 10.4; iChr.1.7; E.V. Kittim), mentioned with Elishah, Tarshish, and Ro- danim (Dodanim), as distributed among the isles of the Gentiles. In Num. 24.24 Balaam predicts that a fleet should come thence to destroy Assyria, and in Is.23.i,i2 it appears as the resort of the fleets of Tyre. In Je.2.io the "isles of Chittim " are to the far W., as Kedar to the E. of Palestine, and thence the Tyrians procured the boxwood or cedar which, inlaid with ivorv, they used for the decks of their vessels (Ezk. 27.6). In Dan.ll.30, " ships of Chittim "are to comeS. against the king of the N. Later, Alexander the Great is described as coming from the land of Chettiim (iMac.l.i), and Perseus, king of the Citims, is referred to (iMac.8.5). .Josephus (i Ant. vi. i) states that Cyprus was called Cethima, from Cethi- mus, its possessor ; and for that reason " all islands, and the greatest part of the sea-coasts, are named Cethim by the Hebrews," the name having been likewise preserved in Citium, now Larnaca. Though "the land of Chittim" stood primarily for the island of Cyprus, it could therefore be applied either to Rome, or to Macedonia, or to any oversea power likely to become prominent in the opinion of the Hebrews. With regard to the island of Cy- prus, the S. and E. was occupied by Phoenici- ans, the remainder being inhabited by Greeks. For this reason it was known to the Assyrians as Ydnana, or Yawanii (" of the lonians "). Sargon of Assyria (709 b.c.) set up a monolith with his own bas-relief at Citium, and Esar- haddon and Assur-bani-apli both received tribute from ten of its princes, whose names 150 CHIUN they give. See Hastings, D.B. (vol. iii. 1900), art. " Kittim," by J. Macphersoii. [t.g.p.] Chiun. [Remphan.] Chlo'e. Some members of the household of Chloe (probably slaves or freedmen) informed St. Paul of the divisions in the church of Corinth (iCor.l.ii). Of Chloe herself nothing is known. [e.r.b.] Choba (xw/3a; Jth.4.4,15.5), Chobai (15. 4), a place near Esora ('Astreh) and Salem (Sdlim), not far from Bethulia (Mithilieh). The Gk. probably represents a Semitic Hobah, or "hiding-place," perhaps at el Mekhubbi {the hiding-place), a ruin 9 miles S.E. of Jenin, and 10 miles E. of Bethulia, on the main road from Beth-shean to Shechem. [c.r.c] Chopashan' (R.V. marg. Bor-ashan), " spring " or " pit " of Ashan (1Sam.3O.30). Like Ashan, it is unknown. [c.r.c] Chora'zin (Mt.ll.21 ; Lu.lO.13), men- tioned with Bethsaida and Capernaum. Now the ruined village Kerdzeh, 2h miles N. of Tell Hum. There are remains of a synagogue, adorned in rude (ireco-Roman style, perhaps not older than 2nd cent, a.d., when Simeon- bar-Yohai is said to have built various Galilean synagogues. [c.r.c] Chozeba' (iChr.4.22), a place apparently in Judah ; probably Kueizibd, a ruin in the Hebron mountains, 2\ miles N.E. of Halhul. It was possibly the native place of the rebel Bar-cocheba, who in 135 a.d. brought ruin on his brethren the Jews. [c.r.c] Christian. In N.T. this word only occurs three times (Ac. 11. 26, 26. 28, and iPe.4.i6). Outside N.T. it is noteworthy that it does not occur in the earliest Christian writers, before the apologists, except in Ignatius, a native of Antioch, with which place St. Luke connects the origin of the word. Ignatius uses the name frequently, and also xP'<'"'''a'''S'e"' ^i^d XpK^TiavLands. With the apologists it becomes a natural term to use. In pagan writers the most important early references are the fol- lowing: Tacitus (Ann. xv. 44), writing (c. 116 A.D.) of the Neronian persecution of 64 a.d., says, " Neroreospoenis affecit, . . . quosvulgus Christianos appellabat " ; Suetonius, writing just afterwards {Nero 16), says, "Afflicti sup- pliciis Christian! genus hominum superstitionis novae ac malificae." Pliny, a few years earlier {Efy. X. 96), asks Trajan whether Christians arc to be punished for the nomen ipsum {i.e. of Christians) or the flagitia cohaerentia. The name also occurs in the well-known and pro- bably interpolated passage of Josephus about Christ (i« Ant. iii. 3), and perhaps in an inscription at Pompeii {i.e. prior to 79 a.d.). Much discussion has gathered round these references to the name but we may say that there are no real grounds for distrusting St. Luke's assertion (Ac. 11. 26) that it origin- ated at Antioch before 44 a.d. Neither the termination -anus, nor the early date dis- credits the statement. His notice of the fact implies that the word was in frecjuent use by the time he wrote, and its origin, therefore, a matter of interest. The reference in St. Peter implies that it was well known to those in Asia ^linor, to whom he was writing, and to the same ilate belong the allusions to the word in connexion with Nero's persecutions found CHRONICLES, BOOKS OF in Tacitus and Suetonius. The name was not given by the Christians to themselves, for they used other titles {ayioi, d5e\(poi, etc.), nor by the Jews, who would not have recognized Jesus as Christ. It was ccined by the heathen in- habitants of Antioch, perhaps by Romans in the retinue of the legxtiis, after the analogy of words like Caesariani, on the supposition that Christus was a proper name. Tacitus (see above) says the name was used by the vulgus at Rome, and his use of the imperfect appella- bat may imply that, once used only by the vulgus, it had come into general use by the time he wrote, and, as we have seen, it was, not long after, generally used by the Christian apologists. Pliny's question to Trajan sug- gests the interesting problem as to when Christians were first persecuted as such, and we may say that such persecution is implied by iPe.4.i6, and probably began with Nero. A variant form, Chr^stiani, is found in N in all the passages of N.T., and is to be connected with a proper name, Chrestus {cf. Suetonius, Claud. XXV.). To the name in this form allusion is made by Justin Martyr and others, who play upon the meaning of xpv^"'''^^- Har- nack, Expansion of Christianity {'Eng. trans.), ii. 15 ff. ; Zahn, Einleitung, ii. 40 ff. ; Lightfoot, Philippians and Ignatius, i. 415 ff.; Lipsius, ijbcr den Ursprung . . . des Chnstennamens ; Kehn, A us dem Urchristenthum ; "Christian" in Hastings, D.B. (3 vols. 1904), and Encyc. Bib. [ll.j.m.b.] Chronicles, Books of (originally one book), called in the LXX. YlapaKiLwoixhuv ■wpQiTov and Sevrepov — which is understood, following Jerome, to mean that they are supplementary to the books of Kings. The constant tradition of the Jews (in which they have been followed by the great niass of Christian commentators) is that these books were completed by Ezra or possibly by Daniel, and the internal evidence as to the time when they were compiled seems to demand that in their final form they must be put somewhat later. In Ne.3.29 Shemaiah, the son of Shechaniah, is described; but iChr.3.22-24 apparently takes us three generations later, and is thus parallel with the latest addition in Nchemiah (12. 10,11). The integrity of Chronicles has been impugned by various critics of late years for a variety of reasons. It is of course a compilation, but has high authority. The plan of the book becomes apparent immediately we consider it as the com- pilation of Ezra or some one nearly contempor- ary with him. Among the greatest difficulties connected with tlie Captivity and the Return must have been the maintenance of that genealogical distribution of the lands which was a vital jioint of tiic Jewish economy ; and the maintenance of the temple services at Jerusalem, which could only be effected by the residence of the jiriests and Le\ites (including porters, singers, etc.) in Jerusalem in the order of their courses ; this residence being only prac- ticable by the payment of the appointed titlies, first-fruits, and t)ther offerings, which was de- (lendent upon the different families of Israel i)eing eslal)lished eacii in his inheritance. Hence the obvious neeil for trusty genealogical records. Moreover, nothing could more eflect- CHRONICLES, BOOKS OF ually aid their leaders to re-infuse some- thing of national life and spirit into the people, than setting forth a compendious history of the kingdom of Judah which should embrace a full account of its prosperity, and trace the sins which led to its overthrow, and should also carry the thread through the period of the Captivity, and continue it on the other side ; and those passages in their former history would be especially important which exhibited their greatest and best kings as engaged in building or restoring the temple, in reforming all corruptions in religion, and zealously regu- lating the services of the house of God. The kingdom of Israel had utterly and hopelessly passed away, and the inhabitants of the land, being among the bitterest " adversaries of Judah and Benjamin," would naturally engage very Little of the compiler's attention. These considerations explain exactly the plan and scope of the two books of Chronicles and the book of Ezra. Many Aramaisms in the lan- guage of these books, the resemblance of the style of Chronicles to that of Ezra — which is, in parts, avowedly Ezra's composition — the rec- koning by darics ( i Chr. 29. 7, R. V. ), as well as the breaking off of the narrative in the lifetime of Ezra, are among other valid arguments by which the authorship, or rather compilation, of i and 2Chronicles and Ezra by Ezra is supported. As regards the materials used by him, and the sources of his information, they are not diffi- cult to discover. The genealogies are obviously transcribed, sometimes rather imperfectly, from public or family registers. A wide divergence in the age of the materials embodied in the books is at times apparent. Thus the information in i Chr. 1 . 43!? . concerning the kings of Edom before the reign of Saul was obviously drawn from very ancient sources. The same may be said of the incident of the slaughter of the sons of Ephraim by the Gittites (7.2 1, cf. 8. 13) and of the account of the sons of Shela, and their dominion in Moab (4.21,22). The curious details concerning the Reubenites and Gadites in ch. 5 must have been drawn from contempor- ary documents, while other records used by the compiler are as late as after the retiurn from Babylon, e.g. 9.2 ff. ; 2Chr.36.20 ff. Hence it is manifest that these books, though put into their present form by one hand, contain ex- tracts from many different writings, which were extant at the time the compilation was made. In more closely examining the sections of Chronicles which are to be found in Samuel and Kings, it is noteworthy that they not merely present a general resemblance, but are prac- tically identical. This has been demonstrated in the Deutero graphs (Oxford Press, 1894). The extracts are 57 in number, of varying length. The variations in the text between these two ancient documents show how liable the earliest copyists were to make mistakes, and also that the Chronicler sometimes introduced a later word for one current in the earlier age. But especially does a comparison of these docu- ments illustrate the method in which the long record in Samuel and Kings was put together. On the one hand, the Chronicler refers to certain authorities almost all through his book, be- ginning with Nathan, Samuel, and Gad for the period of David ; on the other hand, his history CHRONICLES, BOOKS OF 15l is demonstrated to be largely an extract from the books we now possess under the names of Samuel and Kings. The conclusion must be, that Samuel and Kings were the work of pro- phetic men contemporary with the kings whose lives they record. These men were a " school," founded by Samuel to record such events as should be instructive for after-ages. We must carefully distinguish their works from the state annals (frequently referred to as "the chronicles of the kings of Israel and Judah"), which have all perished. This view of the books of Samuel and Kings explains their authority, their instructiveness, and their freshness and vividness in style. The author of Chronicles made use of an early recension of these ancient documents, selecting what best fulfilled his requirements. Beginning with the death of Saul (iChr.lO), he records the election of David, the removal of the ark, the Messianic promise, David's successes, the numbering of the people, notable events in the life of Solomon, and outlines of the reigns of the kings of Judah. He omits many things con- tained in his authorities, such as the matter of Uriah and its sequel, also the sin of Solomon, and the history of the kings of Israel. On the other hand, he introduces a number of events which his authorities (as we now have them) did not contain. These include certain matters relating to David's administration, and also the accounts of the passovers held in the time of Hezekiah and J osiah. In these narratives it will be found that prophets are generally brought on the scene, and they may have left records which the Chronicler was able to use. Where the text of Chronicles is in the main the same as that of Samuel and Kings, it is interesting to notice occasionally a different way of putting the same thing — as in the numbering of the people, the dialectal differences, changes of spelling, and variations of numbers. It is sometimes possible to correct the text of the early source b}' the later extract, and at other times the earlier is clearly the right text. When we find such variations as 22 for 42, 700 for 7,000, 3,000 for 2,000, 4,000 for 40,000, 8 for 18, and 3 for 7, we learn how easily numbers were corrupted. [Number.] It is noteworthy that the LXX. has occasionally corrected one text by the other — unless, indeed, the Heb. copies were different when the Gk. translation was made. The general conclusion is that the record left us by the Chronicler is of high religious and historical value, and that (after making due deductions for textual variations) the work is one of supreme importance to the student of the times of the kingdom of Judah. It re- mains to refer to the Genealogies (iChr.1-9). The first chapter is extracted from Genesis, with slight textual variations. Parts of the chapters which follow may be tested by the contents of Exodus and Numbers, but were evidently extracts from later documents. They give us the family of Judah, including the house of David, up to the return from cap- tivity; also of all the tribes but two, viz. Zebu- lun and Dan. In some cases very little is told us — e.g. of Naphtali, the record of which is taken from Num.26 with no additions. It is observable that we have two copies of Saul's genealogy (iChr.8.29,9.35 ); also two of Samuel's 152 CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. — one ascending and the other descending (cf. our Lord's genealogies in St. Matthew and St. Luke). In these old family lists we get inter- esting variations of spelling and oniissions of names, showing that the ancient methods oi keeping genealogies were not quite in line with our modern methods ; whilst spellings varied in those days as much as they did in our own parish registers 300 years ago. The language of these books, as of Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther, and the later prophets, has a marked Chaldee colouring, and Gesenius says that " as literary works, they are decidedly inferior to those of older date." [r.b.g.] Chronology of O.T. and Arehaeolog-y. [The great importance of the bearing of archaeo- logical research upon the chronology of O.T. fully justifies at the present day the insertion of a separate article by an acknowledged expert viewing the chronology cliiefly from that standpoint of archaeo- logy, while the very many varieties of opinion as to O.T. dates (arising from the acceptance of varying data and schemes of harmonizing — see editorial note to next article) equally justify the presentation of two systems founded on different views. In all cases the writers of other articles have been allowed to suggest their own dates independently of either of the systems of the two following articles. — Ed.'] As far back as 722 b.c. the O.T. dates are well known to about a year, and agree with the statements of monuments and of classical writers. Before that date (the Fall of Sa- maria) there are differences of opinion, ac- cording as the Massoretic Heb. text, or the Gk. LXX., are preferred by scholars ; but, if we accept Hammurabi as the Amraphel of Gen. 14 (as Sir H. Kawlinson proposed), the claims of the Heb. text are the better. There are minor discrepancies in some of the cross- references of the books of Kings, showing corruption by later scribes — probably with a harmonizing intention. Thus it is, for instance, impossible that Ahab's son could accede in 2nd of Jehoram of Judah (2K.I.17) and also in i8th of Jehoshaphat (3.i). But, if we follow the main statements, the O.T. chrono- logy agrees with the monumental notices of ascertained dates of accession except in two rases — viz. (1) Ahab cannot be the Ahab of Sir'laa (or of Riblah), mentioned some 30 years after Ahab's death in a text of Shal- maneser II. (2) Menahem was reigning in 738 B.C., according to a text of Tiglath-pileser III., and appears therefore to have ruled some 20 years or more (O.T. 10 years), while Pekah (on the same authority) would have reigned only 4 years (O.T. 20 years). But these alterations nearly cancel one another, and cannot affect the totals by more than five or six years, as at present understood. As re- gards monumental dates, the Egyptian lists of kings unfortunately give no chronology at all. Scholars still have to depend on the corrupted text of Manetho (who wrote c. 270 B.C.) as ex- tant, second hand, in Eusebius and (ieorge the Syncellus, or in Julius Afriranus. It is, how- ever, known, from the Amarna tablets, that Amenophis IV. was contempurary with Burna- Burias of Babylon, who acceded c. 1440 B.C., and Egyptian dates require to be made con- formable to this fact, which agrees with all the O.T. notices. In Assyria, before c. 010 B.C., there is a gap in the history, after which CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. the Assyrian dates agree with O.T. except as above stated, and except that the expedition of Sennacherib to l.achish occurred in 703 B.C. — i.e. the 24th instead of 14th of Hezekiah. Before 910 B.C. Assyrian dates can only be fixed by the cross-references to contemjiorary Babylonian kings such as Nabu-kudur-usur (1154-1128 B.C.) and Burna-Btirias (c. 1440 B.C.). We thus depend on the Babylonian chronicle, which is continuous back to the foundation of Babylon in 2250 b.c This date also agrees within 18 years with that deduced by Rawlinson {i.e. 2232 b c.) from various statements by Gk. writers. Before this epoch no chronicles exist, and (in spite of popular assertions) the age of the first Akkadian civi- lization under Sargina (" the founder king ") is uncertain within 1,000 years, just as the date of Menes, in Egypt, is variously conjec- tured by scholars with a variation of some 2,000 years. The Babylonian chronology being the only one certain (up to 2250 b.c), the various statements require detailed notice. The statement that a certain liigal (" king "), called Zaggisi (or moi e probably Sargina), lived c. 4000 B.C. is a conjecture not supported by the one known text of this ruler, since this contains no date at all. The totals of dynas- ties in the Bab. chronicle are confirmed and controlled by various independent statements. (i) The text of Sennacherib at Bavian pro- bably fixes the accession of Tiglath-pileser I. of Ass5T:ia as c. 1130 B.C. (2) The same Ass\Tian monarch fixes the conquest of Babylon by Tiglath-adar of Assyria as occurring c. 1292 B.C. (3) Tiglath-pileser I. fixes Ismi- Dagon, ruler of Assyria, as c. 1850 b.c (4) The contemporary of Assur-Dan was Zagaga- sum-edin of Babylon (c. 1200 b.c). (5) NabCi- na'id (Nabonidus), the last king of Babylon, fixes the accession of Burna-Burias of Babylon as being c. 1440 b.c (6) He places Ham- murabi 700 years earlier — i.e. 2140 b.c." (7) Assur-bani-pal fixes the date of Kudur Nan- hundi of Elam c. 2280 b.c (8) Nabii-na'id also fixes Dungi of Uru, the suzerain of Gudea of Zirgul, c. 2800 B.C. (9) He supposes Sar- gina (" the founder king ") of Akkad to have lived c. 3800 B.C., but we have nothing to show how he came to calculate this date — more than 3200 years before his own time. (10) He also places Sagasalti-Burias of Babylon c. 1350 B.C. These statements are all very valuable as checking the Babylonian chronicle. — O.T. Dates. The Heb. and I.X.X. dates differ, es- pecially with respect to the earlier ages. The Heb. in 1K.6. i gives 480 years, but LXX. 440 years, from the Conquest to 4th Solomon. The L.X.X., in Ex. 12. 40, considers that the 430 years include the 21.5 whicli the patriarchs spent in Palestine from the call of Abraham to Jacob's descent into Eg>pt. The LXX. does not, however, agree with Gien.l5.i6 (" four centuries"; A.V. " fourtli generation") nor with Ac. 7.0 (" four hundred years "). The 480 years in 1K.6.1 also agrees best with Judg.ll. 26 (" three Innulred years "), and these state- ments tngetiier agree with ten others in Judg., which make the various judges follow one another. The prevalent idea that they were often contemporaries, in various jiarts of Pales- tine, is quite contrary to all O.T. statements, CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. and also to Ac. 13. 20 (" about four hundred and fifty years "), which is within some 20 years of the total details given in O.T. Lepsius sup- posed that the Exodus must be placed later than the time of Ramses II., because the city Raamses is noticed in Ex.1. 11. But the " land of Rameses " (Gen. 47. 11) is noticed even in the time of Jacob. For these reasons the Heb. text is preferable to LXX. Before the call of Abraham the LXX. gives 3,549 years up to Adam, but the Heh. only 2,083 years. In this case we have as yet no means at all of checking the O.T. chronology. From Solomon, however, down to 722 B.C. we are able to check the chronology of the kings of Judah by the contemporary chronology of kings of Israel, and the O.T. totals represent about 96 years from the death of Solomon to the usurpation of Jehu (who was contem- porary with Shalmaneser II.), and about 150 years from the latter epoch to 722 B.C. when Samaria fell. From these materials we thus obtain dates : — CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. 153 Years^ Eveut. interval B.C. Contemporary. Call of Abraham . . 0 2160 5th king of Bab. Descent into Egypt 215 1955 Hyksos. Exodus 430 1525 Thothmes IV. Conquest 40 1485 Amenophis III. Foundat. of temple 480 lOOS 2 1 St Dynasty. Death of Solomon . . 37 968 Shishak, ace. 966 Ace. Jehu . . 96 872 Shalmaneser II. Hoshea's 9th year . . 150 722 ist Sargon. Incidentally, these dates are confirmed by other monumental notices. Thus Abraham had lived over 10 j'ears in Palestine (Gen. 16. 3) when Ishmael was born, and Hammurabi's inroad (14.1) occurred just before, as the text now stands. Hammurabi reigned from 2139 to c. 2094 B.C., as calculated by Peiser, in agree- ment with the statement of Nabonidus. The raid occurred early in his reign, before he be- came independent of Chedorlaomer. There is thus a total discrepancy of only 10 or 20 years, at most, between the time of his inroad and the fall of Samaria in 722 B.C. — which is as near as we could expect to arrive in the long period of 14 centuries, and which is capable of several explanations. Again, it appears (Judg.5.2) that " Pharaohs t>T:annized " just before the revolt of Barak, which O.T. places c. 1312 b.c. — or in the reign of Ramses II., who conquered Tabor rather earlier. Sisera (whom Barak defeated) has an Egyptian-sounding name (it is not Semitic) — viz. Ses-ra, " servant of Ra." Moreover, when Gideon (6.4,6) defeated Midian, Israel was " greatly impoverished," c. 1265 B.C., and Menephtah (Merenptah) in his 5th year (c. 1265) says of Israel that it " is spoiled, it has no seed." These coincidences are independent of the appearance of the 'Abiri (or Habiri) in S. Palestine c. 1480 b.c, in whom Zimmern and others recognize the Hebrews after the Conquest in 1485 b.c. — Details of O.T. Chronology. In Judg.ll.26 Jephthah speaks of Israel as having conquered Palestine 300 years earlier. The details amount to 326 years, as below, but the periods of " rest " are given in round numbers, which may explain the discrepancy. These details are : — Years The war of Conquest, c. 7 Jos. 14.10 Oppression by Chushan-risha thaim . . 8 Judg.3.8 Rest under Othniel 40 „ 3.11 Oppression by Eglon . . 18 „ 3.14 Rest under Ehud and Shamgai 80 „ 3.30,31 Oppression by Jabin 20 „ 4.3 Rest under Barak 40 „ 5.31 Oppression by Midian . . 7 „ 6.1 Rest under Gideon 40 „ 8.28 Abimelech, son of Gideon 3 „ 9.22 Tola, judge " after " Abimelech 23 „ 10.2 Jair, judge " after " Tola 22 „ 10.3 Oppression by Ammonites 18 „ 10.8 Total to Jephthah . . 326 years. Years. ■ ■ 300 . Judg.11.26 . 6 „ 12.7 • • 7 „ 12.9 10 „ 12.11 8 „ 12.14 20 „ 15.20 .. 40 iSam.4.i8 . 20 „ 7.2 . ? 20 (as\xx6 Ant.-Kxv.q) .. 40 1K.2.11 4 „ 6.1 If we take the round number of 300 years (in Judg.11.26), we obtain a calculation to the foundation of the temple from the Conquest which agrees, within 5 years, with the 480 years noticed in 1K.6.1, as below: — Conquest to Jephthah Jephthah, judge Ibzan " aJter " Jephthah Elon " after " Ibzan Abdon " after " Elon Samson, judge Eli, judge Samuel, judge Saul, king David, king . . Fourth of Solomon . . Total to foundat. of temple 475 years. Regarding the 40 years of Philistine op- pression (Judg.lS.i) it is stated (15. 20) that Samson was judge " in the days of the Philis- tines," and this oppression continued till the beginning of Saul's reign (iSam.13.3). This indicates 20 years for the rule of Samuel. The ark (7.2) was in Kirjath-jearim 20 years in Samuel's time, and was taken out to war early in Saul's reign (14. 18). Samuel, if judge for 20 years, would have been not more than 60 when Saul was made king (see " old," 8.1), but he died some 10 years later (25. i). The length of Saul's reign is nowhere stated in O.T., but Josephus (as above) makes it 20 years, which is quite probable, as Jonathan was grown up at the time of Saul's accession (13.i,14.i), while Ishbosheth (Saul's younger son) was only 40 at the time of Saul's death (2Sam.2.io). The discrepancy between the round number 480 (1K.6.1) and the details 475 may give five more years between Saul and Samuel. — The later chronology of the kingdoms of Judah and Israel presents only difficulties of detail, due either to mis-copying or to harmonizing altera- tions ; and the actual statements agree gener- ally very well. Kings of Jiidah, 1st Period. From B.C. iK. 14.21, 15.1 968 ,, 15.1 950 Years. Rehoboam 18 (17 in Jerus.) Abijah . . 3 . . Asa ..41.. Jehoshaphat 25 (4th Ahab) Jehoram . . 8 . . Ahaziah .. i (nth Joram) Total . . 96 years. ,, 15.9,10 947 ,, 22.42 go5 ,, 22.50 881 3K.9.29 873 to 972 154 CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. This coincides with the parallel reigns of kings of Israel, if J cram of Israel reigned not a full 12 years. It is here assumed that the Hebrews, like the Babylonians and Assyrians, dated the first year from the beginning of the new year, and would have called the months from ac- cession to new year the " throne year " — this applying to Israel and Judah alike. Jeroboam Nadab Baasha Elah Zimri Omri Ahab Ahaziah Jehoram Total Kings of Israel, 1st Period. Years. I. 22 24 (3rd Asa). . 2 (26th Asa) o (27th Asa) II (alone in 31st Asa) 22 (38th Asa) 96 years. iK. 14.20 ,. 15.25 „ 15.33 „ 16.8 „ 16.10 „ 16. 23 „ I6.29 „ 22.51 2K.3.1 From B.C. 968 946 944 920 918 918 907 885 883 to 872 Omri's capture of Tirzah by the slaughter of Zimri (1K.I6.18) was followed by four years of civil war (vv. 21-23), but Tibni is not reckoned as a king. Omri's 12 years (ver. 23) date from Zimri's death, and are reduced to 11 by the cross-reference. Probably 5i in Tirzah, and 5 J in Samaria. Jehoram of Israel and Ahaziah of Judah were killed together by Jehu. Kings of Judah, 2nd Period. From zKings. B.C. Athaliah . . Joash Amaziah . . Azariah . . Jotham . . To 6th of Hezekiah Total Years. 6 .. .. 11.3 •• 872 40 (7th Jehu) .. 11.4,12.1 866 29 (2nd Jehoash) 14.1 .. 826 I5.I .. 797 15.5,32 745 16.1 .. 743 18.10 .. 727 to 722 52 2 (14 regent) 16 5 150 years. Kings of Israel, 2nd Period. From B.C. . 872 827 Years. 2Kings. Jehu ..28 .. ^ --lO-S^ Jehoahaz . . 17 (23rd Joash) . . 13.i . . Jehoash . . 16 (? 37th Joash) 13.io . . ^-^ Jeroboam II. ? 52 (15th Amaziah) I4.23 (O.T.41) 811 Zechariah . . i (38th Azariah) 15.8 . . . . 759 Shallum .. o (39th Azariah) 15. 13 ••759 Meuahem .. ? 21 (Monuments).. 15.17 (O.T. 10) 758 Pekahiah . . 2 • . . ■ 15.23 . . 737 Pekah . . ? 4 (Monuments) 15. 27 (O.T.20) 735 Hoshea ..9 •• ..17.1.18.9 -.731 to Til Total .. 150 years. The only numbers in this list not authorized by O.T. are: 52 years for Jeroboam II. (which, however, results from the cross-references to Judah), 21 for Mcnahem (O.T. 10), which agrees with the notice of his ruling in 738 b.c. —on a monument ; and 4 for Pekah (O.T. 20), necessitated bv the statement of Tiglath- pileser III. already quoted. After the fall of Samaria (in first year of Sargon, or 722 B.C.) the differences ot calculation amount only to two or three years in any date. Sargon took Ashdod in 711 B.C. (see Is.20.i).:_Tbe embassy CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. of Merodach-baladan (39.i) must have been sent to Hezekiah between 702 and 699 B.C. Jehoiakim must liave served Nebuchadnezzar (under Nebuchadnezzar's father) till his fourth year (for "three years," 2K.24.1), since it was then that Nebuchadnezzar acceded (Je.25.i; see 2K. 24.12). The dated contract-tablets of the dynasty of Nebuchadnezzar give a minimum interval between the death of Assur- bani-pal in 626 b.c, and ist Cyrus in 538 b.c, but we do not know that the latest dates of these tablets in any reign coincide with the last year of a reign, and later discoveries may therefore lengthen the total interval by a few years. The minimum is 82 years, which differs by four years from O.T. In Jeremiah (25. 11, 29.10) the " seventy years " of affliction date back from 538 to 608 b.c, and the same book (25.1,3,28.1,32.1,46.2) fixes the accession of Nebuchadnezzar in 608 b.c, which agrees with the chronology of 2 Kings, and is in no manner at discord with monuments. Texts of Nabo- nidus and of Cyrus show that the Median Gobrias (probably " Darius the Mede," Dan. 5.31) began the siege of Babylon in the summer of 539 B.C., after the surrender of Nabonidus at the " palace," which according to Berosus, as quoted by Joseph us {Contra Apion, i. 20), was at Borsippa, a suburb outside Babylon on S.W. The final attack was made about four months later, when the " king's son " was slain. His name we know (from another text) to have been Bel-shar-usur [Belshazz.\r1, and it is clear that after his father's capture he reigned at least four months (Dan. 5. 30), though the third year (8.1) of Belshazzar is either a clerical error for the third month, or repre- sents his rule in Babylon during the absence of Nabonidus with the army. Belshazzar appears as the "son," or descendant, of Nebu- chadnezzar (Dan. 5. 2, 18), who may have been his grandfather through his mother, or even through his father Nabonidus, since the genealogy of the latter is unknown from monu- ments, though his father's name is kno%vn to have been Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, who was a " wise lord." The chronology of Ezra and Nehemiah presents no difficulties if we remem- ber that the Aramaic passage in Ezr.4.7-24 pursues the history of attempts to frustrate the rebuilding of Jerusalem from c. 433 down to 424 B.C., the narrative then returning (5.i) to the history of Zerubbabel. — Authorities. The lists of Manctho may be studied in Cory, Ancient Fragments (ed. 1876). Manetho's dates are correct back to 528 B.c They are 10 years too late for the accession of Necho, and 10 years for that of Tirhakah, placing Shi- SHAK 33 years too late (there is also a difference of four years between the stated total and the details of 22nd dynasty), the date of his acces- sion being 966 b.c. (Brugsch), or 3rd of Rehoboam (1K.14.25). The dates given by Brugsch (Hist. Egt., 1879) only claim to be approximate, but fit with the known fact that .\menophis IV. was contemporary with Burna-Burias, who acceded in Babylon c. 1440 B.C. (.Amarna Tablets. Brit. Mus., Nos. 2, 3, 4. 6, 7). The Babylonian Clironirhs may be studied in Proceedings of Bib. Archaeo. Sac, Dec. 1880, Jan. i83i, May 1884, March 1899. The Eponym Canon, and other Assyrian no- CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. tices, are in Schrader, Cuneif. Inscrip. and O.T. (Eng. trans., 1885). The contract- tablets, in the time of Nebuchadnezzar's dynasty, are given in the Brit. Mus. Guide (1900), pp. 173-186. The cylinder text of Cyrus and those of Nabonidus are translated by Dr. Pinches in Records of Past (new series), vol. V. pp. 144 ff. The important text of Menephtah was first published by Dr. Flinders Petrie (who discovered it) in Contemp. Rev., May 1896. Biot's attempt (1831) to fix astronomical dates is based on a fallacy. Dr. Winckler's discoveries at Pterium {Deiit- schen Orient Gesell. No. 35, 1907, p. 26) show that Ramses II. was reigning in 1330-1320 B.C., thus confirming Brugsch's dates. [Pales- tine ; Syria.] Leading Events, b.c. From the Heb. text of O.T. and Monuments, etc. CHRONOIiOGY OF O.T. 155 Foundation of Babylon B.C. 2250 Call of Abraham . . c. 2160 Hammurabi ace. 2139 Death of Abraham . . e. 206a Descent into Egypt . . . . c. 1955 Exodus . . . . e. 1525 Conquest of Palestine . . c. 1485 Burna-Burias in Bab. . . c. 1440 Ramses II. ace. . . c. 1330 Barak's revolt . . . . c. I312 Menephtah ace. . . . . e. 1270 Gideon's victory . . c. 1265 Jephthah, judge . . c. I185 Samson, judge . . c. II48 Eli, judge . . e. II28 Samuel, judge . . . . c. 1088 Saul ace. . . c. 1068 David ace. . . c. 1048 Solomon ace. . . . . e. 1008 Temple founded . . c. 1004 Rehoboam ace. . . c. 968 Shishak ace . . e. 966 Omri ace. . . c. 918 Ahab ace. . . c. 907 Jehu usurps . . c. 972 Fall of Damascus 732 Fall of Samaria 722 Fall of Carchemish 717 Sargon takes Ashdod .. 711 Sennacherib ace. 705 „ takes Laehish 703 Manasseh acc. . . 699 Esar-haddon ace. 681 Assur-bani-pal acc. 668 Josiah acc. 644 N abopolassar ace. 625 A', cho in Palestine 613 Jthoahaz acc. . . 612 Jehoiakim acc. 612 Fall of Nineveh 609 Nebuchadnezzar ace. 608 Jehoiakin acc. . . 601 Zedekiah acc. . . 6or Fall of Jerusalem 590 Evil-merodach acc. 564 Nergal-sharezer acc. 562 Labasi-Marduk acc. . . 558 Nabu-na'id ace. 555 1st of Cyrus 538 Temple refounded 536 Cambyses acc. . . 529 Darius I. acc. . . 521 Temple resumed 520 ,, finished 516 Xerxes ace. 486 ,, marries Esther 483 Arlaxerxes I. acc. 465 Ezra at Jerusalem 459 B.C. Nehemiah at Jerusalem . . . . 444 „ leaves Jerusalem . . . . 433 Rehum's letter (Ezr.4.8) . . . . 432 Darius II. acc. . . . . . . 425 End of book of Ezra . . . . 423 Alexander at Tyre . . . . . . 333 ,, ,, Arbila . . . . . . 331 ,, dies . . . . . . . . 324 Era of the Seleueidae . . . . . . 312 Revolt at Modin 168 Judas Jlaccabaeus dies . . . . 161 Simon high-priest . . . . . . 143 John Hyrcanus high-priest .. .. 135 Aristobulus I. ,, . . . . 106 Alexander Jannaeus acc. . . . . 105 Alexandra queen . . . . . . 78 Hyrcanus II. acc. . . . . . . 69 Aristobulus II. acc. . . . . . . 69 Pompey takes Jerusalem . . . . 63 Antipater rules „ .. .. 47 Herod the Great acc. . . . . 37 Death of Herod .. .. ..4 B.C. or i a.d. For a discussion of the last date, see Chron- OLOGV OF N.T., where the present writer gives his reasons for preferring the date i a.d. . to the commonly accepted 4 b.c. [c.r.c] Chponolog'y of O.T. (an attempted hapmonizing')' [The occasional corruption of numerals in the Heb. text involves any harmonizing of Chronology in some amount of necessary emenda- tion ; hence any suggested system must be open to criticism in details, according to the data and theories adopted by the particular critic. The system set forth in the following tables and notes is therefore offered, not as infallibly correct (which no system can be), but as a suggested harmony which has been most carefully drawn up and may be useful as a general guide in these difficult questions. It is believed that no general survey of Biblical chronology has been put forward before in so clear a way as this tabular \-iew provides, and with such a minimum of emendation of the text of Scripture. As there has been, however, no wish to commit other writers to the suggestions of this article, they have been left free to adopt their own views, and hence their chronology is independent of this — e.g. an alternative chronology of the kings of Israel is given under Israel, Kingdom of. — Ed^ From the Creation to Abraham. It is easy for any student to construct from the ages of the patriarchs, as given in the Bible, a table of dates working back from Abraham to the Creation, as Archbishop Ussher (to whom the dates in the margin of A.V. are due) did in the 17th cent. But such a system is wholly unsatisfactory, for scientific evidence demands for the world, and probably even for the inhabited world, a greater age than is so obtained, and the ancient monuments now clearly bear witness to a considerable degree cf civilization which many scholars consider to date back a longer period than that allowed by Ussher before Abraham. (But see pre- ceding article.) The Bible, moreover, must not be held responsible for the calculations of Archbishop Ussher, and the Pentateuch itself makes no such claim to give data for chronology; for the "generations" given may not be successive ("son of" being very com- monly used in Heb. for " descendant of "), or the names may represent (as often in other parts of the Bible) the founder or head of a family, in which case also no successive chronology can be built up on them. Hence Biblical chronology, for which any degree of certainty can be predicated, begins only with the birth of Abraham, 156 CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. Abraham to David. The key to the chronology of this period is found in tiie fact that the Hebrews] uniformly reckoned the number of years between the giving of a divine promise and its fulfilment asi the figiu-es to be borne in mind. Thus, (a) St. Stephen speaks of "the time of the promise drawing nigh," and refers the promise of a numerous posterity when as yet he had no child (.\c.7.6, 17 ; Gen. 15. ' 2-5) to the time when Abraham was in Hebron. To this interval — citing Gen. 15. 13 — he gives 400 years, I the dates of the birth of Isaac and the E.xodus being 3Q0 years apart, in the following table (see note /3). Ten other years may have elapsed between the giving of the first promise to this effect and the second in Gen. 16. 10, which immediately preceded Isaac's birth, (b) St. Paul in Gal. 3. 17, citing Ex. 12. 40,41, gives the period of 430 years as intervening between the date of the giving of the Law on Sinai and the call of Abraham. This is the number of years separating items 3 and 16. The LXX. and Samaritan texts of the Pentateuch agree with the Heb. in making the affliction of the Children of Promise include the sojourning of the patriarchs in the land of Canaan, and thus to date from the call of Abraham in 1644. It is from this point of view that the text of Ex. 12. 40,41 is to be read. It is, therefore, im- portant to see how many years belong to the sojourn in Canaan and how many to that in Egypt. In Table I. we see that the birth of Isaac took place 25 years after Abraham's removal from Haran. Jacob was born when Isaac was 60, and was 130 when he went down into Egyjjt. He was 15 years old when his grandfather Abraham died (c/. Heb. 11. 9, which states that Abraham dwelt in tents "" with Isaac and Jacob"). This leads us to conclude that 215 years passed between Abraham's departure from Haran and Jacob's descent into Egypt, and 215 years between the Descent and the Exodus. The two censuses at Sinai and at Shittim (Num. 1,26) canncjt be allowed to influence this decision, as these numbers are subject to revision in common with all military and population returns of O.T. Other than this uncertain factor there is no reasonable ground for rejecting the division of the " 430 " into two equal periods. — Table I. and the Schedule of the Judges depend upon two suggestions: that as to the date of Hammurabi in note (a), and the theory held by many scholars that the judges were not successive. If" these two hypotheses are rejected. Table I. would need to be dated back just about the period required to count the judges as successive, and the subsequent tables would not be affected. TABLE I. ABRAHAM TO DAVID. No. Reference. Biographical and Historical Events. Date B.C. I Gen. 11. 26 .. Birth of Abraham in Ur of the Chaldees 1719 2 Gen.ll.31 •• Removal of Abraham from Ur to Haran, at about 5o . . 1659 3 Gen. 12.4 Call and migration of Abraham into Canaan, when 75 1644 4 Gen.l4.i-i6.. .■Vbraham rescues Lot from the camp of Amraphel (0), say 1640 5 Gen.l6.i6 .. Birth of Ishmael,in Abraham's 86th year 1633 6 Gen.21.5 Birth of Isaac, when Abraham was 100 1619 7 Gen. 25. 26 . . Birth of Jacob, when Isaac was 60 . . 1.559 8 Gen.25.7 Death of .\braham, at 175 (a) . . 1544 9 Gen. 30. 24 . . Birth of Joseph in Padan-aram 1469 10 Gen.35.28 .. Death of Isaac, at 180 . . 1439 II Gen. 41. 46 . . Joseph's promotion, at 30, 10 years before the Descent 1439 12 Gen. 46. 27,47, Descent of the 70 into Egypt. Jacob 9 .. .. 1 30 years old . . 1429 13 Gen.47.28 . . Jacob's death, at 1 4 7 1412 14 Geu.50.22 . . Joseph's death, at 1 10 1359 15 Ex. 7.7; Deut. Birth of Moses, 120 years before the 34.7 . . . . Entrance into Canaan 1294 16 Ex. 12.40,41.. Date of the Exodus from Egypt (Meren- ptah, 1234-1214 B.C.) 1214 (?) 17 Jos.5.6,10 .. Date of the entry into Canaan after 40 years in the wilderness 1174 18 Jos.ll.i8,23.i Joshua's 30 years in Canaan (Jose- phus 25, Talmud 28, Eupolemus 30) 1174-1144 19 See next page Times of the Judges and Saul . . 1144-1027 20 2Sam.5.4-5 . . Date of the establishment of the mon- archy under David (y) 1027 (a) Abraham was a contemporary of Amraphel of Gen.l4.i, who is un- doubtedly the Hammurabi of Babylo- nian history, "it is, as yet, impossible to fix with certainty the date of Ham- murabi (cf., e.g., Hommel 1772-1717 and Peiser 2139) from the cuneiform inscriptions of Babylon, as the names and dates of all the Babylonian kings have not yet been discovered ; in particular, the names are missing be- tween 1013 and 920 (see Dr. Sayce's " Babylonian Chronology " in .Appen- dix II. of Early Israel, pp. 280-283). In this interval the present \vriter suggests a Burna-Burias II. in the " 2ud dynasty of Babylon," to complete the infonna- tion of an inscription of Xabonidus the last king of Babylon (550 B.C.), that " yammurabi, the ancient king who — 700 years before Bunia-Burias — had built the Sun temple at Larsa." This allows us to fix the date of the rescue of I.,ot by Abraham from the camp of Amraphel at c. 1640. (j3) This is Dr. Petrie's date, who, however, allows that it may possibly have been from 5 to 10 years later. (v) The statement in iSam.7.2 that the ark abode a long time in Kirjath- jearim, " for it was 20 years," has dis- turbed many chronologists. The con- text shows that the annalist is writing prior to the anointing of Saul. To the " 20 years " must be added the 40 years of Saul's wars and the first 10 of David's reign. The whole period of the separa- tion of the ark from the tabernacle is thus more nearlv 7'> than 20 years. The first 20 years of the ark's captivity arc supposed to coincide with Uie 20 of Samson's judgeship ; and to have immediately preceded the election of Saul. THE TIMES OF THE JUDGES AND SAUL. The dates liere suggested of the Occupation (in or about 1174) and of the establisinnent of the monarchy in Judaii under David (1027), leave rather less than a century and a half for all the events of Joshua's later life, the rule of the Judges, and for Saul, who is included here, rather than under the monarchy, as being, to a J udaean writer, an illegitimate sovereign (Moore, Judgts, p. 41 IT.). The Biblical records of these times are very complete, every event of importauce in any part of CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. 157 the country having been written down and preserved. We have but to sort and rearrange these records to have a continuous and harmonious narrative of these years. This may be most successfully done in a schedule, which, omitting the first thirty years of the Occupation, as being those of Joshua'3 later years, gives a bird's-eye view of the years following his death. Episodes in the Military History of Palestine, occurring between the Death of Joshua ^ (Table I., Item i8) and the Accession of David {Item 20), a Period of 117 years, numbered B IN the Order of their Record. ** The periods of the various judges often coincided, the different parts of Palestine being at times under different contemporaneous judges ; hence, while the "recorded'' years total 407, they were all comprised in a period of W] years. 1 The Eastern or Trans-Jordanic Tribes. 2 The Northern Tribes. 3 The Mid-Palestine Tribes. 4 The Southern Tribes. 5 The Philistina or S.W. Border Tribes. I. Judg.3.7-11. Cushan's tyranny of 8 years, fol- lowed by a quiet of 40 years. 7. Judg.10.3,4- Judgeship of J AIR the Gileadite, i2 years. 8. Judg.10.6-12. 7. Ammonite oppression of 18 years, followed by Jephthah's rule of 6 years. Blank, 23 years. Recorded, 94 years. 4. Judg.4,5. The Canaanite op- pression of 20 years, followed by Sise- ra's defeat and by a peaceful period of 40 years. 9. Judg.l2.8-io. Judgeship of Ib- ZAN of Bethlehem in Zebulun, 7 years. 10. Judg.l2.ii,i2. Judgeship of Elon the Zebulunite, 10 years. 11. Judg.i2.14. Judgeshipof Abdon the Ephraimite, 8 years. Blank, 32 years. Recorded, 85 years. 5. Judg.6-8. IMidianite oppres- sion and spoliation as far west as Ga- za, near Samaria, and continued for 7 years. Gideon's war, contemporane- ous, followed by a peace of 40 years. 2. Judg.3.12-30. Moabite domination and octupation by Eglon of Jericho, 18 years, followed by 80 years of quiet in Judah and Benjamin. Blank, 19 years. Recorded, 98 years. 3. Judg.3.31. Shamgar's \ictory over the Philistines, pre- ceded and followed by inter\'als of peace. 12. Judg.13.1. The Philistine domi- nation of 40 years. during which Abim- elech was "prince" of Ephraim for a short time. 6. Judg.l0.i,2. Judgeship of Tol.\ of Issachar, who lived in Ephraim 23 years. Blank, 47 years. Recorded, 70 years. 13. Samson's judgeship of 20 years, " in the days of the Philistines " (Judg.l5.2o). " iSam.4r-31 describe ' later events in the 40 years' Philistine oppression and war, following the time when the ark was captured and separated from the tabernacle (iSam.7.2). 14. AC.13.2I. Saul's reign of 40 years followed Samson's judge- ship. These two officers — one wholly and one for his first 20 years — were contemporary with the Philistine overlordship of 40 years (item 12). Blank, 57 years. Recorded, 60 years. The Hebrew Monarchies. The following tabular view of the Hebrew kings is constructed on the principle that while the southern kingdom (Judah) followed the Babylonian precedent of dating its kings' reigns from the first day of the civil year — being Tishri i or September 21 — the northern kingdom (Israel) reckoned any fraction of a year as a full unit, and included the same year as part of the reigns both of the deceased monarch and his successor. The former plan is known as post- dating, the latter as pre-dating. This peculiarity in the Israelitish mode of computing the reigns of their kings would account for a difference of 14 years in the sum of the years given to Israel, 227 years having actually passed between the division of the kingdom and the fall of Samaria. As the recorded number of years during which the kings of Judah reigned while the northern kingdom lasted amount to 260, and in Israel to 241, it becomes necessary to show how the gain of 33 years in the Judaean monarchy occurred, the reduction in the records of Israel to 227 being efiected by subtracting the 14 duplicate years arising from their system of pre-dating. By the following considerations, 33 years are eliminated from the total of 260 in the annals of Jerusalem, though they still stand as a portion of the national history. (a) Athaliah, a female ruler and a blood-stained usurper, is omitted from the list of constitutional sovereigns and her years are included in the 40 given to Jehoash. A modern parallel is the dating, as is the case in all official records and legal documents, of the accession of Charles II. from the day of the death of Charles I. (b) Twenty-seven other years — completing the 33 — are gained by a consideration of the repeated statement that " Jotham the king's son was over the household, judging the people of the land " (2K.I5.5 ; 2Chr.26.21). King Uzziah's retirement from the duties and cares of State and Jotham's accession is thus seen to have taken place before the former's death, and is shown in these tables as occur- ing in his 41st year and in the 25th year of his reign. He lived for some 27 years longer (c/. 2 K. 15.2) in a separate house in Jerusalem, often spoken of as " king," but taking no part in the government, and died (ver. 7) late in the reign of his grandson Ahaz. These corrections with regard to the two reigns of Athaliah and Uzziah, with the variations of reckoning in the two kingdoms, are alone needed to correct the whole machinery of Hebrew chronology during the time of the kings, and to bring the two systems of Judah and Israel into accord. 158 CHHONOLOaY OF O.T. TABLE II. THE HEBREW KINGS. It must he bovfU in mind itl making the deductions that such an expression as iS Jeroboam Hence 947 minus 17 {not 18) = 930, the dale No. I Regnal Years. Kings of Judah. Accession, B.C. Post-dated years. Accession, B.C. Pre-dated years. Kings of Israel. Regnal Years. 40 David 1027 2 40 Solomon . . 987 — — — 3 17 Rehoboam 947 947 Jeroboam I. 22 4 3 Abijam 930 — — — 5 41 Asa 927 — — — 6 — 926 Nadab . . 2 7 — . — 925 Baasha . . 24 8 — — 902 Elah 2 9 — — 901 Zimri -f Tihni 4 1 ,, 10 — — 897 Omri 8/'^ II — . — • 891 Ahab 22 12 J- Jehoshaphat 886 — — 13 — — 869 Ahaziah . . 2 14 "Ij — — 868 „ with Jehoram 0 15 „ with Jehoram 866 — — -U2 16 — — 865 Jehoram . . 8/ 17 8 Jehoram . . 861 — — 18 — — ■ 857 Jehu 28 19 I Ahaziah . . 853 — — 20 0 (Athaliah) (852-846) — — — 21 40 jehoash . . 852 — — — 22 — — 830 Jehoahaz . . 17 23 — — 814 Joash 16 24 29 Amaziah . . 812 — — — 25 — — 799 Jeroboam II. 41 26 25 Uzziah 783 — — 27 — 759 Zechariah 6 m. 28 — — 759 Shallum . . I m. 29 — • 759 Menahem 10 30 — — 750 Pekahiah . . 2 31 — — 749 Pekah 20 32 16 Jotham . . 758 — — — 33 16 Ahaz 742 — — — 34 — 730-721 Hoshea . . 9 35 29 Hezekiah . . 727 Reference. 2K.2I.1. 2K.2I.19 2K.22.1 36 37 55 2 Manasseh . . Amon Josiah 698 643 641 Total of kings of Israel. Deducting 14 duplicate ycirs. 241 14 38 31 39 3 m. Jehoahaz . . Jehoiakim 610 609 2K.23.31 2K.23.36 227 40 II 41 3ni. Jehoiachin 598 2K.24.8 42 II Zedekiah . . 597-586 2K.24.i8 (A) In 1K.6.1 "the fourth year of Solomon's reign" is given as the synchronism of "the 480th year after the children of Israel were come out of the land of Egypt." The following figures make up 480 years, and the historian of Solomon's reign sccnxs to have used them in his calculations. To the 3 completed years of Solomon's reign and the 40 of David's, we add the 407 years detailed in the book of Judges, as those during which there was a state of either peace or war in Israel. This total (see note ** on prcccdint^ page) d(jes not include the 3 years following Gideon's deatli, during which the tribe of Ephraim made an abortive attempt at establishing a monarchy under his son, as these years are expressly included in the 40 years' peace secured by Gideon. To the 450 years thus obtained we add the 30 during which Joshua lived after the crossing t)f the Jordan. The total is 480, a complete justification of tlie text, if looked at solely from an arithmetical point of view. (B) The reigns of the two Jehoranis present a problem of great complexity. The course of events would seem to be as follows : In 869, the 2nd year of his reign, Ahaziah, the king in Samaria, had an accident (2K.I.2) which left him bedridden until his death, and compelled him to hand over the duties of kingship to his brother Jehoram. This was in the i8th year of Jehoshaphat's reign in Jerusalem (item 14). Ahaziah survived his injuries for 3 years, during which time there was a co-sovereignty of the brothers. Then Aliaziah died, and his brother became sole king ; this might have been dated as 21 Jehoshaphat. It is not, however, so dated in the text, because during Ahaziah's lifetime Jehosha- phat had taken his son — also named Jehoram— into partnership with himself on the throne of Judah, and the historian has preferred to date the northern Jehoram's years of sole power from the 2nd year of the southern Jehoram's co-sovereignty — i.e. 865. This southern co-sovereignty, again, is not de- scribed as having taken place in his father Jehoshaphat's 20th year, but (2K.8.16) in " the 5th year of Jehoram of Israel " — i.e. from the beginning of his rencncy (and see correction in table, item 15), it being added, "Jehoshaphat being tlicMi king f>f Judah"; but the "8 years" in ver. 17 refers to the time he was sole king (item 17). We thus fmd that the two Jehorams who ultimately became kings of Judah and Israel were not only contemporary sovereigns for 4 years, but that for some months previously they were simultaneously holding the positions of associate kings in Jerusalem and Samaria respectively. CHRONOLOaY OF O.T. 159 WITH THEIR SYNCHRONISMS— DOMESTIC. — i.e. " In the i8th year of Jeroboam" — means that he had then been 17 years on the throne, of A bij urn's accession : and so elsewhere. No. Synchronism. Reference. Remarks. (a) The deaths of Jehoram of Israel and Ahaziah of Judah took place at the same I See Table I. (y) rK.2.ii. time, B.C. 853. The Biblical 2 Temple built, 4- 11 Solomon 1K.6.1, 38,11.42... (A). record, however, follows the 3 Division of monarchy iK.12.20. action of Elisha (note D) in 4 18 Jeroboam I. iK.15.1. regarding the last five years 5 20 „ iK.15.9. of Jehoram's reign as uncon- 6 2 Asa iK.15.25. stitutional. >- 7 3 „ iK.15.33- (^) I.e. the southern scribe 8 26 „ iK.16.8.. Baasha attacked Judah counts from the accession as 9 27 „ iK.16.i5,2i. " 36 Asa" (2Chr.l6.i) ; sole king of Jehoram of Israel, 10 31 „ 1K.I6.23. for 36 read 16 {cf. item 8j and ignores the illegality of II 38 , 1K.I6.29. = 911 B.C. his latter years, which was 12 4 Ahab 1K.22.4r. recognized (see note a) by 13 17 Tehoshaphat 1K.22.5r. the northern one. 14 18 „ .... 2K.3.1 .. (B), (C). (7) Amaziah " lived . . . 15 5 Tehoram (Is.) 2K.8.16.. (B). For 5 read 2. 15 years " after the [death 16 2 „ (J.) .. 2K.I.17.. {0^) of Joash (2K.I4.17)— i.e. 17 Became sole king See Note (B). Joash d. 799, Amaziah d. 18 See item 21 2K.IO.36 (D). 783. 19 12 Jehoram (Is.) 2K.8.25.. 0). (6) Uzziah b. 798 ; crowned 20 An unanointed usurper 2K.II.3.. See introduction. (in 1 6th year of his age) 21 7 Jehu 2K.I2.1.. For 7 read 5. 783 ; disqiiaUfied (in his 41st 22 23 Jehoash . . 2K.I3.1. year) 758 ; rf. 731. He 23 37 „ 2K.I3.10 For 37 read 39. " reigned " — i.e. lived after 24 2 Joash 2K.I4.1.. (v)- his accession — " 52 years 25 15 Amaziah . . 2K.14.23 For 15 read 14. in Jerusalem" (2K.I5.2). 26 27 Jeroboam II. 2K.15.1 . . For 27 read 17. Items 27 and 28 :— The 27 38 Uzziah '1 . . 39 .. 1; 39 .. ^* 50 „ 52 „ ; 2K.I5.8.. end of the 38th year of 28 2K.I5.13. * All these are the years of Uzziah's age and beginning 29 2K.I5.17. Uzziah's age {&). of his 39th was 759. There 30 2K.I5.23. is no reason of time why 31 2K.15.27 For 52 read 51. this year may not have seen 32 2 " Pekah " 2K.I5.32 For Pekah read Menahem. four kings on the throne of 33 17 2K.I6.1.. For 17 read 7. Israel. 34 12 Ahaz 2K.I7.1. 35 3 Hoshea 2K.I8.1; cf. 9,10 Hoshea slew Pekah " in the 20th year of Jotham " (2K.I5.30), read " in An alternative harmon jzing, involving the 20th year of his [i.e. a change of about a year in most of the Pekah 's] reign." dates of accession, but not e iltering the prin- ciples of this chronology, v ras given by the present vsTiter in Solomon's Temple (2nd ed., R.T.S., 1907). (C) The fact that Jehoshaphat and Jehoram of Israel became allies in a campaign against Mesha, king of Moab (2K.3.5-27), derives additional interest from the contents of the Moabite Stone, describing the war. The years during which the allied sovereigns could have co-operated are narrowed down to the last 7 years of Jehoshaphat's reign (868-861). The victory commemorated by the Moabite Stone is veiled in the dubious phrase of ver. 27, " there was [or, came] great wrath upon Israel " (i.e. on the part of Jehoshaphat and the Judahites) for their panic and disgraceful flight from before the votaries of Chemosh. (D) The battle of Qarqar in 854, at which the whole contingent of troops sent from Israel had been lost, was the event which, in all probability, led to the prophet Elisha's sending a messenger to anoint Jehu as king of Israel, while still engaged as a captain in the defence of Ramoth-gilead (2 K. 8.28- 9.28). But he had long been designated for that office by the prophet Elijah (iK.19.i6). Some 3 years previous to the battle of Qarqar, it would seem from the chronological evidence that political action of some sort in Samaria had raised him to the position of king de jure, though he still remained in a private station. The evidence of which is this : Ahaziah of Judah is declared to have been made king " in the twelfth year of Jehoram " (2K.8.25). Jehoram of Israel had two beginnings to his reign, one in 868 as regent, and one in 865 as sole king. That the latter of these is the one referred to in the above-cited texts is apparent, as 865 minus 12 brings us to 853, the year of Ahaziah's elevation to the throne. That Jehoram was then alive, his death by the arms of Jehu at the same time as Ahaziah proves. But this was 4 years after Jehu had received his title to the throne. These 4 years, there- fore, were those in which " Jehu conspired against Jehoram " (2K.9.14). The fatal results to Samaria of the battle of Qarqar are seen in the visit of condolence paid by Ahaziah to his brother-in-law, and more especially in the easy conquest of Jehu over both kings. There were evidently not sufficient warriors left in Samaria to protect the person of the king. 160 CHRONOLOGY OF O.T. TABLE III. THE HEBREW KINGS: SYNCHRONISTIC DATES— FOREIGN. No. Reference. Hebrew King. Foreign Sovereign. Historic Event. Harmonizing Year B.C. I iK.14.25. 5 Rehoboam, 947-930. Shishak I., 952-930 B.C. Temple and palace spoiled 942 2 2Chr.l4.9,15. 10. 15 Asa, 927-886. Zerah (Uarsarkon I.), 930-894. Battle of Mareshah 912 3 Monuments. 4 Jehu, 857-830 (A). Shalmaneser II., 859-825. Battle of Qarqar . . 854 4 Monuments. 18 Jehu (B). The same. Assyrian tribute paid by Jehu 842 5 2K. 15.19. Menahem, 759-750 Assyrian general Pul or 1,000 talents of silver paid (C). P'ulu, called " king " by anticipation by Menahem 759-750 6 2K.I5.29. Pekah, 749-730 (C). Tiglath-pileser III. ,745-27. N. and E. Palestine lost . . 738 7 2K.I6.10. 10 Ahaz, 742-727 (C). The same. Ahaz visits Tiglath-pileser r Pharaoh So (Shabaka),"i { regent, 72s (Petrie, ]- I. £?>'/>/, iii. 282). ) at Damascus 732 8 2K.I7.4. Hoshea, 730-721. Envoys sent to Egypt from Samaria . . 725 9 2K. 18.9,10. The same. Shalmaneser IV. and Fall of Samaria and end of Sargon " the I aK.26.27-30 ; " Thirty -seventh rirst year of ,Avil-Marduk Jehoiachin released from Je.52.31-34. year of our cap- (Evil-Mcrodach), 5O1- prison in the 45th year of Uvity." 560 the national captivity . . 561 (a) Item 18 : " King " (when account was written, actually prince when events happened) Nebuchadnezzar commanded the army (cl. Note C). A similar s\iggcstion accounts for the emendation '■ prince " in item 11. O) The occasion of McroTia from 824-812. It therefore records events of from 30 to 40 years before its own date, and when exact particulars of Heb. names were perhaps not available. The insertion of Ahab's name here, as representing the reigning dynasty of Samaria, is not unnatural, since, though he himself had died 15 years before, a son of his was de facto, though not de jure, ruler. (For an alternative solution of the chronological difficulty, see Ahab.) (B) The monuments record that, in 842, " Jahua, son of Humri ", "of Israel," paid certain specified articles of tribute to Shalmaneser II. As 842 = 16 Jehu, there is no chronological difficulty here, but an etymological one only. He is called the " son of Humri " — i.e. Omri. This is a further instance of Assyrian ignorance of Heb. history, or of the less accurate use of names (or designations) than modern records demand; for the dynasty of Omri had been destroyed by Jehu. While neither Qarqar nor Shalmaneser II. is named in the book of Kings, we find there a statement of territorial loss which just such a series of events as the monument describes might produce. It tells how, in Jehu's day, Hazael, king of Damascus, as the ally or dependant of Assyria, " cut Israel short," and " smote them in all their coasts " E. of Jordan (2K. 10. 32-33). (C) The statement that Menahem paid to Pul, king of Ass\-ria, 1,000 talents of silver, in order to secure his peaceful occupation of the throne of Samaria, is explained by the Heb. idiom by which per- sonal titles and dignities afterwards acquired were often used by Biblical writers in anticipation of such official use (cf. note a). The occupants of the throne of Nineveh during the years of Menahem were Assurdan III. and Assur-ninari. Five years after Menahem's death, Pul became king of Assyria, took the throne-name of Tiglath-pileser (III.), though still called Pul in the Babylonian list of kings, and reigned for nearly 20 years. We must suppose his relations with Samaria to have been these : Some time during Menahem's life he had led an army to the West and received Menahem's tribute on behalf of the Assyrian power. In 738 — Pekah being then on the throne of Israel — as Tiglath-pileser he again invaded N. and E. Palestine and carried away many of their inhabitants (2 K. 15. 29). To this year belongs the inscription of one of his tablets (Schrader, Keilinschriftliche Bibliothek, vol. ii. plate 31), giving the name of " Menihimme of Samaria" as one of his tributaries. Though Menahem had then been dead 12 years, the use of his name on the tablet is explained by the fact (2 K. 15. 19) that during Pul's years of Assyrian generalship ^Menahem had paid him tribute. Pekah was in 738 the sufferer ; * and a few years later (732) his contemporary Ahaz of Judah also paid homage to Tiglath- pileser at Damascus. These two dates — 738 and 732 — are taken from cuneiform inscriptions, and cause no discord in our chronology. * " The tribute lists were sometimes carelessly compiled, and in error as to names " (Geo. Smith's Assyrian Canon, p. 179). TABLE IV. FROM THE RESTORATION TO CLOSE OF O.T. HISTORY. Note. — The chronology after the con- quest of Jerusalem (586 B.C.) presents few, if any, difficulties. Authentication of the early Persian successions are found in the inscription of Behistan, which gives the line of the Achaemenid kings of Elam and Persia to Darius I. (Hystaspis) ; while in the Canon of Pioleniy the successors of Darius I. are given to the fall of the Persian Em- pire. This Canon — written by an Alex- andrian scholar c. i^o a.d. — gives, to the time of writing, the names of the rulers of Babylon, the Egyptian Ptolemies, and the Romans from 747 B.C., with the number of years each reigned. It is an accurate and reUable document, and its figures are con- firmed for the years 893-666 B.C. by the Assyrian Eponym list. Each year of the Assyrian list bears the name of an officer called an Eponym. From the mention of a total eclipse which occurred in 763 B.C. is determined the date of all the remaining years. t " Darius the Mede " is to be distin- guished from the three men of the same name who sat on the throne of Persia. AU that the Bible states of him is that he was the son of a certain Ahasuerus or Xerxes, and was in the train of Cyrus the Great at the taking of Babylon. By him " he was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans " (Dan.9.i), and from him he " received the kingdom, being about threescore and two years old " (5.31). This was in 537, whereas Darius I. came to the Persian throne in 522. See the present writer's Second Temple (Murray, 1908) ; and for the usual identification with Gobryas, see Darius. 11 No. Reference. Foreign Sovereign. Historic Event. Year B.C. 1 Dan.5. 30,31 . . Accession of Cy- rus the Persian! Capture of Babylon by Medes and Persians . . 539 2 Ezr.l.1,5,13.. " I " Cyrus Edict for return issued 538 3 Dan.lO.i .. "3" Cyrus .. Conclusion of the 70 years' captivity . . 536 4 Ezr.3.8 " 2nd year " Foundation of after the Return temple laid 535 5 Hag.l.iff. ; "2" Darius I. Temple building re- Ezr.6.14 .. (522-485) . . sumed, after Sa- maritan opposition 520 6 Ezr.6.15 "6" Darius I. Completion and de- dication of the second temple . . 516 7 Esth.1.3 "3" Ahasuerus Invasion of Greece (Xerxes, 485- planned . . 482 465) 8 Esth.2.16 .. "7" Ahasuerus Xerxes' return from Greece 477 9 Ezr.7.i-7 .. "7" Artaxerxes Ezra appointed go- (464-424) . . vernor of Judah . . 457 10 Ne.l. 1-2.8 .. "20" Artaxerxes Nehemiah appointed governor of Judah 444 II Ne.13.6 ; cf. 5.14 "32" Artaxerxes Nehemiah returns to Persia, before his 2nd term of office 432 162 CHRONOLOGY 01* N.f, TABLE V. PERIOD OF THE HEBREW PROPHETS. No. Name. I Joel . . 2 3 Elijah .. Obadiah 4 EUsha . . 5 Jonali . . 6 Amos . . 7 Hosea . . 8 9 10 Micah . . Isaiah (1-39) . . Nahum II Zephaniah 12 Jeremiah 13 Zechariah (9-14) 14 Habakkuk >5 Ezekiel i6 Daniel . . >7 i8 19 30 Isaiah (40-66) 0) Haggai Zechariah (1-8) Malachi Reference. J1.3.2,I2 ; cf. 2 Chr.20.26 .. iK.lS.i: 2K.I.17 iK.22.47; 2K.8. 20-24 ; 2Chr. 21.16,17,22.1 2K.3.6-i2,13.i4 2K. 13. 4-6,14.25 2Chr.26.i6ff. ; Am.7.10 Ho.l.i.. M.l.i ; Je.26.i7 Is.l.i,39.i Na.3.7,8,1.1 .. Zeph.l.i Je.l. 1-3,25.1-3 2Chr.35.25 Hab. 1.6,2. 20 .. Ezk.l.i,2,8.iff., 20.iff.,29.i7 Dan. 1.1,10.1 .. Passim . . Hag.l. 1,2.10 .. Zech. 1.1,7.1 .. Mai. 1.8; Ne.5.14 Prophesied during the Time of Jehoshaphat, and after the ^victory over Edom cele- brated at Beracah — i.e. Wadv Bereihut Ahab, 891 ; Ahaziah, 869 ; Jehoram (Is.), 868-8S7 Jfhoram of Judah. Oracle against Edom for its raid on Jerusalem Jehoram (Is.), 868 ; Jehu, 857 ; Jehoahaz, 830. First years of Joash of Israel, 814 ff. Jehoahaz, 830 ; Joash of Israel, 814. Early years of Jeroboam II., 799 ff . . . Uzziah retired 758 ; Jeroboam II. d. 759. "Two years before the earthquake " (Am.l.i) — i.e. in . . Last years of Jeroboam II. (d. 759) and of Uzziah ; Jotham, 758 ; Ahaz, 742. First years of Hezekiah, 727 ff Jotham, 758 : Ahaz, 742 ; Hezekiah, 727 ff. (Uzziah.) Jotham, 758 ; .\haz, 742 ; Hezekiah, d. 698 Written between capture of Thebes (" No-amon ") in 663 and fall of Nineveh, 607 . . " In the days of Josiah." On Necho's advance from Egypt (see Table III., item 16) Prophesied from "13" Josiah to fall of Jerusalem (11 Zedekiah), and after. See Table III., note 7. Jeremiah's lamentations on Josiah's death (Mt.27.9; c/. Zech. 11. 1 2,13) Between rise of last Babylonian kingdom in 625, and destruction of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar Between 13th and 35th years of Nebvichadnezzar — i.e. 5th to 27th from Jehoiakim's captivity (7) . . Prophesied between last year but one of Nabopolassar and 3 Cyrus . . An appeal to return to Zion on issue of Cyrus' edict " 2 " Darius I., king of Persia ; cj. Ezr. 4.24,5.1 In 2nd and 4th years of Darius When Judah was under native governors appointed by Persian kings Outside Limit of Period of Prophecy. 886-862 891-868 861-854 868-814 ff. 831-799 ff- 765 (a) 761-727 ff. 758-727 ff. 758-638 663-607 641-610 628-586 ff. 610-586 625-586 593-570 606-538 538-536 520 520-518 485-432 (o) The total eclipse of the sun, from which all the years of the Assyrian Eponym Canon are counted, happened June 15, 763 B.C. \ reference to it is in the words of Amos (8.9). O) This is on the common assumption of the " second Isaiah," who wrote in e.xile ; but it is fair to add that another view argues the equal applicability of these chapters to the time of Hezekiah (<•.<;. Thirtle, O.T. Problems, 1907), in which case this would fit the date of the earlier part of Isaiah as given in item 9. (7) His ministry began in the 30th year of his own age and 5th of Jehoiachin's captivity — i.e. 13 Nebuchad- nezzar (c/. Table III., item 22). Similarly, 35 Nebuchadnezzar = 27th from Jehoiachin's captivity (Ezk.29.i7). Bibliography. — George Smith's Assyrian Eponym Canon remains indispensable to the student of Babylonian chronology. It should be supplemented by Dr. Sayce's volume on Early Israel for l)articulars of the first and second Babylonian dynasties. Mr. L. W. King's Chronicles concerning Early Babylonian Kings, in Luzac's series, are of immense importance, especially as bearing upon the (juestion of Amraphel and Abraham. A little-known essay on the period of the judges, by Dr. Flinders Petrie, is to be found in the Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archaeology, for December 1896. In tliis the construction of the book of Judges is taken to consist of records of Northern, Eastern, and Western, Palestine, an idea which has been expanded above. Moore's Commentary on the Book of Judges is good, but fails in its chronology. Many treatises on the chronology of the Hebrew kings assume that Pekahiah and Pekah are variations of the same name, and are thereby rendered unreliable. [w.s.c] Chponoloery of N.T. There are no serious difficulties as to the dates of the N.T. period, and wlurc authorities differ the variations arc mostly slight. The date 4 B.C. for the Nativity, and for Herod's death, is VVhiston's deduction from Josejihus (i-t Ant. .\iv. 5, xv. 14; 17 Ant. viii. i ; I Wars xxxiii. 8). Hut Herod reigned 37 years, and the battle of Actium (Sept. 2, 31 B.C.) was fought in his seventh year (i Wars xix. 3). He took Jerusalem in tlie sunuuer of 36 B.C. (14 Ant. xvi. 4). The date i a.d. for his deatli, tluis obtaiiwd, fits witli .Mt.2.i, l.u.3.1,23. A discussion of each of the crucial points will be found under the separate heatls — e.g. Ta.xinh, (of Cyrenius) ; Star of Wise Men, etc., and questions as to the dates of the N.T. writings are left to the articles on the several books, and to such articles as Canon of N.T. But it will be useful to add, in an easily accessible form, the leading historical (as distinct from literary) dates, as in the list subjoined : Leading Events. Nativity of Christ {26th of Augustus as 4 B.C. (or Emperor) i a.d.) Coponius, procurator of Judaea . . . . 6 a.d. Marcus Ambivius, procurator of Judaea 10 y4 nnius if «/ms, procurator of Judaea .. 13 Gratus, procurator of Judaea (ist of Tiberius) . . . . . . . . . . 14 Pontius Pilatus, procurator of Judaea 25 The Crucifixion .. .. .. .. 30 (or 32) Marcellus, procurator . . . . . . 35 Martyrdom of St. Stephen . . . . 36 Conversion of St. Paul . . . . • • 37 Marullus, procurator (ist of Cuius, em- peror) 37 Herod Agrippa I. ace. in Galilee . . 39 „ receives Judaea and Galilee (ist oi Claudius) .. .. .. ..41 Herod persecutes the Christians (Ac. 12. 1-23) 44 Cuspius Fadus, procurator . . . . 44 First journey of St. Paul . . . . 45 (or 48) Tiberius Alexander, procurator .. ..47 Council at Jerusalem . . . . . . 48 (or 50) Ventidius Cumanus, procurator . . . . 49 Second journey of St. Paul .. .. 49 (or 51) Felix, procurator . . . . . . . . 52 St. Paul returns to Antioch (ist of Nero) 54 „ at Ephesus . . . . ■ • 57 „ at Jerusalem (Ac.21.i8) .. 58 before FelLx (Ac.23.24-24.27) .. 58 Porcius Festus, procurator . . . . 60 St. Paul reaches Rome . . . . . . 61 /4/6inMS, procurator .. .. ..62 End of the book of Acts . . . . . . 63 Nero persecutes Christians in Rome . . 64 Gessius Florus, procurator . . . . 64 Revolt of the Jews . . . . . . 66 Fall of Jerusalem (Vespasian, emperor) . . 70 Chrysolite, one of the precious stones in the foundation of the heavenly Jerusalem (Rev. 21. 20). This name now denotes a choice variety (also called peridote) of the rather common mineral olivine, hard, transparent, and a yellowish-green colour, fine specimens of which are brought from Egypt, parts of Asia, and Brazil. But according to King, " the chrysolithus of Pliny, or at least his best sort, the Indian, was the gem " popularly termed the Oriental Topaz (i.e. a choice yellow variety of corundum), though some have sug- gested it may be the ordinary topaz (commonly a rich yellow) and others a yellow jasper, which were both engraved by the Egyptians from the i8th dynasty onwards. [t.g.b.] Chpysoppasus (Rev.21.20 only), now denotes an apple-green Chalcedony, found especially in Silesia. Darker varieties are called prase. Pliny, however, gives the chrysoprase as the third variety of his beryl, paler or yellower than the ordinary one, and probably means by it (according to Mr. King) the Indian Chrysolite. But a mineral ap- proaching the true chrysoprase, only with a bluish tint, and thus something like turquoise, has been found in old Egyptian jewellery ; and prase was used for scarabeoid gems in the Levant at least as early as the 6th cent. b.c. So the tenth foundation-stone in the walls of the heavenly city may have been a variety of green chalcedony. [t.g.b.] Chub (Q-IB, Ezk.30.5) is mentioned only once in Scripture, in a passage referring to Egypt, where the translations differ consider- ably. The name does not occur in the LXX., and it is doubtful whether the Greek Aleves, " Libyans," must be taken as its equivalent. CHtrRCH 163 Some manuscripts have the variant 3-133> kenubh, which might be compared to the Egyptian keneb, or gheneb, which, in the statis- tical tablet of Thothmes III., is the collective name for the nations of the S., the Ethiopians and the Negroes. [e.n.] Chun (iChr.18.8 ; R.V. Cun). [Berothai.] Chupch. (i) Meaning of the Name. The word church is found in the Teutonic and Slavonian languages generally; e.g. Anglo- Saxon circe, Scottish kirk. German Kirche, Swedish kyrka, Polish cerkiew. It is usually thought to be derived from Kiipta/fov, "the house of the Lord." Other derivations which have been suggested, but are now little accepted, are from the Lat. circus, circuliis, and the Gothic kelikn (a tower, or upper chamber). The Gk. iKKXrjcria, which " church " is used to translate, denotes those who are called out from their tents or houses to the assembly ; and so the assembly that is gathered together. In the LXX. it occurs frequently to translate qdhdl, ^.g. Deut.l8.i6. (2) The Church 171 the Gospels. The word €KK\T]aia occurs in the gospels only twice: in Mt.l6.i8, "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church " ; and 18. 17, " If he refuse to hear them, tell it unto the Church ; and if he refuse to hear the Church also, let him be unto thee as the Gen- tile and the publican." In 16. 18 the thought is closely connected with the kingdom of heaven ; for our Lord goes on to say to St. Peter, " I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven." Though the kingdom of heaven has a wider connotation than the earthly Church, yet the Church on earth is the kingdom of heaven in its outward and visible aspect. As such the Church has outward marks and organization. For admission into it baptism is necessary (Jn.3.3,5) ; to those who are in it the reception of the Holy Communion is com- manded (Lu.22.19) ; the'parables of the wheat and the tares, of the net cast into the sea, and of the man who had not on a wedding garment show that those of different inner character will be included in it and that some who have been in it will eventually be cast out from the presence of God, conditions which could not be fulfilled unless the Church was outwardly known and constituted (Mt. 13.24,38,41, 42,47- 50,22.2,11-14). The same fact of the visible nature of the Church is shown also in the pains taken by our Lord in the training of the apostles to be the nucleus of the Church. Yet the consideration of other aspects of the king- dom of heaven shows plainly that this outward organization is a means to promote inward and spiritual life. Repentance, humility, an hon- est and good heairt, perseverance, patience, the seeking of righteousness, the doing the will of the Father, the accomplishment of difficult tasks beyond the power of man unaided by divine grace, the recognition of claims on human love, the possession of characteristics going so deep in human life as poverty of spirit, mourning, meekness, earnest desire for righte- ousness, mercy, pureness of heart, the love of peace, the willingness to be persecuted for the sake of righteousness, are all needed in those who are to justify their place in the Church (Mt. 5.3-10, 19, 20,6.33,7.2 1, 18. 1 -4, 19. 14,23 -26; 164 CHURCH Mk.l. 15, 12.34 ; Lu. 8.10,15, 17.20,21). [King- dom OF God.] (3) The Church in the Acts. The same characteristics of outward marks and inward and spiritual life are seen intheChurcii in the history in Acts. Baptism was the means of admission (2.38-41,8.12,13,16,36,38,9.18,10. 47,48,16.14,15.33.18.8,19.1-5 ; see also Bap- tism). Those thus admitted by baptism were in the fellowship of the apostles (2.42) ; they formed part of a definite body of disciples (2. 41,47,9.26,27) ; in the earliest days at Jerusa- lem they took part together in the temple services (2.46) ; they received Confirmation in the Laying on of hands {8.14-17,19.6) ; they took part in the Holy Communion in the breaking of bread (2.42,46,20.7-11); they frequently, though not of obligation, sold their property for the common good of the whole body (2.44,45.4.32-37,5.1-11); as comprising one societv thev were known as the Church (5.ii,8.i,3;9.3i. 11.22,26, 12.1,5,13.1,14.23, 27, 15.3,4,22,41,16.5,18.22,20.17,28). While the Church was thus an outward society, spiritual qualifications of repentance and belief were re- quisite in adults who should join it (2.37,38,16. 30,31 ) ; and all that is told of the life postulates that spiritual earnestness and devotion were regarded as necessities for any who were rightly to make use of its privileges. At the first the Church was a Jewish community, though some of its earliest members were not Jewish by nationality, but Hellenistic Jews (2.6,0-11,14,4.36,6.1.3,5). But its limits were rapidly extended. Samaritans and the Ethio- pian eunuch were ccjnverted and baptized, and the Samaritans confirmed (8.5-17.27-38) ; that the privileges of the gospel might be received by the Gentiles was shown in the vision seen by St. Peter at Joppa, and the reception of the Holy Ghost by Cornelius and his company at Caesarea — so that baptism was administered to them by the command of St. Peter ; and, though at first there were doubts at Jerusalem, the apostles and brethren in J udaea eventually " glorified God, saying, Then to the Gentiles also hath God granted repentance unto life " (10,11.1-18). Some of the Hellenistic Jews preached at Antioch to (ireeks (11. 20, with the reading "ViWrjvas, which is more likely than 'EXXtji'io-tcis) ; St. Paul and St. Barnabas turned to the Gentiles at Antioch of Pisidia, converted Greeks there and at Iconium, and announced at .\ntioch that God " had opened a door of faith unto the Gentiles" (13.46-48,14. 1,27); at the Council of Jerusalem the way was made clear for missionary work among the Gentiles, and the recognition of their jiosition in the Church by the declaration that circum- cision and compliance with the obligations of the Jewisli ceremonial law were not to be re- quired from them (15. 1-20). As an indication of the connnon and united life of all Christians in one society, the use of the word Church will repay detailed examination. (4) The Church in the I'.pp. and the Revelation of St. John. The fact of the Uni\ersal Church, as including and comprising all hx al cluirc hes, which is imiilied in the terminology used in the Acts, receives further illustration in the epistles. There are abundant instances in them and in the Revela- tion of the use of the word Church to denote a local body, whether in relation to a house, a CHURCH city, or a country (Ro.l6.r,3,4 ; iCor. 1.2,16.1, 19 ; 2Cor.l.i,8.i ; Gal.1.2 ; Col. 4.15, 16 ; iTh. 1.1,2.14; 2Th.l.i ; Rev.l.4,11, 20,2.1, 8,12, 18,3.1,7,14). But these local bodies are called " churches " simply because they are parts of the Universal Church. Thus St. Paul speaks repeatedly of the Church as a whole — as one society. To it, as a whole, offence may be given (iCor.10.32) ; in it, as a whole, apostles and prophets and teachers have been set by God (12. 28) ; he had himself in the days preceding his conversion persecuted it as a whole (iCor.lS.g; Gal.1.13 ; Ph. 3. 6). The ex- planation of this fact, that Christians every- where and all local churches make up the society of the Universal Church, is gi\en in St. Paul's teaching that the Church is the body of Christ. It is a result of the gifts of naember- ship of Christ and partaking of the Holy Ghost communicated in baptism, and of the gifts of the Holy Ghost in confirmation [Baptism], and of the communion of the body and blood of Christ, to which he alludes as a customary and recognized part of the ordinary worship of the Church (iCor.lO.16-22, 11. 23-34), that the supernatural society of the whole Church is the body sometimes described as itself the Body of Christ, and sometimes spoken of as the body of which He is the Head. This doctrine of the Church as the Body of Christ, with its marvel- lous and far-reaching consequences, is not con- fined to one period in St. Paul's life, or to one set of his epistles (see II. c. supra). The doc- trine that the Church is the Body of Christ, and that Christ is the Head of the Church, is most clearly and fully expressed in Ephesians and Colossians ; but it has place also and emphatic expression in the earlier and very different epistles to the Romans and iCorinthians (Ro. 12.5; iCor.lO.17,12.12, 13,27 ; Kph.l.17,19, 22,23,4.11,12,15,16,5.23.30 ; Col. 1.18,24, 2.16- 19). With this Pauline doctrine that the Church is the Body of Christ, and that Christ is the Head of the Church, must be linked St. Paul's teaching that the Church is tiie bride of Christ. What is fundamental in this idea is found in iCorinthians in connexion with the view of Christians as members of Christ and in- dwelt by the Holy Cihost, and as forming part of a practical exhortation against sins of the body (iCor.6.15-20). A little later it appears more explicitly in zCorinthians in a statement that Christians have been betrothed to Christ with the object of being presented to Him in purity (2Cor.ll.2). Later, again, the thought is developed with care ami at some length in Ephesians, where a |)arallel is drawn between earthly marriage and the relation between Christ and the Church, and the thought is in close connexion with those of Christ as the Head of the Church and the Saviour of the body. This com|)arisnn leads uji to the con- clusion, " The twain shall become one flesh. This mystery is great ; but I speak in regard of Christ and of the Church" (I';ph.5.23-32). In thus describing the Church as the bride of Christ, St. Paul was carrying out the idea mys- tically contained in Ps. 45. 10-15. I'l his teach- ing the Church is so viewed c\en in the jiresent life. In the Revelation of St. John there is a jiicture of the Church in her heavenly glory, in which she is represented as the wife of the CHURCH Lamb, made ready for His marriage, as " a bride adorned for her husband," as " the bride, the wife of the Lamb " (Rev.19.7,8, 21. 2,9-11, 22.17). The aspect of the Church as the temple of God, founded on our Lord's words in Mt.l6. 18, is found, like the teaching about the bride, in different periods of St. Paul's writings. The general idea of the work of the ministry as a work of building is in iCor.3.io,ii. This leads up to the aspect of Christians collectively as the temple or sanctuary of God, inasmuch as they are indwelt by the Holy Ghost (3.i6), and later Christians individually are spoken of as temples or sanctuaries of the Holy Ghost (6. ig). The idea of Christians collectively as the temple or sanctuary of God occurs again in 2Cor.6. 16. Later, the idea is developed and more fully explained in Eph. 2.19-22. The Church, being thus the Body and bride of Christ, and the temple of God, has certain de- finite characteristics. In our Lord's teaching the idea of the external unity of the Church is conveyed in the expression "' one flock " (Jn. 10.16), and the idea of the inner unity of life which results from participation in the one life of Christ is suggested by the comparison of the vine and the branches (15.1-8). These two aspects of the unit}' of the Church are found in St. Paul's writings, and again at different periods in iCorinlhians and in Ephesians. If the different statements are put together, it is seen that St. Paul describes as marks of the unity of the Church the worship of the one God, the holding of the one faith, the reception of baptism and the Holy Communion, the reali- zation of the one hope of eternal life, and the possession of the Holy Ghost (iCor.lO.16,17, 12.13 ; Eph. 4. 4, 5). The ultimate destiny of the Church to be perfectly holy is shown in the picture of the bride in the Revelation, where it is said " it was given unto her that she should array herself in fine linen, bright and pure ; for the line linen is the righteous acts of saints " (Rev. 19. 8). That the attainment of this destiny was the purpose of Christ in choosing the Church as His bride is shown in St. Paul's statement that " Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself up for it, that He might sanctify it, having cleansed it by the washing of water with the word " (i.e. in the cleansing at baptism, when admission to the Church takes place), " that He might present " (i.e. in the future perfecting described in the Revela- tion) " the Church to Himself a glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but that it should be holy and without blemish " (Eph. 5. 2 5 -2 7 ; of. 2 Cor. 11. 2 ; Tit. 2. 14). That perfect holiness is the purpose and destiny of the Church is involved also in the truths that the Church is the Body of Christ and the temple of God. In addition to this purpose and destiny of perfect holiness, the Church as a whole is regarded as holy in her present life. St. Paul habitually addresses the whole Christian community in a place as the " saints " (R0.I.7 ; iCor.l.1,2 ; Eph.l.i ; Ph. l.i ; Col. 1.2 ; cf. Ac.9.32) ; and he used the phrase " a holy temple in the Lord " with ap- parent reference to the present and yet unper- fected life of the Church (Eph. 2.21). The Church is represented as having a mission to ajl races and classes of men. St. Paul teaches CHURCH 165 that the distinctions of race and class do not exist in relation to Christ (Col.S.ii) ; and in the representation of the destined future in the Revelation it is said that " the kingdom of the world is become the kingdom of our Lord, and of His Christ" (Rev. 11. 15). In this teaching effect is given to our Lord's own commands (Mt. 28.19 ; Mk.l6.15 ; Lu.24.47) ; the decision of the Council of Jerusalem (Ac.i5.1-29) and St. Paul's speech at Athens (Ac.i7.26) are carried on to their proper conclusions ; and there is shown the fulfilment of the prophecies conveyed in the mvstical sense of the Psalms (Ps.2.7,8, 22.27, 72.8-II). The union with Christ which makes the life of the Church is re- presented as being held together in the fellow- ship of the apostles, since the Church of the present time is built on them, Christ being " the chief corner-stone " (Eph.2.2o), and in the perfected Church of the future the names of the apostles are depicted as being on the foundations of the walls of the city (Rev.21. 14). Thus called, chosen, united, and built, the Church is the spiritual heir of the promises given in O.T. to the Israel after the flesh (Gal. 6.16; iPe.2.5-10,17,4.17.5.2,9), though the promises to Christians of being " partakers of the divine nature" (2Pe.l.4) surpass any of these older promises. Yei, in spite ot all tnese splendid privileges, the Church is not perfect, and some of those who are within her borders are sinners. St. Paul speaks of grievous sins on the part of those who are in the society of " the saints " (iCor. passim) ; cases in which one who is " named a brother " is " a fornica- tor, or covetous, or an idolator, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or an extortioner," have to be con- sidered (5.11) ; he contemplates the building of work of verv different qualities on the foun- dation Christ' (3.11,12) ; declares that the "treasure" of the ministry is "in earthen vessels "^(2 Cor. 4. 7) ; and describes the " great house "aof the Church as containing " not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth ; and some unto honour, and some unto dishonour " (2Tiin.2.2o). A different ex- pression of the same fundamental truth is in the teaching of St. John that, while no one who is true to the state of regeneration in which his baptism has placed him can acquiesce in com- mitting sin (ijn.3.9), nevertheless, the lives of Christians are (as a matter of fact) marked by some sins (1.8,9). (5) The Authority of the Church. The Church is represented in N.T. as having the guidance of the Holy Ghost and the authority of Christ (Mt.l6.i8,18.i7 ; Jn.l4.i6, 26,16.13; Ac.l. 2, 3, 2.4,14-36,15.28 ; 2Cor.2. 10,10.8; Gal.l.i,ii,i2 ; iTim.3.15). Thus, there is a divine sanction for the acts of the Church. This authority is seen to have been exercised. The apostles exercised authority as teachers and rulers in their witness to our Lord and the facts>f His earthly life (e.g. Ac. 1.8,22,2.32,4.33) ;1 in making known the con- ditions of entrance into the Church (2.38,16. 31,33) ; in instituting the office held by the " seven men of good report," and in appointing to it those on whom they laid their hands (6. 2-6) ; Tand in the proceedings of the Council of Jerusalem (15. 1-29). In connexion with these matters, a prominent part was taken by St. Peter at the appointment of a new apostle in 166 CHURCH the place of Judas (1. 15) and the declaration ofj,thc conditions of entrance intcj the Church to the first converts (2.38) ; and some inter- preters have assigned to him a chief place at the Council of Jerusalem (15.7,14), though there is a much stronger probability that the president was St. James, as being the chief at Jerusalem, while not so elsewhere (15.13,19). The selection of the two candidates from whom the successor to Judas was to be chosen by lot was the work of the brethren in general (I.15, 16,23-26). The " seven men of good report " were chosen by the whole multitude of the dis- ciples before their ai^pointment and ordination by the apostles (6.2-6). I'resbyters as well as tlie apostles were menibers of the Council of Jerusalem, and joined with apostles in writing the formal letter declaring the decision, although the decisive voices at the council appear to have been those of the apostles ; and both presbyters and laity shared with them in making the decisions of the council known (15.2,4,6,7,12,13,22,23). In the Kpp. St. Paul exercises authority in matters of doctrine {e.g. iCor.l5), and morality {e.g. iCor.5 ; iTim.l. 20), and Church government (see the Pastoral Epistles, passnn). To some extent the mem- bers of the Church in general, or the jiresbyters in particular, are associated with hin^ in this exercise of authority (iCor.5.4,i2,ll.i6,15.i ; 2Cor.2.6, 10 ; iTim.i.i.t ; 2Tim.l.6). [Hx- COMMUNICATION.] (6) The Ministry of the Church. Before our Lord's ascension the apostles had been gradually and at intervals constituted as the nainistry of the Church, with a commission to baptize, to administer the Eucharist, and to rule (Mt. 16. 19, 18. 17,18, 28. 19 ; Lu. 22.19 ; Ac.l.2,3 ; iCor.ll.24,25), and had received some anticipatorv gift of the Holy (ihost (J n. 20.22, 23). Through the out- pouring of the Holy Ghost on the Christian society, on the Day of Pentecost, those who thus formed the original ministry of the Church received power to make effective use of the ministerial authority which they had received from our Lord (Lu.24.4() : Ac. 1.4, 8). The first delegation of any part of their minis- terial position was in the ajJiiointment of the " seven men of good rejiort," chosen by th<' Christian community, and appointed and or- dained by the apostles by means of the laying on of hands (.•\c.6.2-6). The character of the work afterwards done by two of these, SS. Stephen and Piiiiii) (6.8-10, 8.5-13, 26-40), joined with the subsecpient almost universal tradition of the Church, makes it highly pro- bable that these were the original " deacons " in the sense of being tlie first holders of the third order of th<^ ministry, though it is not imi)ossible that they held a unifpie office, from wliich both the subsequent ]iresl)yterate and the subsequent diaeonatf^ were developed. [Dkacon.I There is no explicit mention in N.T. of the institution of the office of presby- ter, the second order of the nunistry. Pres- byters ar(^ referred to in .Ac. 11. 30, 14. 23, 15. 2, 4, 6,22,23,16.4,20.17,21.18,23.14 ; " I Tim. 5. 1, 2, 17, 19; Tit.1.5 ; Jas.5.14 ; il\'.5.i; 2Jn.ll; 3jn. 1. The name " bishoj) " {^irliTKoiroi) is api)lied to them in Ac.20.28 ; Ph.l.i ; iTim.3.2 ; Tit. 1.7 ; c/. iTim.3.1. fBisiioi'.J At ICphesus and Qrete St. Timothy and St. Titus are seen to CHUSI have possessed the authority of St. Paul to rule and ordain in the local churches of which they had charge {e.g. iTim. 1.3,2. 1,2,8,9,11,5.19-22 ; aTim.l. 13,4.2 ; Tit. 1.5. 13, 2.15, 3. 10,11). St. Timothy was ordained or consecrated to this office by the laying on of St. Paul's hands {5ia T^s (TTiOiaeus tQjv xf'pwi' /u<"'). together with the laying on of the hands of the presbyters (fiera iiridiaiui^ tQiv ;^eipa;>' tov Trpeajiureplov, 2Tim.l.6 ; iTim.4.14). In the Acts prophets and teachers are mentioned in 11.27,28,13.1-3, 15.32,21.10,11, as foretelling the future, minis- tering to tile Lord, laying hands on SS. Barna- bas and Paul either in a formal act of appt)int- ment or, as is much more probable, in sending them out on a special mission, and preaching. St. Paul mentions " prophets," " teachers," workers of " miracles," and possessors of " gifts of healings, helps, governments, divers kinds of tongues," as well as " apostles " in iCor. 12.28-30 ; and, " prophets," " evangel- ists," " pastors," and " teachers," as well as " apostlesT' in Eph.4. 11. Of these the word " evangelist " probably was a description of work done rather.'than the designation of an office ; " prophets " and " teachers " may ha\e denoted some such formal office as that held by the apostcjlic delegates SS. Timothy and Titus, or may also have been descriptive of work done. [Evangelist.] In the various parts of N.T., then, mention is made of the following officers of the ministry : (i) the apostles ; (ii) ajiostolic delegates, such as St. Timothy and St. Titus ; (iii) " presbyters " or " bishops," forming part of the local ministry ; (iv) deacons, also part of the local ministry ; (v) "prophets" and "teachers," supposing that these held a formal office. The rite of ordination consisted in the laying on of hands. The persons mentioned as ordaining are the apostles and the apostolic delegates, to whom must be added the " prophets " and " teachers " on the less likely hypothesis that their laying im of hands on SS. Barnabas and Paul was the ordination of these two s weighed (Gen. 41. 57,42.3,25,35,43.11,12,21). Intercourse with Tyre, with whom trade was carried on espe- cially by the tribes of Issachar and Zebulun (Deut.33.18ff.), appears only to have occurred at a later period. At the same period trade was carried on between Babylon and the Sy- rian cities, and gold and silver ornaments were common among the Syrian and Arabian races (Num. 31. 50 ; Jos.7.21 ; Judg.8.24). L'ntil the time of Solomon the Hebrew nation may be said to have had no foreign trade. Foreign trade was indeed contem- plated by the Law, but its spirit was more in favour of agriculture (Deut. 17. 16,17). Solo- mon, however, organized an extensive trade with foreign countries. He imported linen yarn, horses, and chariots from Kf^ypt (iK.lO. 22-2>)), and ivory, sandal-wood, monkeys, pea- cocks, pri'cicus stones, silver, and above all, gold lTA-ansing of tlie conscience " from past sin (Heb.9.14,10.22) ; and here again Christ affords the sole satisfaction of moral needs. [Atonement.] Thos. Aq. Summa I. a, q. 7<), I. 2, q. if) ; Butler, Sermons 1, 2, 3 ; Rashdall, Theory 0/ Good and Evil, bk. i. ch. 6. .An>' treatise of Christian Ethics — Newman Smyth is comprehensive ; and see also our art. Piiii.osopiiv. [c.l.b.] Conversion. [Cf. Salvation.] The term " conversion " does not occur except in Ac. 15.3, " the conversion of the Gentiles." The verb, however, occurs several times in A.V. ; but in R.V. is uniformly translated "turn," the retranslators evidently feeling it inadvisable to introduce a word commonly used in a technical CONVOCATION sense, and expressive of a particular view of grace, when a simpler word conveyed a satis- factory and sufficient meaning. Since, how- ever, the term is in frequent religious use, it seems advisable to appropriate it to a definite sense, as meaning the human part in salvation. It is granted that popularly it is used of the divine agency ; but this is a mistranslation, since the word is only used in the active of human agency in turning a sinner from the error of his ways, and in the middle voice of a man turning himself to repentance, faith, and good works. When used in the former sense there is no dan- ger of misuse, since human influence can hardly be so strong as to annihilate choice, as would certainly be supposed likely if the word was used (which it is not) of God. Any one can see the vast difference between " except ye be converted " and " except ye turn." The doc- trine of irresistible grace appears therefore to have come in by way of a mistranslation. That it has been productive of great moral hurt will hardly be denied, since it has caused men, and especially the young, to neglect personal effort while waiting for a divine compulsion. Pro- perly used, however, the term may be usefully employed as a summary of the human side of salvation, including repentance, faith, and COPPER 177 only. The phrase is applied to the sabbath (Lev.23.2,3) ; the first and last day of Un- leavened Bread or Passover (Ex.l2.i6 ; Lev. 23.7,8) ; Pentecost (ver. 21) ; Trumpets, the first day of the civil year (ver. 24) ; Weeks, or Firstfruits (Num.28. 26) ; first and last day of Tabernacles (Lev.23.35,36) ; to all these festivals (vv. 4,37) ; and to the Day of Atone- ment (ver. 27). See also the enumeration in Num.28.i8, 25, 29.1, 7,12. [h.h.] Cooking'- As meat did not form an article of ordinary diet among the Hebrews, cooking was of a primitive kind. Animals were only slaughtered for purposes of hospitality and sacrifice. On the arrival of a guest the ani- mal, a kid, lamb, or calf, was killed (Gen. 18. 7 ; Lu.15.23), its throat being cut that the blood might be poured out (Lev.7.26) ; it was then flayed and was ready either for roasting or boiling ; if the former, the animal was pre- served entire (Ex.i2.46), and roasted over a fire (Ex. 12.8) of wood (Is.44'.i6), or perhaps in an oven, consisting simply of a hole dug in the earth, well heated, and covered up. The Pas- chal lamb was roasted in the first way (Ex.12. 8,9; 2Chr.35.13). Boiling, however, was the more usual method of cooking flesh. Vegetables were usually boiled, and served up as pottage DO Q^ COOKING. (From Wilkinson.) obedience. It is not inconsistent with bap- tismal regeneration, but may be considered as its realization, and the acceptance by the will of a position freely given by God. It is, however, particularly applicable to the case of those who have through ignorance or wilfulness lived lives of carelessness or disobedience, and have gone in a way that is not good, and should therefore retrace their steps. " The way to heaven," said Bp. Selwyn, " is to turn to the right, and go straight on." In this series of articles (which includes also Salvation, Saviour, Faith, Re- pentance) it will be seen that the doctrine of substitution, and the doctrine of conversion, as popularly preached, both seriously depreciate the response of the will. Repentance is often slurred over, and faith restricted to trustful acceptance ; and in some cases obedience is thought to partake of the nature of " works." This presentation of Christianity seems to arise from the misunderstanding of St. Paul, and the omission of very distinct teachings both of Christ and the apostles generall}'. For a fuller discussion, see the writer's Crux Crucis (Simp- kin, Marshall : 1907). [M.S.] Convocation. With the prefix " holy " this was the technical term for a religious gathering on the sabbath and festivals. No servile work was to be done, necessary pre- paration of food only being permitted (Ex.12. 16). It occurs Is. 1.13, 4.5 (E V. assemblies), without " holy " ; elsewhere in the Pentateuch (Gen.2-5.29 ; 2K.4.38). Fish was also cooked (Lu.24.42), probably broiled. The cooking was in early times performed by the mistress of the household (Gen. 18. 6) ; professional cooks were afterwards employed (iSam. 8. 13,9.23). Co'os (Ac.21.1). [Cos.] Copper (Heb. trhdsheth), in A.V. always rendered Brass except in Ezr.8.27 and Je.l5. 12 (A.V. steel). This metal is usually found as chalcopyrite (sulphide of copper and iron), malachite (hydrous carb. of copper), or as an oxide ; occasionally also native, but rarely in the Old World. It was almost exclusively used by the ancients for common purposes ; for which its malleable and ductile nature rendered it practically available. Vessels of it have been found in tombs of kings of Egypt belonging to the ist dynasty, and the copper mines neaiWddy en Nasb (Sinai) were workedby them from very early times. It was known in Babylonia (Tel-loh) as early as 2500 e.g. We read in the Bible of copper, possessed in count- less abundance (2Chr.4.i8), and used for every kind of instrument : as chains (Judg.l6.21), pillars (iK. 7. 15-21), lavers, the great one being called " the copper sea " (2K.25.13 ; iChr.18. 8), and the other temple vessels. These were made in the foundry, with the assistance of Hiram, a Phoenician (iK.T.isff.), though the Hebrews were not ignorant of metallurgy (Deut.4.20, etc. ; Ezk.22.i8). We read also of copper mirrors (Ex.38.8 ; Job 37. 18), and even . 12 178 COR of copper arms, as helmets, spears, etc. (iSam. 17.5,6,38; 2Sam.2i.16). The expression " bow of steel," in Job20.24, Ps.l8.34, should be rendered " bow of copper." They could hardly have applied copper to these purposes without being acquainted with some means of hardening it. Antimony was perhaps some- times used, and Dr. J. H. Gladstone (see Proc. Bibl. Arch. Soc. Feb. 1894) ascertained that copper weapons from Tell el-Hesy, found in a pre-lsraelite stratum, contained (like others from ancient sites in Egypt) a consider- able proportion of sub-oxide of copper, and thinks the workers may have discovered a way of forming this during the smelting in order to harden the mixture. [Handicrafts.] The only place in A.V. where " copper " is mentioned is Ezr.S.ay (cf. iEsd.8.57 ; but the R.V. renders it " brass," as in Je.i5.12). These vessels may have been of orichalcum, like the Persian or Indian vases found among the treasures of Darius. In Ezk.27.i3 the im- portation of copper vessels to the markets of Tyre by merchants of Javan, Tubal, and Meshech is alluded to. Probably these were the Moschi, etc., who worked the copper-mines in the neighbourhood of the Caucasus. In 2Tim.4.i4 xa^K(vs is rendered " coppersmith," but the term is perfectly general. Cop (kor). [Weights and Measures.] Coral occurs only, as the somewhat doubt- ful renderhig of the Heb. rdmulh, in Job 28. 18 and Ezk.27.i6. The old versions fail to give any clue, but as the natural upward growth of the Corallium rubrum is well suited to the ety- mology of n/jHri//;, it probably is rightly rendered "coral." This was known to Theophrastus and Pliny, was worn for ornament, and supposed to possess medical and magical virtues, an idea lingering yet, especially in Italy. Pliny says that the Indians valued coral as the Romans valued pearls, and it is still highly esteemed in the far East. Coral often occurs in ancient Egyptian beads and amulets. [t.g.b.] Copban'. Heb. subst. connected with a verb meaning to bring near. In the Penta- teuch it denotes either (i) an animal or vege- table offering brought to the religious centre for sacrificial purposes (Lev. 3. 2, etc.) ; or (2) specifically that portion of the animal or offering which was presented by the sacrificant for God or the priests (Lev.3.i4,7.29ff., etc.) ; or (3) any offering brought near to God for sacred purposes — e.^. a portion of spoil (Num. 31.50), the gifts of the princes (Num.7). Sub- sequently used in vows (e.g. Mt.15.5 ; Mk.7.ii) to dedicate something to God, thereby with- drawing it from human use (c/.Pr.26.25), a practice by which other obligations were some- times evaded. In Mt.27.6 it denotes the sacred treasury. [Vow.] Jew- Enc. wii. ^bi. [h.m.w.J Cop'be (il-:s(1.5.i2) = Zaccai. Copd, iiichiding rope, and twisted thongs, was used for the fi)liowing, among other, pur- poses : For fastening a tent (Ex.35. 18 ; Is.54. 2). As the tent supplied a favourite image of the human l)ody, the cords which held it in its place represented the principle of life (Job 30. II ; Ec.12.6). For binding slaughtered ani- mals to th? horns of the altar (Ps.ll8.27). For yokinc animals to a cart (Is.5.i8) or plough (Job 39.10). For binding prisoners (Judg.l5. CORlNTfl 13 ; Ps.2.3 ; Ezk.3.25). For bow-strings (Ps. 11.2), made of ox and camel gut ; such are spoken of in Judg.16.7 (A.V. green withs, but more properly fresh or moist bow-strings). For the ropes or " tacklings " of a vessel (Is. 33.23). For measuring ground (2Sam.8.2 ; Ps.78.55 ; Am. 7. 17 ; Zech.2.i) ; hence cord or line became an expression for an inheritance (Jos.i7.14, 19.9 ; Ps.16.6 ; Ezk.47.i3), and even for any defined district (Deut.3.4). For at- taching articles of dress ; as the " wreathen chains," which were twisted cords, worn by the high-priests (Ex. 28. 14, 22, 24,39.15, 17). For fastening awnings (Esth.1.6). For drawing water out of a well, or raising heavy weights (J05.2.15 ; Je.38.6,13). Cords were also worn as a sign of humility (1K.2O.31). The materials of which cord was made varied according to the strength required ; the strongest rope was probably made of strips of camel or ox hide, as still used by the Bedouin Arabs. The finer sorts were made of flax (Is.19.9), and probably of reeds and rushes. In N.T. the term ffxoivla. is applied to the whip which our Saviour made (Jn.2.15), and to the ropes of a ship (Ac. 27. 32). Cop'e (Ecclus.45.i8 ; Ju.ii)= Korah, i. Copiandep. The Coriandrum sativum is found in Egypt, Persia, and India, and has a round tall stalk. It bears umbelliferous white or reddish flowers, from which arise globular, greyish, spicy seed-corns, marked with fine striae. Formerly coriander was regarded as possessing many virtues against sickness. It is mentioned in the Bible only as resembling manna (Ex. 16. 31 ; Num. 11. 7). Coplnth. This city, remarkable for its dis- tinctive geographical position, was eminent in classical history, and closely connected with the early spread of Christianity. So famous was its Isthmus that that name has been given to every narrow neck of land between two seas. But, besides this, the site of Corinth is distinguished by another con- spicuous feature — viz. the Acrocorinthus, a vast citadel of rock rising abruptly 2,000 ft. above the sea-level, with a summit so exten- sive that it once contained a whole town. The situation of Corinth with its E. and W. harbours is the key to its history. Its im- portance probably began under the Phoeni- cians, but the first authentic records show the Greeks here in a position of wealth and military strength; and in the latest days of Gk. history Corinth w;is still conspicuous. But before St. Paul's day it had been rebuilt and established as a Roman colony. The distinction between the Greek and Roman cities of Corinth must be carefully remembered. The new city was hardly less distinguished than the old, and was the metropolis of the Roman province of Achaia. It was a place alike of great mental activity and of commercial and manufactur- ing enterprise. Its wealth, its vice, and the profligacy of its inliabitants were proverbial. The worship of Venus was here attended with shameful licentiousness. All these points are incidentally illustrated in i and 2 Cor. Corinth is still an episcopal see. The cathedral church of St. Nicolas, " a verv mean place for such an ecclesiastical dignity,'' used to be, in Turkish times, in the Acrocorinthus. The city is now only a wretched village, on the old site. eORIN'THIANS, FIRS* EP. TO and bearing the old name, often corrupted, however, into Gortho. Pausanias, describing the antiquities of Corinth as they existed in his day, distinguishes clearly between those of Greek and Roman origin. Two relics of Roman work are still to be seen : a heap of brick-work which may have been part of the baths erected by Hadrian, and the remains of an amphitheatre with subterranean arrange- ments for gladiators. Far more interesting, however, are the ruins of the very ancient Greek temple. From the Posidonium, or sanc- tuary of Neptune, the scene of the Isthmian games, St. Paul draws some of his most striking imagery in iCor. and other epistles. This sanctuary was a short distance N.E. of Corinth, at the narrowest part of the Isthmus, near the harbour of Schoenus (now Kalamdki) on the Saronic gulf. Its exact site is doubtful ; but to the S. are the remains of the stadium, where the foot-races were run (iCor.9.24) ; to the E. those of the theatre, which was probably the scene of the pugilistic contests (ver. 26) ; and on the shore grow many small green pine-trees such as provided the fading ^vreath (ver. 25) for the victors in the games. Copinthians, First Epistle to. Date. Some time before Pentecost (iCor.16.8), and near the Passover (5.6-8), towards the close of St. Paul's visit to Ephesus ; therefore a httle before Easter, 58 a.d. — Place. Written from Ephesus (16.8,19), where St. Paul sta^^ed more than two years (see Ac. 19. 8, 10), after he had sent Timothy and Erastus to Macedonia (Timothy also to Corinth, Ac.19.22 ; iCor.16. 10), and had already determined to journey round through Macedonia and Achaia to Jeru- salem (Ac. 19.21 ; iCor.16.3). — Readers. Cor- inth, destroyed by Mummius in 146 B.C., was rebuilt by Julius Caesar, made a Roman colony, and under the care of the emperors was re- stored with wonderful rapidity to its former glory and luxury. It became a wide commer- cial city, the seat of the Roman proconsulate, of the Isthmian games, of the fine arts, of learning, andof the worship of Aphrodite. Here, in 54 A.D., St. Paul planted Christianity (2Cor. 3.6), on his second missionary journey, and stayed upwards of a year and a half (Ac.18.i- 17). He lodged with Aquila, his fellow-crafts- man, whom he converted here (18. 1,2), and afterwards with the proselyte Justus (18. 2-7), when Silas and Timotheus had arrived (18. 5), and Jewish opposition had caused him to turn to the Gentiles. This had the advantage of making the church from the first mixed (the Gentiles were in the majority, iCor.12.2) and very numerous (Ac. 18. 4, 8, 10), the most im- portant in Greece, the mother-church of the province (iCor.l.2). Only a few of the upper classes believed (I.26, etc., among them Cris- pus, the president of the synagogue, Ac. 18. 8 ; iCor.1.14) ; for the preaching of the cross did not suit their intellectual pretensions and their moral laxity. Some time after the failure of the Jewish accusation against St. Paul be- fore Gallio (Ac. 18. 12-17), he left Corinth with Aquila and Priscilla (who stopped at Ephesus), and travelled to Jerusalem, and thence through Galatia and Phrygia (18. 18-23). Meantime Apollos, an eloquent and fervid dis- ciple of St. J ohn Baptist from Alexandria, had CORINTHIANS, FIRST EP. TO 179 been brought to Christianity by Aquila and Priscilla at Ephesus (18. 24, etc.), and went to Corinth (19. i), where he preached Pauline Christianity, but in somewhat different phraseology, probably introducing terms from Philo. There was no divergence of doctrine (iCor.3.5,4.6,16.12), but some preferred the manner of the former teacher, some that of the new ; and thus partisanship crystallized. Then there came to Corinth Judaizing teachers, with leanings to St. Peter, having letters of recom- mendation (2Cor.3.i), trying to lower the authority of St. Paul (9.2), and exalt that of St. Peter (11. 5), and at the same time boastfully asserting their national privileges (5.t2,11.22, 1 2. 1 T ). The remainder, repudiating these three parties, formed a fourth, by dissociating them- selves from the Pauline, Apollonian, and Petrine sections, and (with something of phari- saic pedantry) professing special allegiance to Christ (I.12). — Occasion. The epistle was addressed to the whole church at Corinth, including all sections, and the Christians of Achaia. Before the present First Epistle, there had been a letter (not now extant, an alleged epistle in Armenian being a wretched apocr>T)hal production) from St. Paul to the Corinthians (iCor.5.9) ; but when he wrote he had not known of the divisions. It was from the household of Chloe that he received in- formation about them (l.ii) ; and on this account he commissioned St. Timothy to vis't Corinth (4. 17), going first with Erastus through Macedonia (Ac.19.22). Then there was the fact of unchastity in the church, of which he had already spoken in the last epistle, and which had now developed into a case of incest ( I Cor. 5. 1, etc.). In addition, there were the questions brought in a letter from the church by Stephanas, Fortunatus, and Achaicus, about such matters as celibacy (7.t, etc.), the eating of flesh offered in sacrifice, etc. (8.1). These messengers carried back his own letter in reply (16.12,17). — Aim. (i) To counteract the party divisions, and uphold his own authority as founder; (2) to remove the unchastity which had gained ground ; (3) to giveinstraction on the points mentioned in the questions ; (4) to communicate other instructions, suitable to the state of the church at Corinth, such as (a) disorders in the public assemblies ; (b) the gifts of the Spirit ; (c) the Resurrection ; {d) the coming collection. — Contents. Saluta- tion and exordium (I.1-9) ; ist main section : the party divisions, with detailed justification of the apostle's own method of teaching when compared with that of Apollos (l.io-4.2i). (2) The unchastity (ch. 5). (3) The bad habit of going before heathen tribunals, with a re- peated warning against impurity (ch. 6). (4) The question about marriage (ch. 7). (5) That about meats used in sacrifice, with an illustra- tion of the unselfishness he aimed at in his discharge of the apostolic office (8-11. i). (6) Directions as to irregularities in meetings for worship, the head-covering of women, the love-feasts and the Lord's Supper (ch. 11). (7) Discussion on spiritual gifts (ch. 12 and 14). (8) The magnificent description of the true ideal Christian love (ch. 13). (9) The teaching of the Resurrection of the Dead, in reference to a local mistake (ch. 15). (10) Injunctions about ISO CORINTHIANS, SECOND EP. TO CORINTHIANS, SECOND EP, TO the collection for Jerusalem, miscellaneous re- marks, and greetings (ch. 16). [Cf. the Introd. to this I'"p. in Meyer's Comm.) [w.m.s.] Copinthians, Second Epistle to. Occasion. Timothy had been delegated to Corinth by St. Paul before the composition of the first epistle (iCor.4.i7) ; and as he was expected to arrive later than the epistle (16. I of.) he would probably be able to communi- cate its results to his master. He is with St. Paul at the composition of the second epistle. The reason why no mention is made directly of what Timothy had reported is that he is as- sociated with St. Paul (2Cor.l.i) as the joint- sender of the epistle, and it would have been awkward to refer to his report, especially as the early effects of the first epistle were not favourable (2.12,7.5). St. Paul was not at Ephesus, but had travelled by way of Troas to Macedonia ; and besides Timothy, Titus had brought intelligence of these effects (2.12,7.15). He had been delegated to Corinth after the first epistle, and after Timothy had again arrived in Ephesus from the journey mentioned in iCor.l6.io, cf. 4.17. Titus was now to convey the second epistle ; and its occasion arose from the accounts first brought by Timothy, but afterwards chiefly by Titus, of the effects of the previous letter, and of the attitude of the Church of Corinth. — Aim. Stated by St. Paul himself (2Cor.l3. 10) " to put the church before his arrival in person into that frame of mind which it was necessary that he should find, in order that he might there- upon set to work among them, not with stern corrective authority, but for their edification. But in order to attain this aim, he had to make it his chief task to elucidate, confirm, and vin- dicate his apostolic authority, which, in conse- quence of his former letter, had been assailed still more vehemently, openly, and influenti- ally by o])ponents. For, if that were regained, his whole influence would be regained ; if the church were again confirmed on this point, and the opposition defeated, every hindrance to his successful jiersonal labour amongst them wf)uld be removed. With the establishment of his apostolic character and reputation he is chiefly occupied in the whole epistle ; every- thing else is only subordinate, including a de- tailed appeal respecting the collection " (Meyer). — Contents, (i) Troubles and suffer- ings before the return of Titus (I.1-14). (2) First plan of coming ; defence against fickle- ness (1-15-2. i). (3) Satisfaction at having changed plan ; time for repentance of incestu- ous offender (iCor.5. i) ; need now for sym- pathy and pardon (2C()r.2.2-i i). (.() Mention of meeting with Titus brings back the trium- phant joy of that moment, filling him with a sense of issues of life and death hanging on his words (2.12-17). (5) Has he a right to say this ? True credentials of effective preaching : new covenant, of which he is the jireacher ; contrast between tlie new and the old, for the benefit of the Judaizers (3.i-i8). (6) Tre- mendous responsibility of his commission ; his fitness and unfitness ; for the latter, infirmity and disease ; for the former, the life of Christ working in his life (4. i-iH), and the hope of life after death, in which the spiritual shall be free from the flesh, and clothed with new spiritual organism (5.1-9). (7) This hope does not ex- clude the fear of judgment, through which all must pass. At the risk of seeming beside him- self, he nmst urge that fear. Only so can men estimate rightly the transcendent importance of the message of reconciliation (5. 10-21). (8) Will the Church receive his message in vain ? By all he has done and suffered for them, he pleads for a place in their affections, above all, to give Christ the supreme place in their hearts. Only so can they be indeed God's children. Christ and Belial (the flesh) can have no part in common (6.1-18). (9) After his urgent appeal to the inconsistent, he turns to those who had been zealous against im- purity, and describes more in detail the delight he had received from the report of Titus (7. 1-16). (10) He gives them an opportunity of proving their repentance and goodwill, by joining heartily in the great collection for the poor Christians in Jerusalem and Judaea, who owed their poverty to their experiment in socialism ; explaining arrangements, and citing the example of Macedonia (8.1-8.15). (11) He then finally vindicates his authority as an apostle, dealing with the sarcasms and in- sinuations which had caused him such acute pain (IO.1-18). He charges the Judaizing teachers with intruding into his province, defends himself against some of their special accusations, and challenges them to a com- parison of their sufferings and labours with his own (11. 1-29). Even the infirmities with which they taunted him were, when rightly under- stood, a ground of confidence and strength (11. 30-I2.18). (12) Now for his projected visit. He looks forward, not without anxiety, to the pos- sibility of having to exercise his apostolic au- thority to punish both the party of licence and the Judaizers. His wish and prayer are that they may be restored to completeness without it. His own spirit is calmed, and he ends with words of peace and blessing (I2.19-I3.14) (Dean Plumptre). — Results. Within a few months he paid his promised visit, and was receiveil by one of the chief members of the Church (R0.I6.23). St. Titus and the unnamed brethren of 2Cor.8.8,22 (probably St. Luke and Tychicus) had done their work effectually, and he could tell the Romans that the collection had been made in Achaia as well as in Mace- donia (Ko.15.26). The Jews, however, en- dangered his life by a plot as he was about to embark at Cenchreae, and he had to change his jilans and return througii Macedonia (Ac. 20.3). After his first imprisonment at Rome, and his return to his former labours, Erastus, who was i)robahly travelling with him, and was chamberlain of the city of Corinth, stopped there (R0.I6.23; 2Tim.4.2o). About 95 a. d., some 35 years after this second ejiistle, Clement of Rome wrote an ejiistle to the Corinthians, which shows that, after a time of peace, the old evils had reappeared. A few rash and self- confident persons, placing themselves at the head of a factious party, had discredited the Church. Clement reminds them of the self- denying labours of St. Peter and St. Paul, and the faith and humility of Christ and the O.T. saints. The doubts of the Resurrection had reappeared, and were once more confuted by Clement. The authority of the bishops and CORMORANT deacons (cf. Ph.l.i) was disputed, and he urges submission, quoting the first epistle, esp. iCor.13. Later on, c. 135 a.d., the church of Corinth was visited by Hegesippus, the his- torian of the Jewish Church (who gives us the account of the death of James, bishop of Jerusalem). He touched at Corinth on his voyage to Rome, and stayed there several days, finding the church faithful to the truth under its bishop Primus (Euseb. Hist. Eccl. iv. 22). Dionysius, succeeding Primus as bishop, brought out all that was good in the church, and extended his activity to the people of Macedonia, Athens, Nicomedia, Crete, and Pontus. He bears testimony to the liberality of the church of Corinth to the poverty of other churches, and to the traditional liberality it had received from the Roman churches. He records the fact that the epistle of Clement was read from time to time on the Lord's day. One Chrysophora, like Dorcas and Priscilla, was conspicuous both for good works and theology (Euseb. Hist. Eccl. iv. 23) (Dean Plumptre). — Place. St. Paul was no longer at Ephesus, but had already arrived in Mace- donia by way of Troas (aCor. 2. 13,7.5,8.1,9.2 ; Ac. 20.1), where Titus, whom he had already been expecting in Troas ( 2Cor. 2. 1 2 , 1 3) , returned to him. — Date. Probably 58, the same year as that of the first epistle. That was shortly before Easter ; he left Ephesus after Pente- cost. He intended to come to Corinth, as he did soon after the second epistle (Ac. 20. 2). — Genuineness. This is as internally certain and as unanimously attested and undisputed as that of the first. Cf. Iren. Haer. ii. 7, i ; iv. 28, 33 ; Athenagoras, De Resurrect, p. 61 ; Clement, Strom, iv. p. 514 ; TertuUian, De Pudiciiia, 13. [w.m.s.] Copmopant, the translation in A. V. of the Heb. qd'ath and shdldkh. For qd'ath, see Pelican, shdldkh occurs only as the name of an unclean bird in Lev. 11. 17, Deut.l4'.i7, and has been variously rendered. The ety- mology points to some diving bird. The common cormorant (Phalacrocorax carho), which some have identified with shdldkh, ranges from Europe to India, while an allied species (P. desmaresti) inhabits the Mediterranean, Black, and Caspian Seas. Other suggestions for shdldkh are gannet and tern. [r.l.] Copn, the Heb. words so rendered in A.V. are ddghdn, " produce " (Gen. 27. 28), or "bread" (Lam.2.12) ; 'dhhur, "produce" (Jos. 5. 11) ; bdr, " clean " winnowed corn (Gen. 41. 35), or the Arab, bur, " wheat " ; and shebher (Gen.'^2i.T.), probably "ground" corn or " meal." Corn of Minnith in Moab, and of Pannag (Ezk.27.17), sometimes supposed to mean " Phoenicia " but otherwise " a sweet cake," was especially valued. Corn included wheat, barley, and spelt. [Agriculture.] " Seven ears on one stalk " (Gen. 41. 22) are not unknown in Egypt and on the bearded wheat of Palestine. Corn was exported in payment for labour in Solomon's time (2Chr.2.io,i5), with wine and oil ; meal (shebher) was sold in the market (Am. 8. 5). [Barley ; Rie ; Wheat.] [c.r.c] Copnelius (Ac. 1 0), a centurion of the Italian cohort, which probably consisted of Italians resident in Palestine. Judaea was garrisoned CORNET 181 not by Roman legions, but by cohorts of auxiliary forces raised from the non- Jewish population. Cornelius was uncircumcised (11. 3), and therefore not a full proselyte, but he belonged to the numerous class of those who feared or worshipped God, frequently men- tioned in Acts, from whom the Christian Church was largely recruited. His personal character was marked by devoutness {vv. 2, 22), zeal for the welfare of others (ver. 24), humility (ver. 25), teachableness (ver. 33). St. Luke dwells on the story of his conversion as affording the first or one of the first in- stances of the baptism of uncircumcised per- sons, and their admission to Christian fellow- ship. If there had been previous instances, as perhaps in 8.38, they could not compare in importance to the public action of St. Peter, the acknowledged chief of the apostles, acting under the guidance of a divine vision, and sanctioned by a great manifestation of the Holy Spirit (Ac.lO.44-46 ; c/. Gal. 3. 2). [e.r.b.] Copnep. — 1. The " corner of a bed " (Am. 3. 12) means the corner seat on a diwdn, and is the seat of most honour in a room. — 2. The "corner" of the field was not allowed (Lev. 19. 9) to be wholly reaped. It was the right of the poor to carry off what was so leit. In the later period of the prophets their constant complaints concerning the defrauding the poor (Is. 10. 2 ; Am. 5. 11,8. 6) show that such laws were neglected. The later rabbis (Mishna, Peah) fixed one-sixtieth as the portion of a field to be left for the legal " corner," and provided that two fields should not be so joined as to leave one corner only where two should fairly be reckoned. It is still a pious custom, which the Palestine peasantry derive from " the law of Abraham," to leave the corner of the cornfield unreaped for the poor to take. [c.r.c] Copnep-stone. (i) A stone, usually mas- sive, so shaped and placed as to bind together two walls of a building ; hence both a corner- stone and, as helping to support the structure, also a foundation-stone. The word has both meanings in Is. 28. 16, but foundation- and corner-stones are distinguished in Je.51.26 [cf. Job 38.6). (2) The capstone, which com- pleted the building (Zech.4.7 ; Ps.ll8.22). The word in both meanings is applied to our Lord (Mt.21.42 ; Eph.2.20 ; iPe.2.6,7). Cf. Is. 19. 1 3 marg., where rulers are spoken of as the corner or support of the tribe. [h.h.] Copnet(Heb. shophdr), a loud-sounding in- strument, made of the horn of a ram, an ibex, or (sometimes) an ox, and used by the ancient Hebrews for signals, for announcing the " Ju- bile " (Lev.25.9), for proclaiming the new year, for the purposes of war (Je.4.5,19 ; cf. Job 39.24,25), as well as by the sentinels at the watch-towers in giving notice of the approach of an enemy (Ezk.33.4-6). shophdr is gene- rally rendered in E.V. " trumpet," e.g. in all the passages already cited, but "cornet" (the more correct translation) is used in iChr.15. 28, 2Chr.i5.14, Ps.98.6, and Ho.5.8. " Cor- net " is also employed in Dan. 3. 5, 7,10,15, for the Aram, qeren (lit. "a horn"). Oriental scholars for the most part consider shophdr and qeren to be the same instrument ; but some critics regard shophdr and hafof^rd as 182 cos belonging to the species of qeren, the usual term for a horn. The generally received opinion is that qeren was the crooked horn, and shophar the long and straight one (Mishna, Rosh-hassanah iii. 2-5). The silver trumpets (hacocrd) which Moses was charged to furnish for the Israelites were to be used for calling together the assembly, for the journeying of the camps, for sounding the alarm of war, and for celebrating the sacrifices on festivals and new moons (Num.10. i-io). In the age of Solomon 120 trumpets were used in the temple worship (2Chr.5.i2). yobhel is used sometimes for the "year of Jubile " (cf. Lev. 25. 13, 15 with 25.28,30), because of its having been in- troduced by the blowing of a yobhel, or ram's horn. The sounding of the cornet was the distinguishing ritual feature of the festival ap- pointed by Moses to be held on the first day of the seventh month as " a day of blowing of trumpets " (Num.29.i), or " a memorial of blowing of trumpets " (Lev.23.24) ; and that rite is still observed by the Jews in their cele- bration of the same festival, which they now call " the day of memorial," and also " New Year." The intention of the appointment of the festival appears to be set forth in J 1.2. 15 : " Blow the trumpet in Zion, sanctify a fast, call a solemn assembly." Agreeably to this sequence, the festival seems to be the prelude and preparation for the Day of Atonement. The word " solenm assembly " applies to that on the eighth day (Lev.23.36), the closing rite of the festive cycle of Tishri. The cornet is also sounded in the synagogue at the close of the service for the Day of Atonement, and, amongst Jews who adopt the ritual of the Sephardim, on the seventh day of the feast of Tabernacles, known by the post-Biblical de- nomination of " the Great Hosannah." A.V. also renders by " cornets" theHeb. tn'na'an'im (2Sam.6.5), but here the R.V. marg. sistra seems the best rendering. In Ezk.7.14 "trumpet" represents the Heb. tdqo'a' ; pro- perly a " blast " (c/. Ps.150.3). [Pipe; Shawm.] Cos or Co'os (now Stanchio or Sianko). This small island of the Grecian Archipelago has several interesting points of connexion with the Jews. It was one of the places which contained Jewish residents (1Mac.i5.23). Josephus, quoting Strabo, mentions that the ».. crali aiitl bow in else, all witliin clotted ti-;trai)Kaciim of C()S. Oiv. : Head of young Hercules to right. ,. KnioN *"'■ MoiXmN- sr|u.ire. Jews had a great amount of treasure stored tliere during the Mithridatir war, and also that J ulius Caesar issued an edict in favour of the Jews of Cos. Herod the Great conferred COSMOGONY many favours on the island. St. Paul, on the return from his third missionary journey, passed the night here, after sailing from Miletus. It was celebrated for its light woven fabrics and for its wines ; also for a temple of Aesculapius, which was virtually a museum of anatomy and pathology. The em- peror Claudius bestowed upon Cos the privi- lege of a free state. The chief town (of the same name) was on the N.E. near a promon- tory called Scandarium ; and perhaps it is to the town that reference is made in Ac.21.i. Co'sam (Lu.3.28), an ancestor of Joseph, between David and Zerubbabel. [c.r.d.b.] Cosmogrony. The Biblical conception of the origin and nature of the material universe must be inferred from a variety of poetical and rhetorical passages primarily designed to convev spiritual truth. The principal of these are Gen. 1-2.7; iK.8.27; Job 9.5-q,26. 7-14.28. 9-11,38 ; Ps.8.3, 33.6-9,65.6-13,74.13-17,89.9- 13,90.2,104; Pr.8.23-29 ; Is.5i.6 ; Je.5.22,31. 35 ; Jn. 1.1-3 ; Ac.14.15-17,17.24-29 ; K0.I.20 ; Col. 1.16; Heb.l.2,10-14,3.4,11.3 ; 2Pe. 3.4-10. [Creation.] While it would be unfair to im- pose upon these the strict literal interpretation appropriate to a scientific treatise, it is not difficult to see that there is a restraint upon the sacred writers in their representation of God's relation to the universe which did not rest upon those who framed the cosmogonies of other ancient nations, or even upon the commenta- tors and poets and scientific men of later times. The Babylonian cosmology, with which it would be most naturally compared, is but im- perfectly presented in the cuneiform tablets by reason of their fragmentary character, onlv a small portion having been preserved. [See Plate XXV.] But from what remains it would seem that matter was regarded as eternal. The opening passage reads : Long since, when of the gods not one had arisen . . . Then were made the gods. Upon the creation of light, Tiamat rebelled, and drew a number of the gods after her; where- upon Marduk volunteered to conquer her. After accomplishing this, he cut her body in two halves, and out of them made the heaven and the earth. The furtlier account is too fragmentary to be of any service. From Berosus, however, we learn that Qd/xTf was cut asunder by Bel. and her blood mixed with clay, from which man was formed. All other non- Biblical cosmologies are equally fantastic and absurd. According to the l-^gyptian concep- tion, the latent germs of Being slept in the bosom of tlie dark flood " Nut," until a demi- urge moulded one of them into an egg, from which the world was evolved. This conception of a world-egg was very general. The Indian mytht)logy represents the " self-existent," the " wonderful," as evolving from a sleeping universe which was pre-existent. This self- existent Being, having created the waters, placed in them a seed, which became a golden egg. in which Brahma, the progenitor of the world, strove for a year, when he split it in twain, and from the upper part made the heavens, and from the under jiart the earth. According to the Polynesian myths, it was a bird which laid the world-egg. Nor are the COSMOGONY Gk. myths, with their hundred-handed giants and Titans, less fantastic. Even Plato taught that the earth was the centre of the universe, and that its motions were produced by what he called the '"soul of the world"; while the scientific astronomer, Ptolemy, distinctly taught the geo-centric theory of the universe. If Milton's Paradise Lost were taken as prose, and interpreted as some would interpret Gen.l, its cosmogony would appear extremely fanciful. How contrary to modern science and to the restrained statements of Scripture is the whole seventh book, of which the following is a fair specimen : The grassy clods now calved ; now half appeared The tawny lion, pawing to get free His hinder parts, then springs as broke from bonds, And rampant shakes his brindled mane. Yet popular ideas of Biblical cosmogony are often derived from Milton, rather than from the Bible. There are two words in Genesis to represent the process of creation, namely, hard and 'dsd, of which bard (to create) is used only when speaking of the first creation of the heavens and the earth (Gen.l. i), of the creation of animals (I.21) and man (I.27) ; elsewhere the less specific word 'dsd (to make) is used, or even more ambiguous forms of expression like " Let the waters bring forth " (I.20), which positively favours some form of evolution. There is great force, therefore, in the remark of Guyot, that absolute creation is affirmed in Gen.l only, and precisely at the three stages of the creative process where all theories of thorough- going evolution completely and hopelessly break down in their evidence. So that " the question of evolution within each of these great systems — of matter into various forms of matter, of life into the various forms of life, and of man- kind in all its various varieties — remains still open." Moreover, when properly interpreted, the scriptural statements readily adjust them- selves to the best conceptions of the universe formed by modern men of science. The Co- pernican (rather than the Ptolemaic) system is implied in the rhetoric of Job 26.7, " He stretcheth out the north over the empty place, and hangeth the earth upon nothing." The " firmament " which divides the waters above from those below is natural enough in Job's in- terpretation (26.8), "Hebindeth up the waters in his thick clouds, and the cloud is not rent under them." The only apparent interrup- tion to the progressive development of Gen.l is in connexion with the appearance of the sun, moon, and stars, upon the fourth day of crea- tion. But even there the way is left open for adjustment with the natural order, if we lay proper emphasis upon the piurpose for which these bodies are said to be set in the heavens, viz. " to divide the day from the night," and to " be for signs and for seasons," which they could be only when the primeval clouds, with their dazzling glow of molecular light, had given place to conditions like those of the pre- sent. It is not, necessarily, the absolute creation of the heavenly bodies which is re- ferred to in Gen.l. 14-18, but the accomplish- ment of the purpose for which they were " set in the firmament." [Light.] It is certainly to the believer no less gratifying than it is sur- COTTON 183 prising to find the following appreciative words in the agnostic Haeckel's History of Creation (vol. i. pp. 37, 38, Eng. trans.): "Its extra- ordinary success is explained not only by it5 close connexion with Jewish and Christian doctrine, but also by the simple and natural chain of ideas which runs through it [i.e. the Biblical account], and which contrasts favour- ably with the confused mythology of creation current among most of the ancient nations. . . . Two great and fundamental ideas, common also to the non-miraculous theory of develop- ment, meet us in the Mosaic hypothesis of creation with surprising clearness and sim- plicity— the idea of separation or differentia- tion, and the idea of progressive development or perfecting. ... In his [Moses'] theory there lies hidden the ruling idea of a progressive development and a differentiation of the ori- ginally simple matter. We can therefore be- stow our just and sincere admiration on the Jewish lawgiver's grand insight into nature, and his simple and natural hx^jothesis of creation, without discovering in it a so-called Divine Revelation." Jensen, Kosmologie der Babylonier ; esp. Gunkel's Schopfimg, Eng. trans, by Open Court Co. ; Pinches, O.T. in the Light of the Hist. Rec. of Ass. and Bab. ; Cun. Tablets, Brit. Museum, pt. xiii. plates 1-23, 35-38 ; Arnold Guyot's Creation, or the Biblical Cosmogony in the Light of Modern Science ; J. D. Dana, art. on "Creation" in Bibliotheca Sacra, April 1885 ; S. R. Driver, in Expositor. Jan. 1886 ; G. F. Wright, Scientific Confirma- tions of O.T. History, ch. xii. (1906). [g.f.w.] Cotton, Heb. karpas (cf. Lat. carbasus), Esth. 1.6, where the Vulg. has carbasini coloris, as if a colour, not a material (so in A.V. green), were intended. There is a doubt whether un- der shesh, in the earlier, and bite, in the later books of O.T., rendered in A.V. by " white linen," " fine linen," etc., cotton may have been included. The dress of the Egyptian priests, at any rate in their ministrations, was without doubt of linen (Herod, ii. 37), though Pliny (in ist cent, a.d.) says (xix. i, 2) they preferred cotton. Cotton garments for the worship of the temples are said to be men- tioned in the Rosetta Stone (c. 195 e.g.). There is, however, no word for the cotton plant in Heb., nor reason to suppose any early knowledge of the fabric. The Egyptian mummy swathings are linen. Cotton is made from the woolly covering of the seeds of Gossypium herbaceum, a plant of the mallow family. Speaking of " the trees of the Island Tylos, within the Persian sea," Pliny says (xii. 10, Holland's trans.) : " In the highest part and knap of the same Island there be trees bearing wooU . . . they beare a fruit at the last, like Gourds in fashion, and as big as Quinces ; which when they be full ripe, doe open and shew certaine balls \vithin of downe : whereof they make most fine and costly linnen clothes." Varro knew of tree-wool on the authority of Ctesias, contemporary with Herodotus. The Greeks, through the commercial consequences of Alexander's conquests, must have known of cotton cloth, and more or less of the plant. Cotton was manufactured extensively in Egypt later, but extant monuments give no proof of its growth, as in the case of flax, in'that 184 COUCH country. But when Pliny asserts that cotton was then grown in Egypt, a statement con- firmed by Julius Pollux (a century later), we can hardly deny that some plantations existed there. This is the more likely, since the cotton- tree is mentioned by Pliny as the only remark- able tree of the adjacent Ethiopia ; and since Arabia, on its other side, appears to have known cotton from time immemorial, to grow it in abundance, and in parts to be highly favour- able to that product. In India, however, we have the earliest records of the use of cotton for dress ; of which, including the starching of it, some cm-ious traces are found as early as 800 B.C., in the Institutes of Manu. Cotton is now both grown and manufactured in various parts of Syria and Palestine ; but there is no proof that, till their contact with Persia, the Hebrews generally knew of it as a distinct fabric from linen. [Flax ; Linen.] Couch. [Bed.] Council, (i) The Great Sanhedrin (Mt. 5.22,26.59 ; Jn. 11.47 ; Ac.4.i5,5.2i, etc.). (2) The Lesser Sanhedrin (Mt.lO.17; Mk.lS.g) ; probably also "the judgment" (Mt.5.21,22). [Sanhedrin, 2.] (3) Assessors (Ac.25.i2). Such were usual in the Roman provinces (Suet. Tib. 33 ; Galba 19). [h.h.] Coupt. The rendering of two Heb. words, both meaning an "enclosure." (i) 'dzdrd, the outer court of Solomon's temple (2Chr.4.9,6. 13)- (2) hdcer, court of house, containing the well (2Sam.i7.18) ; court of palace, the " other court," that immediately surrounding the palace (iK.7.8) ; court of guard — i.e. place of confinement in king's house (Ne.3.25 ; Je.32.2); court of the tabernacle {¥.x.21.'))\ of Solomon's temple— two courts (2K.2I.5), the inner (iK.6.36) priests' (2Chr.4.9) or upper court (Je.36.io) ; the new (2Chr.20.5) outer (Ezk.10.5) or great court (2Chr.4.g). Also used of the courts of Ezekiel's temple (Ezk.40. 14, etc.). [Judge.] [h.h.] Cou'tha. Sons of Coutha were among the servants of the temple who returned with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.32). Covenant, Ivrith (lit. a cutting, i.e. divid- ing of the sacrifice), LXX. biadriKt], and N.T. The idea of covenant is to be interpreted, not from its crude beginnings, but from its highest development — as between God and man, rather than between man and man. (For the latter, see Law in O.T. ; F"amily ; Handclasp: Oaths; Witness.) (i) The old covenant consisted in the union between God and one selected nation, Israel. The conditions were recorded in the B905, pp. 259-266; and see further a valuable art. Cosmogony in this Diet. [jJl.] Cpedltop. [Loan.] Crescens, a companion of St. Paul, who had left hJMi to go to Galatia (2Tim.4.n)). St. Paul's usage makes it prr)bable that Galatia in Asia Minor is meant : but the reading of X. C, Gaul instead of Galatia, and the testimony of Euscbius, have led to the belief that the other CRIMES AND PUNISHMENTS Galatia, viz. Gaul, is meant, and the foundation of the churches of Vienne and Mayence has been ascribed to Crescens. [e.r.b.] Crete, a large island S. of Greece, in the Mediterranean at the mouth of the Aegean Sea. It is about 140 miles E. and W., and 30 miles N. and S. Mount Ida rises 8,000 ft. from its shores. It is first noticed in 147 B.C. (iMac.10.67) ; and St. Paul's voyage along its S. shores is described (Ac.27.7-21) till, driven by the N.E. wind, the ship sheltered leeward of the island Clauda. [Fair Havens ; GoRTVNA ; Lasea ; Phenice ; Salmone.] In the Ep. to Titus the establishment of elders and bishops in Crete is noticed (Tit.t.5), and the evil reputation of the Cretans (ver. 12). Josephus mentions Jews in Crete as early as the time of our Lord (2 Wars vii. i). The old population was Greek ; and the discoveries of Mr. A. J. Evans (since 1893) show that the island was civilized as early as 1500 b.c. [Writing.] But there is no reason to suppose that theCHERETHiTES (2Sam.8.i8 ; Ezk.25.i6) were Cretans. They were probably inhabit- ants of Keratiyah in Philistia. [c.r.c] Cretes (Ac.2.ii), Cretians (Tit. 1. 12), inhabitants of Crete. Cpib (Heb. 'ebhiis ; Job 39-9 : Pr.14.4 ; Is. 1.3), a " feeding-piacc " or "stall." The ancient rock stables in the Hebron hills and elsewhere have stone mangers with holes per- forated beside them for the halter ropes (Surv. W. Pal. i. p. 310 ; iii. pp. 348, 369). [c.r.c] Cpimes, Wpong's, and Punishments. A. Nature of Subject. In mature legislations distinctions exist between crimes and civil vsTongs (English tort, Roman delict), but in archaic law these are not applicable without considerable modifications. The subject must therefore be studied in the light of ancient con- ditions and ideas. In all early communities certain factors are found. The following con- cern us : (i) When the society is weak, many injuries lead to vengeance expressed in blood- feud (see especially Gen. 34) and retribution, seen in talion ("eye for eye," etc.). This is often disadvantageous to the community which is weakened by private wars and the loss or crippling of fighting men, and everywhere recourse is had to a system of compensation to prevent this. Tlius the owner of property is offered manifold restitution from the thief to prevent his taking the law into his own hands and fighting (Ex.22.i[21.37], etc. ; Post, Grundriss, ii. 430-432); and in most cases both the blood-feud and talion are regularly succeeded by composition. Gen. 20. 16, where a thousand pieces of silver are given as " a covering of the eyes," is particularly instruc- tive. (2) Similar to talion is the notion that an offender " shall be deprived oi the limb with which he offends " (Gautama, xii. i ; cl. Vishnu, v. 19, etc. Sec Post, Grundriss, ii. 239. One instance in Pentateuch, Deut. 25.12). (3) In other cases the offence is such as to demand the maintenance of the severest punishments for the protection of society. Here the very motives tliat operate in (i) to do away with the death penalty com- bine to preserve it — e.g. kidnaiiping (Ex.21.i6 ; sec Post, GrM«rffi5.>.k.23.47, but this is not the only possible interpretation of the passage. I-'rom Je.2O.2f., 29.26 it appears that prophesying in the temple was an ofTence pimishable with heating, stocks, and collar (?) (see commentaries ad loc), if dis- a|>|>roved by the priests. 'J'reasonwus imnished by heating and imprisonment (Je.37.13ff.). In at least one O.T. case prophesying against Jerusalem and Judah was punished by execu- tion with the sword, followed by casting the corpse into the graves of the common people (26. CRIMES AND PUNISHMENTS 20-23). Slaying with the sword or spear often occurs elsewhere (£:.g. iK.2.25,34); but it is not always clear whether the cases should be re- garded as instances of legal punishment. The Philistines burnt Samson's wife and father-in- law (Judg. 15.6 ; c/. 14.15). Imprisonment a.p- pears to have been common under the mon- archy (iK. 22.27 ; 2Chr.l6.ro; Je.37.15, etc.), as also stripes (37.15, etc.). Some form of Stocks or block on the feet is mentioned in Job 13.27, 33.11 (not the Heb. word translated "stocks" in Je.20.2, etc.). Scourging with thorns and briers occurs in Judg. 8. 7, 16, but not as a legal punishment. Heaps of stones were some- times raised over offenders who had been put to death (Jos.7.25f. ). Banishment dind con fisca- tion also occur (Ezr.7.26). On 2Sam.i2.31 see H. P. Smith ad loc. Theft of movables was perhaps punishable by sevenfold (? manifold) restitution (Pt.6.21)- [Law in O.T. ; Homicide ; Judge.] For literature, see Law inO.T. [h.m.w.] — In N.T., Punishments, etc. (i) Stoning. (a) For blasphemy. Two attempts were made to stone Jesus on this charge : Jn.8.59, ^or taking to Himself the divine name, and 10. 31, for claiming unity of substance with the Father. St. Stephen was charged with speaking blas- phemous words against the temple and the law (Ac.6.11,13 ; hut cf. 7.56 and Mt. 26. 64, 65). [Witness.] (6) For adultery (Jn. 8. 5, 7). (c) It was the usual form of punishment inflicted by the people (Lu. 20.6: Ac.5.26,14.5,19 : Mt. 21.35- See also 2C0r.ll.25 ; Heb. 11. 37). (2) Scourg- ing with thongs, the culprit being bound to a GROSS 189 ROMAN SCOURGE. (From Kinn's G pillar by the hands, in a stooping attitude, (a) This was part of the punishment of Crucifixion, and was inflicted after sentence of death ; but in our Lord's case it seems to have been a lesser punishment, administered in the hope that it would satisfy His accusers (Mt. 27.26 and parallels). [Pilate.] (b) Followers of Christ so punished (Mt. 10.17, 23. 34; 2C0r.ll. 24). A stronger term, dfpw, "to flay," N.T. "to beat or smite," is used Mk.lS.g ; Lu.22.63 ; Jn.l8.23 > Ac.5. 40,22.19; see also 16. 37. Pa/iSi'foj, "to beat with a rod," is used Ac. 16. 22 ; 2C0r.ll.25. St. Paul was " put to the question " by scourg- ing (Ac.22.24). According to PorcianLaw(Cic. Verr. v. 62-66) it was " a high crime to beat " a Roman citizen. (3) 'Vvixiravigu}, "beating to death " — breaking on the wheel. Heb. 11. 35, "others were tortured," R.V. marg. "beaten to death, " refers to 2Mac.6. 19,28, 30. Josephus, de Mace. v. 9, calls the same instrument rpoxos, " a wheel." (4) Imprisonment. For debt, Mt.5.26 ; for insurrection and murder, Lu.23. 19. Believers in Christ, Lu.21.i2 ; Ac.5. 18, 8.3,22.4,26,10, etc. There was a public ward, .■\c.5.i8 ; some kind of Stocks was in use in " the inner prison," 16. 24 ; prisoners were sometimes bound to soldiers by chains, 12.6. (5) Expulsion from the synagogue for con- fessing Christ, Jn.9.22,12.42,16.2. (6) De- capitation. John the Baptist, Mt. 14.8-12. Seealso Ac.12.2 ; Rev.20.4. (7) Precipitation, Lu.4.29. According to 2Mac.6.io, two women were precipitated from the walls of Jerusalem for circumcising their children. (8) Drowning, Mt.18.6. This was a Gk. and Roman punish- ment; cf. Josephus, 14 Ant. xv. 10. (9) Saw- ingasunder, Heb. 11. 37. Mt. 24.51, "thelordof that servant . . . shall cut him asunder," R.V. marg. " severely scourge him." (10) Exposure to wild beasts, 1C0r.i5.32 ; 2Tim.4.i7. The meaning of these passages is, however, un- certain. (11) Banishment, Rev.l.g. (12) Crucifixion. [Cross.] (13) Handing over to Satan, iCor.5.5 ; iTim.l.20. This was prob- ably a temporal punishment, intended to be remedial; cf. Lu.l3.i6: 2Cor.l2.7. [Excom- munication; Satan; Hymenaeus.] [h.h.] Cpimson. [Colours.] Cpispingr-pins (Is. 8.22). [Bag.] Cpispus, a ruler of the synagogue (dpx'- avvdywyos) at Corinth. His conversion (Ac. 18. 8), coincident with St. Paul's removal from the synagogue to the house of a Gentile, was ap- parently the turning-point in the history of a mission which, until then, had only met with resistance. The importance of such a con- vert, or services rendered by him, would ac- count for the distinction granted him of baptism by the apostle himself (iCor.l.14). See Lightfoot, Hor. Heb. in loc. [e.r.b.] Cposs. The word represents the Gk. aravpos, which is strictly equivalent to Lat. palus (stake), though it was afterwards used (as in N.T.) for the Lat. crux. Death by im- paling on a stake had been practised by the Romans on their slaves as well as death by crucifixion proper. Of the three forms of the cross (decussata X, commissa T, immissa +), tradition is almost certainly right in assigning the last to our Lord's case. The upright limb was usually left standing at the ordinary place of execution outside the citj', and only the cross- piece was borne thither by the criminal him- self or another from the place where he had been condemned or scourged. This was often made of two parallel timbers joined at the ends 1 §0 CROWN I I. between which the victim's head was inserted : Lat. patibulum. On^arrival, the hands and feet were either bound or (as in our Lord's case) nailed to the cross-piece, when it had been duly fixed to the upright. A stout CHRISMA. (These sifrns. combining the cross and the sacred monosrram, are found on the labarum of Constantine, but also earlier on coins of non-Christian Kin^— ?.^. Herod the Great and Trajanus Uecius — and in the catacombs.) wooden peg, projecting from the latter, helped to support the body at the centre; but it is doubtful whether there was any similar sup- port below the feet. A board, whitened with gypsum, on which the nature of the offence was written in black letters, was usually carried before the criminal to his execution, and then affixed to the cross over his head. This was done in our Lord's case. Pilate drew up the inscription, and it was made out in Heb., Lat., and Gk. — the national, official, and " common " dialects of Judaea. The versions of the inscription in SS. Mark, Luke, and John may possibly each represent one of these ori- ginal languages {Jn.l9.2o) and St. Matthew's a combination of the three. See Farrar's St. Luke, p. 293. For further interesting con- siderations on the Title on the Cross see Swete's notes on Mk.i5.26, Westcott's on Jn.i9.19ff., and Edersheim, Jesus the Messiah (3rd ed.), ii. 590 f. For our Lord's Words from the Cross, see Seven Words, The. Death was often long delayed, and sometimes in rough mcrcv hastened by the breaking of the legs (Jn.l9. 3iff.). There is some ground for thinking that (in deference to Jewish feeling) our Lord was not (as was usual) stripped of His clothing, until His body was prepared for burial. Even so the disgrace of the cross was fully as great as N.T. (especially St. Paul's epistles) depicts it. [Calvary.] [c.l.f.] Cpow^n occurs in O.T. as the translation of various Heb. words, (i) The simplest {zer) has merely the idea of " encircling," and is used of the decorative golden wreath which CROWNS WORN BY ASSYRIAN KINCS. (Frnm Nimrftd and Kouyiinjik.) crowned the ark of the covenant (Ex.25.ii), the altar of incense (Ex.80.3), and the table of shewbread (Ex. 25. 24). (2) nezir expresses the idea of " setting apart " for a sacred work, 6lRYSTAt and has the root that appears in " Nazarite." Hence this word denotes consecration, and is used of the crown which the high-priest wore upon his mitre (Ex. 29.6), and sometimes also of the royal diadem (2Sam.l.io). In each case it indicates a sacred office. [King.] (3) The ordinary Heb. word ('a*drd) for the royal crown, from which oiu: word " tiara " is derived, has, however, no such special meaning. (4) In Esth. 1.11,2.17,6. 8 only, kether is used for the royal crown. In N.T. the tik. words aT(Tene in N.T. Simon, who bore our Saviour's cross (Mt.27.32 ; Mk.l5.2i ; Lu.23.26) was a native of Cyrene. Jewish dwellers in Cyreuaica were in Jerusalem at Pentecost (Ac. 2. 10). They even gave their name to a synagogue in Jerusalem (6.9). Christian converts from Cyrene were among those who helped to found the first Gentile church at Antioch (11. 20). Lucius of Cyrene (13.1) is traditionally said to have been the first bishop of his native district. Cypenius. This is P. Sulpicius Quirinus, described by Tacitus (Afinals iii. 48). After the deposition of Archelaus in 6 a.d., Quirinus, then proconsul of Syria, took o\er Judaea, and carried out a census or assessment for tax- ation, which met with some resistance (Ac. 5. 37). St. Luke, who records this revolt in the speech of Gamaliel, refers (Lu.2.2) to a previous" census as occurring during Quirinus' govern- ment of Syria, and dates the birth uf Christ by it. He clearly distinguishes it from the census in 6 A.D. by calling it " first," thus implying that he knew of another. Serious difficulties arise in respect of this statement. Allowing on sufficient grounds the probability that Quirinus was twice proconsul of Syria, his earlier tenure cannot have begun til! after the death of Herod the Great, 4 b.c, and therefore would not remove the difficulty, as Christ was born in Herod's lifetime (Mt.2.i). Varus was proconsul of Syria till after Herod's death. It is, however, probable that Quirinus was in the province, during the government of Varus, with a military command, which was, we know, given him in order to reduce certain Cilician tribesmen. And the vague word translated " was governor " (Lu.2.2)might w^ell describe such a command as distinct from the civil governorship held at that time by Varus. [Taxing.] Other objections to the accuracy of the statement are as follows: (i) Herod was king of Judaea, and a census could not have been imposed on him by the emperor. But this is to misunderstand the dependent position of the subject kingdoms. (2) A Roman would not have required enrolment at the city of origin (e.p,. Bethlehem). But paral- lels for a tribal and family system of enrolment by Roman authority in Egypt have been dis- covered in the papyri. liven if Ramsay's explanation be rejected, and a mistake on St. Luke's part be admitted, the historical char- acter of the census which brought Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem is not necessarily im- pugned, and the utmost result of criticism is that St. Luke, who knew of Quirinus' census in 6 A.D., has wrongly attributed to him also the census at the time of the nativity. Augus- DABBASHETH tus, as we know from other sources, did or- ganize periodical assessments for various parts of the (Roman) world. [e.r.b.J Cypus, the founder of the Persian empire (see Dan.6.28,10.1,13 ; 2Chr.36.22, 23), was son of Cambyses, king of AnSan, a descendant of Teispes. There are several contradictory accounts of his birth and rise to power, but they are all regarded as unhistorical, including the tragic story told by Herodotus (i. 95), which makes him tf) have been the son of a Persian nobleman named Cambyses and Man- dane, daughter of Astyages, the last king of Media. According to the Babylonian Chron- icle, Astyages marched against Cyrus (549 b.c) to capture him, but his army revolted, and de- livered him to Cyrus, who then took Ecbatana, and carried off its spoil to Ansan. He subse- quently defeated Croesus, and annexed Lydia. In 538 B.C. a revolt took place in Babylonia, and this gave Cyrus an opportunity of invading the country. After defeating the Babylonians at Opis, his army entered Sippar, and Naboni- dus sought safety in flight, but was captured in Babylon, which had been taken by Gobryas without fighting, though Belshazzar, son of Nabonidus, seems to have held out in some part of the city. [Belsmazzak.] The result of these successes was, the addition of the whole of Babylonia to the empire. The date of the reduction of the Gk. cities in -Asia Minor is doubtful. Cyrus is said to have fallen in battle against the Massagetae in 529 B.C., but .Xenophon makes him to have died peaceably, and to ha\c been buried at Pasargadae. Before his time the great kings with whom the Jews had come into contact had been either open oppressors or seductive allies, but Cyrus was a generous liberator. The prophet Isaiah (44. 28) recognized in him " a shepherd " of the Lord, an "anointed" king (45. i), but his favouring of the Jews is now regarded as being rather due to policy than to sympathy with them as a monothoist — he was equally sym- [iathetic to the Babylonian priesthood. The edict of Cvrus for the building of the temple (2Chr.36.2'2,23 ; Ezr.l. 1-4, 3. 7,4-3. 5.13,17,6.3) gave new life to Judaism, and enabled that development to take place which the after- history of the Jews reveals. The reputed tomb of Cyrus at Murg-ab is probably not that of the great conqueror. See Savce in Hast- ings, D.B. (3 vols. 1898). ' [T.G.P.] Dabapeh' (Jos. 21. 28). Daberath, as R.V. Dabba'sheth, a place important as de- fining the boundary of the tribe of Zebulun (Jos. 19. 11), which "reached to Dabbasheth, and reached to the river [Kishon] facing JoKNEAM." This defines the extent N. and S. Dabbasheth is apparently the present ruin Dabahch, where alone in Palestine the name has been found. It is on a hill 13 miles N.E. of Accho, on S.W. side of the great valley W'lidy el Qurn, which is probably the valley (gi) of Jiphthah-el (the mif^hty opening), so called because of its breadth ; for near Dabsheh it expands into a broad vale called el DABERATH Buqei'ah (Heb. hiq'd) a term applied only to wide, deep valleys. This line agrees with the position of Hanxathon (Kefr 'Andn), and the two latter names (Jos. 19. 14) sufficiently de- fine the N. border as far as Dabbasheth, where the line turned S. "towards the west" (ver. 11, A.V. sea). Zebulun thus embraced the hills and plains from near Tabor to Hannathon on E. and from Jokneam to Dabbasheth on W., not reaching the sea of Galilee (in Naphtali), nor the shores of the bay of Accho (in Asher). Nazareth was thus in Zebulun, and Caper- naum in Naphtali (Mt.4.13). [c.r.c] Dabepath' (with the articlein Jos.), a town on the boundary of Zebulun (Jos. 19. 12), named as next to Chisloth-tabor. In iChr.6.72 and Jos. 21. 28 (R.V.) it is said to belong to Issachar. Now the village Debiirieh at the W. foot of Tabor. [c.r.c] Da'bnia, one of the five swift scribes who recorded the visions of Ezra (2Esd.i4.24). Daco'bi (iEsd.5.28). [Akkub.] Dadd'eus, or Sadde'us (R.V. Lodde'us; iEsd.8.45,46), a corruption of Iddo, 6. Dag'on', a Philistine god (iSam.5.2) whose most famous temples were at Gaza (Judg.16. 21-30) and Ashdod (iSam.5.5,6 ; iChr.lO.io). The latter was destroyed by Jonathan in the Maccabaean wars (1Mac.lO.83, 84, 11. 4). Traces of the worship of Dagon likewise appear in the names Caphar-dagon (near Jamnia) and Beth-dagon in Judah (Jos.i5.41) and Asher (Jos. 19. 27). Dagon was originally a Babylonian deity whose name and cult had been introduced into Palestine in early days. The old belief that he was a fish -god is more than doubtful [Ashkelon], since the Baby- Ionian fish-god was Ea, the god of wisdom, and not Dagon. According to Philo Byblius, Dagon was a god of agriculture whose name was derived from a Phoenician word signifying " corn." [a.h.s.] Dai'san (iEsd.5.31) = Rezin, 2 (Ezr. 2.48), by the common confusion of R andD. Dalaiah', the sixth son of Elioenai and of the royal family of Judah (iChr. 3.24). Dalmanutha (Mk.8.10), an Aramaic equivalent for the Heb. mighdol. [Magdala.] Dalma'tia, a mountainous district on the E. coast of the Adriatic Sea, extending from the river Naro in the S. to the Savus in the N. St. Paul sent Titus there (2Tim.4.io), and he himself had preached near it (R0.I5.19). Dalphon', the second son of Haman (Esth.9.7)- Dam'apis, an Athenian woman con- verted by St. Paul's preaching (Ac. 17. 34). Damascus. The name of this famous capital of Aram, or Zobah, does not seem to be Semitic. The city is still called Dimeshq esh Sham, or " Damascus of Syria " (Shdmi in Syr. Arabic being usually the word for "north," otherwise Shemdl). As an Akkadian word Dim-esk would mean " chief town," and Dim-isk perhaps " verdant city." Damascus is mentioned in the time of Abraham (Gen. 14.15), who said, " The holder [mesheq] IDAMASCIJS 195 of my house, that is Dani-meseq [as now pointed in Heb.], is Eliezer" (15.2). There appears to be a play on the name of the city ; but the word is perhaps a later note creeping into the text, referring to the " house," as it cannot refer grammatically to Eliezer. Hence arose an early Jewish tradition that Abraham had a house at Damascus, of which Eliezer was tenant, or steward. In the time of David Damascus was the capital of Hadadezer, king of Zobah, whom he defeated, taking from him shields of gold, chariots, and chariot horses (2Sam.8.5,6 ; 1Chr.l8.3-7 ; Can.7.4). About 950 B.C. Rezon became independent in Da- mascus, after the death of Solomon (iK.ll. 23-25), and was succeeded by Tab-rimmon, son of Hezion. The kings who followed — accord- ing to O.T. and Assyrian accounts — were Ben- hadad I. son of Tab-rimmon, Hazael I., Hadadezer II., Hazael II., Benhadad II. (who became subject to Jeroboam II. of Israel for some years), Mari, Benhadad III. (Am.1.4), and Rezin, who was put to death by the Ass}Tians on the capture of Damascus in 732 B.C. This represents about 20 years for the average reign of each king. These kings were generally at war with Israel or with Judah, with intervals of alliance after defeat, or taking the side of one against the other, in the shifting policy of the age. In spite of alliance with the princes of N. Syria, Damascus fell before Tigath-pileser III. in 732 e.g. (2K.I6.9 ; Is. 7.8 ; m.1.5). The O.T. mentions the league of Benhadad I. with Judah (1K.I5.19; 2Chr.l6.3), and his attack on Ahab (iK.20.i- 34), whom he slew at Ramoth-gilead (22.1-36); also his murder — after a reign of about 60 years — by Hazael I. (2K.8.15). His second siege of Samaria (2 K. 6. 24-7. 20) occurred in NORTHERN SIDE ARCH, EAST GATE, DAMASCUS. (From Five Years in Dantasats, by T. L, Porter.) 196 DAMASCirS the reign of Jehoram son of Ahab. In the reign of Benhadad II., Jeroboam II. of Israel " recovered Damascus " (2K.I4.28). Rezin, with Pekah of Israel, about 742 B.C., attacked Jerusalem in vain, but Rezin appears to have conquered E. Palestine to Elath, before his defeat by the Assyrians (2K. 16.5-11), which Isaiah foresaw (Is. 7. 1-7) : he speaks of the wealth of Damascus (8.4), and of its fall (10.9,17.1), which Amos predicts as a punishment for the slaughter in Gilead (I.3 ; see 5.27). Jeremiah speaks of the weakness of Damascus about 600 b.c. (49.24,27), per- haps under a Benhadad IV. tributary to Nebuchadnezzar (ver. 30). Ezekiel, rather later, mentions the trade of Damascus in wine of Helbon, and white wool, sent to Tyre (Ezk. 27.18). Its border marched with that of Hamath, and included Hermon and Anti- Lebanon (47.16,17). Damascus is also noticed as attacked by Jonathan, brother of Judas MONUMKNr FROM -IIU.I. liS SAI.AIIIVAH (DAMASCUS). Maccabaeus (iMacll. 62,12.32), about 147 B.C. It then fell into the hands of Aretas (Harith) the Nabathean king of Petra (Jose- phus, 13 Ant. XV. 2 ; 14 Ant. ii. 3), from about 82 to 69 B.C. ; and it was conquered for Pom- pey by Scaurus in 65 b.c. In the time of St. Paul another Aretas was "king" of Damascus (Ac.9. 2-25, 22.5-11,26.12, 20 ; 2C0r.ll. 32 ; Cal. 1.17; see 18 Ant. v. i). — The Monumental History of Damascus begins with its conquest by Thothmes III. in i6th cent. b.c. A very archaic figure in relief, found in 1865 near the city, may be as old as Abraham's age. It represents (see illustration above) a bearded man with a short tunic ; unfortunately it is not inscribcfl. The city Thamasku (No. 13) in the list of Thothmes III. precedes Abila (15) and Hamath (16), on his route to Kadesh and Arvad. In the Amarna letters (Brit. Mus. 37 and 43) the name is spelt Timasgi and Dimaska. The city was then attacked by Aiduganiu, the Hittite king of Kadesh : and DAN Hobah (Gen. 14.15) is here noticed as a country near it. The Amorites were apparently in alliance with the Hittites, and this event led to their conquest of Bashan and Gilead shortly before the Heb. conquest (see Berlin 171 and 132), for the advance lay by Tibhath, a city N.W. of Damascus which they then took, and Ashtaroth fell in turn (Brit. Mus. 64). In 853 B.C. Shalmaneser II. defeated Hadad- ezer II. and the Syrians, N. of Riblah ; and in 842 he shut up Hazael II. in Damascus, and then invaded Bashan. In 797 Mari of Da- mascus submitted to Rimmon-nirari III. of .Assyria, presenting 2,300 talents of silver, 20 talentsof gold, 3,000 of copper, and 5,000 of iron, with robes and utensils. The final siege by Tiglath-pileser III. lasted for two years (734- 732 B.C.), during which N. and E. Palestine, and the plains down to Philistia, were overrun by the Assyrians. Damascus is now a beautiful city of some 250,000 inhabitants, in the plain E. of Hermon. Two rivers (Barada and Taura) join on its W. and flow through it ; it lies amid gardens and poplars, surrounded by tilled lands. The street " called Straight " (Ac.9.ii) was probably the main street which runs E. and W. straight through the whole city. The most famous of the buildings of Damascus is . the Great Mosque, built in 7th cent. a.d. by the Khalifs, who included the ancient cathedral of St. John, which had replaced a Roman temple, on the site — no doubt — of the temple of Rimmon (2K.5.18). A Gk. text (Wadding- ton, No. 2,549) gives the name of Metrophanes, "high-priest of the temple" ; and on the Byzan- tine facade of the cathedral which stood in the great temple court. Dr. Porter found another also in Gk. (Waddington, No. 2,551), "Thy kingdom, O Christ, is an everlasting kingdom, and thy dominion throughout all generations " (see Ps.i45.13). [c.R.c] Dan (judge), Jacob's 5th son, and the ist son of Bilhah, Rachel's slave, named from Rachel's exclamation, "God hath judged me [or, de- cided the case in my favour], and hath also heard my voice" (Gen. 30. 6). In the blessing of Jacob Dan is likened to a snake, but is to "judge his people " (49. 16, 17). In theblessing of Moses(Deut.33.22) he is a lion's cub " pounc- ing from" (or, "on") "the Bashan" (or, "soft soil ") of his plains held by theCanaanites. In the wilderness the tribe, under Ahiezer (Num. 1.12), is the second largest (1.39,26.42), and it included a skilled artisan (Ex. 35. 34), as in the time of Solomon also (2Chr.2. 1 4), when a woman of the tribe married a Tyrian. In the song of Deborah (Judg.5.17) the reference appears to be to Danites on the coast, whose fleet watched the struggle against Sisera. But, somewhat earlier, it appears that they had been unable to conquer tlie inhabitants of the siiore plain (Judg.1.34), and were crowded in the moun- tains (18.2). Hence they sought new lands in the far N., under Hermon (18-19) at I.Aisn, which they renamed Dan in the time of Jonathan the grandson of Moses (not of "Manasseh"), and where tiiey worshipped a graven imane until " the captivitv of the ark " (Heb. MS. 916 A.n.) and the fall of Shiloh (18.30,31). [Mahanku-dan.I — The Tribal Lot (Jos. 19. 40-48) included about 400 sq-m. of hill and plain. Its E. border was the W. border DAN of Benjamin, and its S. border the N. border of JuDAH. On the W. the tribe extended to the sea, and on N. apparently to the brook DANIEL 197 — ^ M A ly A s s g '•■••« ^KAKKon ''*•^, J <^ ^^=^^iU< LjS^^^'^ ^ = ^-e^_-^.- ^ / \rMilUV3 ^~^ '^^Nw-^S.^-^tS ^^N^ ' cciHraIi ^^-v ! _L i,r <;i^~-^2 ::-^ ^Iw THE TRIBAL LOT OF DAN. Kanah and the Me-jarkon and Rakkon. It included some of the best corn lands of Sharon. — The Town, called Laish, and after- wards Dan (Judg.l8.29), is noticed in Gen. 14.14 and Deut. 34.i before it was so named. But it is dangerous, as Ewald saw, to base criticism on such incidental notes, unless we could know for certain that they are not later glosses. In the second passage this appears very probable [Nebo], because Dan is not actually visible from mount Nebo. This town is said to have been " far from Zidon " (Judg.l8.28), and is noticed (as captured by Benhadad I.) with places in the extreme N.E. of the land of Israel W. of Jordan (iK.15.20 ; 2Chr.l6.4). From the time of its conquest the term "Dan to Beer-sheba" (Judg.20.i, etc.) signified the whole length of Palestine. Jero- boam, erecting two shrines with calf idols on the borders of his kingdom, placed one of them at Dan (iK. 12.29,30 ; 2K.IO.29) ; and to this idolatrous centre Amos (8.14) refers, coupling it with another at Beer-sheba. Dan also repre- sents the far N. in Jeremiah (4.15,8.16). It is remarkable that no list of Danite genealogies occurs in Chronicles, and that the tribe is also not among those sealed in Rev. 7. 5-8, perhaps on account of idolatry. Josephus says that the calf temple was near Daphne (now the ruin Dufneh), which points to the great mound a mile to N.E. now called Tell el Qd4i, or "mound of the judge" — perhaps a transla- tion of the name Dan. From this mound, and its great spring 'Ain Ledddn, flows the stream of "Little Jordan" (Josephus, 4 Wars i. i). It is interesting to note that, in 1881, the pre- sent writer discovered a group of dolmens on the slope to W. (at a place called Nukheileh, or " little palm," a mile from Tell el Qd4i), show- ing that the vicinity was a sacred centre [Moab] in very early times. The Dan mentioned with Javan (Ezk.27.19) as trading with Tyre about 600 B.C. has no connexion with the town above described. The reference is probably to the Danai, who appear (as early as the 14th and 13th cents, e.g.) among the fair Aryan tribes of the " north " who attacked Egypt. Probably like Javan (Ionia), the Danai were Greeks, and as such the name is familiar, [c.r.c.] Dance (/;wi, "to whirl round" ; Mghagh, "to keep the feast"; kdrar, " to whirl" ; rdqadh, "to jump "). Thedanceisspokenof in Holy Scrip- ture universally as symbolic of rejoicing, and is often coupled for the sake of contrast with mourning, e.g. Ec.3.4 (c/. Ps.30.ii ; Mt.ll.i?)- In the earlier period it is found combined with some song or refrain (Ex.l5.2o,32.i8,i9 ; iSam. 21.11) ; and with the tambourine (A.V. tim- brel), more especially in those impulsive out- bursts of popular feeling which cannot find sufficient vent merely in voice or in gesture. Dancing formed a part of the religious cere- monies of every primitive race. Cf. David EGYPTIAN DANCES. (Wilkinson.) dancing before the ark (2Sam.6.i4), especially in connexion with the words " he was girded with a linen ephod," i.e. a holy garment worn while waiting on the Lord. Many representa- tions of dances, both of men and women, are found in the Egyptian paintings. The " feast unto the Lord" which Moses proposed to Pharaoh to hold was really a dance. Among Arabs, dances of men are an extremely ancient custom. In the period of the Judges the dances of the virgins in Shiloh (Judg.21. 19-23) were certainly part of a rehgious festivity. Dancing also had its place among rnerely festive amusements apart from any religious character (Je.31. 4,13 ; Lam.5.i5 ; Mk.6.22 ; Lu.15.25). Daniel. — 1. A son of David, called his 2nd son, bv Abigail the Carmelitess (iChr.3.2), and apparently identical with Chileab (2Sam.3.3). — 2. The head of the house of Ithamar, who 198 DANIEL, BOOK OF returned from the Exile with Ezra (Ezr.8.2). — 3. One of those who joined in sealing the cove- nant (Ne.10.6). — 4. One of the prophets of the Exile carried away into the land of Shinar in the reign of Jehoiakim. On his arrival at the court of Nebuchadnezzar, he had to undergo (with his three companions, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah) a special training for three years, before they could stand before the king. This included a special dieting, from which they obtained exemption, which improved their appearance above all their companions. They received fresh names, being called respectively Beltcshazzar, Shadrach, Meshach, Abed- NEGO. They were all young men of high birth (Dan. 1.3) ; Daniel was noted above them all for skill in the interpretation of dreams. On the first occasion on which he explained a dream of Nebuchadnezzar, he was made "ruler over the whole province of Babylon, and chief governor over all the wise men of Babylon," and obtained from the king offices for his three companions. He interpreted Nebuchadnez- zar's dream foretelling his temporary mental aberration, and also the writing on the wall at Belshazzar's feast, by which time he seems to have lost his office as governor of the wise men. In the reign of Darius the Made he was cast into the den of lions, for his faithfulness in praying to his own God, though he was then one of the three presidents of the whole king- dom (Dan. 6. 2). Coming out unscathed, he pros- pered throughout the reign of Darius and in that of Cyrus. His visions are dated, that of the last being in the third year of Cyrus (Dan. 10- 1), by thebanks of Hiddekel, «'.<>. the Tigris. In Bel- shazzar's reign his home seems to have been in the royal palace at Susa. Ezekiel twice men- tions Daniel : in 14. 12-20 he is joined with Noah and Job as an example of righteousness ; in 28.3 as a pattern of wisdom — exactly the qualities which the Daniel of the book w^hich bears his name displayed. Some have thought that Ezekiel could scarcely have referred this to so young a man as Daniel must have then been, and have made this Daniel another per- son, but there seems no real reason to doubt that they were one. It is curious that Daniel's name does not occur in the commemoration of the prophets by the son of Sirach (Ecclus.49). Our Lord refers to "Daniel the prophet " in His discourse upon the approaching Fall of Jerusa- lem, when " the abomination of desolation " was to stand in the holv place (Mt.24.i5 ; Mk. 13.i-t, A. v.). [H. A.R.I Daniel, Book of, is one of the most diffi- cult books of the Bible to deal with. To begin with, whilst our l-2nglish Bible classes the book with those of Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, in the Hf'b. canon it is counted among the Hagio- gra|)ha. or third class ni vs-ritings into which the O.T. is divided. Then again, the language of it is pot all the same. 1-2.40,8.1-12.13 are written in Heb. ; 2.4ft-7.28 are in Aramaic. Further still, thercr are (ik. additions to the book which almost certainly were originally written in r.k. and not in a Semitic language. It is the first extant specimen of apocalyptic literature, though a precursor may bo found in some of the prophecies of ICzekiel — a style of literature which finds its highest develoiimcnt in the apocalyptic discourses of our Lord and the DANIEL, BOOK OF book of Revelation. Yet with all this the book claims to give us also historical details connected with the Babylonian and Persian empires ; and, according to some commenta- tors, some of its prophecies enter into such detail that they must necessarily have been composed after and not before the events they describe. It is because of this that some have den'ed it any connexion with Daniel, and re- fused to accept its authenticity or historicity. Some of these points are dealt with later. — ■ A nalysis of Contents. Roughly speaking, the first six chapters profess to be history, the last six prophecy ; but this division takes no account of the variation in language, or the form of the book. We may better divide it as follows: Ch.l introduces Daniel to us and accounts for his position. 2-7.15 gives a history of Daniel and his first vision in the third person. Then with the interpretation of that vision we begin what we may call (from the uniform use of the first person) the " I " section of Daniel (7. 15-I2. 13). The first person is suddenly introduced, although the first portion of ch. 7 gives us what profess to be Daniel's actual words. A similar variation is found in Nehemiah, the greater part of which is in the first person, a smaller portion telling us about Nehemiah. If we take the book itself as our authority, 1-7. 14 are anonymous, the rest we must ascribe to Daniel. An editor has combined two (or per- haps three) sources into one whole, and inscribed it with the name of Daniel. This, however, leaves many difficulties unsolved, and they vary with the two main portions of the book. In the former the question of miracles as well as of revelation by dreams enters, both being difficulties not confined to the book of Daniel, or even to O.T. This is not the place to discuss these in detail, but, granted that miracles are possible, and that the .•\lmighty may choose to make His purposes known through the instru- mentality of dreams {cf. Job 33. 15. 16), there is nothing inherently improbable in what is told us in this book. We have only to compare these with the apocryphal stories of Bel and the Dragon to see on what a different plane they stand : the one is dignified and real in feeling, the others are childish and almost vulgar. The argument against the minute details of the prophecies runs parallel with the former. If the .Almighty chooses to reveal the future to man. He may do it in broad outline or in detail, as seemeth best to His omniscience. The v-ery exceptional character of these prophecies may go to prove the rule of His generally leav- ing His servants the prophets to deal only in generalities. With regard to this history, if indeed it could be shown that the historical details of the book contradicted the history of the times as derived from other sources, then the question might have to be reopened. But there is nothing of that kind to be foimd. Difficulties that seemed insuperable have been cleared up, especially with regard to Darius the Mede and his rule over Babylon. It ap- pears that he may reasonably be identified with oneGobryas, who acted as imderlord over Babvlonia till Cvrus came in person to take possession of that portion of his empire. A comparatively less important difficulty has been raised from the fact that the names of some DANIEL, BOOK OF of the musical instruments in ch. 3 are said to be of Gk. origin. But we have only to ex- amine some map in which are marked the old trade-routes of the East (see, e.g., that in the Encyc. Bibl.) to see how possible it was in very early times for Gk. musical instruments to have been carried to Babylon and naturalized there, or vice versa. [Dulcimer.] If the book had been a composition of an orthodox Jew of the Maccabaean period, he would scarcely, with the feeling against Hellenism then prevalent in orthodox circles, have ven- tured to insert words drawn from such a source. [See also Semitic Languages.] The final shape which the book assumed may indeed be later than Daniel, but we have no sufficient reason for ruling the latter part of the book to be of later invention or for discrediting the history of the prophet's life and that of his companions. The author of the epistle to the Hebrews seems to refer to this record when, in his account of the heroes of older times, he speaks of those " who through faith . . . stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the power of fire " (Heb.ll.33,34). Some portions of the apocryphal book of Baruch shew an inter-relation between the two (see the marg. references in the R.V. of Baruch), and doubtless the writer of Baruch made use of this book. The first book of the Maccabees recog- nizes (2.59,60) the deliverances of the Three Children and of Daniel, and also (1-54 ; cf. 6.7) " an abomination of desolation " in Jerusalem. Josephus held the book to be valuable and authentic, and informs us (11 Ant. viii. 4) that Daniel's prophecies won for the Jews the good- will of Alexander the Great. The only early writer who attacks the book is Porphyry, early in the 4th cent. Nothing very definite can be asserted as to the historian who composed the first chapters of the book. Jewish authorities hold to a tradition that this book, together with the twelve minor prophets, Ezekiel. and Esther, was, to use a modern expression, " edited " by the men of the great synagogue. It seems clear from the version of the LXX. that it was held that greater liberty might be used in translating this book into Gk. than in the case of any other book of the Bible, except perhaps the Proverbs. The result is that the LXX. translation is paraphrastic rather than literal, and has somewhat of the nature of a Jewish midrash upon the text. In later times this seems to have been felt so much that Theodotion's more literal version sup- planted the elder one, of which only one copy in Gk. survives. It remains to indicate briefly the most probable interpretations of the prophecies in the book, (i) In Dan. 2 the four kingdoms are Nebuchadnezzar's, the Median, the Persian, and the Macedonian ; the last is divided be- tween the Seleucidae and the Ptolemies, who are to give place to the kingdom of God. (2) In Dan. 7 the four beasts represent the same four kingdoms ; the ten horns are Alexander the Great's successors ; the little horn is Antiochus Epiphanes, after whose time is to come the kingdom of God. (3) In Dan. 8 the ram with two horns is Media and Persia ; the rough goat is Greece under Alexander the Great ; the four kingdoms after him are those into which his kingdom came to be divided, one of them being that of Antiochus Epiphanes, represented DARIUS 199 by the little horn. (4) In Dan.10-12 wehave a more detailed account of the Seleucidae and the Ptolemies, as well as of the times of Antiochus, followed once again by the kingdom of God'. The varying opinions about these prophecies, and also about the interpretation of Dan.9, are fairly stated in Driver's edition in the Cam- bridge Bible. [H.A.R.] Daniel, Apocryphal additions to. The Apocrypha contains three additions to the book of Daniel, which are to be found in the Gk. (i) The Song of the Three Holy Children, of which part is to be found in the Book of Common Prayer and goes bv the name " Bene- dicite, omnia opera." It begins with a prayer of deliverance uttered by Azarias (vv. 3-22), fol- lowed by an account of their protection 'from the fire. (2) The Historv of Susanna, which generally occurs at the beginning of the book, though occasionally at the end. This is a story told to illustrate the wisdom and discern- ment of Daniel. (3) Bel and the Dragon, a story into which the prophet Habakkuk is introduced. No historical authority can be claimed for any of these. [h.a.r.] Dan'ites, members of the tribe of Dan (Judg.l3.2,18.i,ii ; iChr.12.35). Dan-ja'an (2Sam.24.6), a place on the N.W. border of David's kingdom, noticed with Zidon and Tyre. It is thought to be the ruin Ddnidn, 4 miles N. of Achzib (Ez-ztb). The Phoenician coast cities were independent at this time. [c.r.c] Dannah' {low), a city in the mountains of Judah (Jos. 15. 49). Now the village Idhna, 8 miles W. of Hebron, on the lower hills. Daph'ne (2Mac.4.33), a celebrated grove and sanctuary of Apollo, about 5 miles from Antioch in Syria, with which it is intimately associated in history. Its establishment, like that of the city, was due to Seleucus Nicator. Its situation was very beautiful, with peren- nial fountains and abundant wood. Succeed- ing Seleurid monarchs, especially Antiochus Epiphanes, embellished the place still further. When Syria became Roman, Daphne continued to be famous as a place of pilgrimage and vice. The site has been well identified by Pococke and others at Beit-el-Md, " the House of the Water," on the left bank of the Orontes, to the S.W. of Antioch. Dana' (iChr.2.6). [Darda.] Dapda', a son of Mahol, one of the four wise men surpassed in wisdom by Solomon (iK.4. 31). In iChr.2.6 his name appears as Dara, son (i.e. perhaos descendant) of Zerah. Dapie (.\.V. dram ; iChr.29.7 ; Ezr.2.69, 8.27 ; Ne. 7. 70, 71, 72), a gold coin current in Palestine after the return from Babylon. There was then no large issue of gold money except by the Persian kings. The Darics which have been discovered are thick pieces of pure gold, of archaic style, bearing on the obverse the figure of a king kneeling on one knee, with bow and spear, and on the reverse an irregular incuse square or oblong. Their full weight is about 128 grs. troy, or a little less than that of an Attic stater, and is most probably that of an earlv didrachm of the Phoenician talent. The Daric was the chief gold coin of Persia. rWEiGHT<=, Com) The military organization, inherited from Saul, but greatly developed by David, was as follows: (i) "The host," consisting of all males capable of bear- ing arms, and summoned only for war. There were 12 monthly divisions of 24,000 each ; and over each presided an officer, selected from the other military bodies formed by David (1Chr.27.1-15). In the army were introduced a very limited number of chariots (2Sam.8.4) and of mules instead of asses for the princes and officers (13.29,18.9). (ii) The body-guard. This also had e.xisted in the court of Saul, and David himself had probably been its command- ing officer. But it now assumed a peculiar organization. The guards were at least in name foreigners, as having been probably drawn from the Philistines during David's resi- dence at the court of Gath. They are usually called from this circumstance Cherethites AND Pelethites. The captain of the force, however, was not only not a foreigner, but an Israelite of the highest distinction and purest descent, who first appears in this capacity, but who outlived David and became the chief sup- port of the throne of his son, namely Benaiah, son of the chief priest Jehoiada. representative of the eldest branch of Aaron's house (2 Sam.8.i8, 15. 18.20.23 ; iK. 1.38,44)- (iii) The most peculiar military institution in David's army arose out of the circumstances of his early life. The nucleus of what afterwards became the only standing army in David's forces was the baud of 600 men who had gath- ered round him in his wanderings. The number of 600 was still i)reserved. It was di\ided into 3 large bands of 200 each, and small bands of 20 each. The small bands were commanded by 30 officers, one for each band, who together formed " the thirty," and the 3 large bands by 3 officers, who together formed " the three," and the whole by one chief, " the captain of the mighty men " (2Sam.23.8-39 ; iChr.ll. 9-47). This rommander of the whole force was .\bishai, David's nephew (1Chr.ll.20 ; and c/. 2Sam.l6.9). (c) Side by side with this mili- tary organization were established social and moral institutions. Some were entirely for pastoral, agricultural, and financial purposes (iChr.27. 25-31), others were judicial (26.29- 32). A few men are named as constituting what would now be called the court, or council of the king : tiu- councillors, .\hithophel of (iiloh, and Jonathan the king's nephew (27.32,33) : the companion or " friend," Hushai" "(iChr.27.33 : 2Sam.l5.37,16.i9) : .the scribe, Sheva, or Seraiah, and at one time i Jonathan (2Sam.2O.25 ; it hr.27.32) ; Jeho- DAVID shaphat, the recorder or historian (2Sam.20. 24), and Adoram the tax-collector, both of whom survived him (iK. 4. 3, 6, 12. 18). Two prophets appear as the king's constant ad- visers. Gad, being called " the seer," belongs probably to the earliest form of the pro- phetic schools. Nathan, who appears for the first time after the establishment of the kingdom at Jerusalem (aSam.T.a), is distin- guished both by his title of " prophet " and by the nature of the prophecies which he utters (7.5-17,12.1-14) as of the purest type of the prophetic dispensation, and as the hope of the new generation, which he supports in the person of Solomon (iK.l). Two high-priests also appear — representatives of the two rival houses of Aaron (iChr.24.3) : Abiathar, com- panion of David's exile, and Zadok, who was made the head of the Aaronic family (27. 17). Besides these four great religious functionaries there were two classes of subordinates — pro- phets, specially instructed in singing and music, under Asaph, Heman the grandson of Samuel, and Jeduthun (1Chr.25.1-31), and Levites, or attendants on the sanctuary (26). (d) The external relations of David's kingdom will be found under the various coun- tries concerned. It will here be only neces- sary briefly to indicate the enlargement of his dominions. Within 10 years from the cap- ture of Jerusalem he had reduced to a state of permanent subjection the Philistines on the W. (aSam.S.i) ; the Moabites on the E. (8.2) by the exploits of Benaiah (23. 20) ; the Syrians on the N.E. as far as the Euphrates (8.3) ; the Edgmites (8.14) on the S. ; and finally the Ammonites, who had broken their ancient alliance, and made one grand resist- ance to the advance of his empire (10. 1-19,12. 26-31). These three last wars overlapped each other. The crowning point was the siege of Rabbah. (3) Three great calamities marked the beginning, middle, and close of David's otherwise prosperous reign. (a) A three years' famine (21. iff.) was the punishment inflicted on the nation as involved in Saul's slaughter of the Gibeonites. At their request David in consequence surrendered all his predecessor's sons, except Mephibosheth, to be slain, thus acting in accordance with the religious beliefs of his time. (6) The second group of incidents contains the tragedy of David's life, which grew in all its parts out of the polygamy, with its evil consequences, into which lie had plunged on becoming king — the double crime of adulter}^ with Bathsheba and of the virtual murder of Uriah. The crimes are undoubtedly those of a common Oriental despot. But the rebuke of Nathan, the sud- den revival of the king's conscience, his grief for the sickness of the child, the gathering of his uncles and elder brothers around him, his return of hope and peace, are characteristic of David, and of David only. But the clouds from this time gathered over David's fortunes, and henceforward " the sword never departed from his house" (I2.10). The outrage on his daughter Tamar, the murder of his eldest son Amnon, and then the revolt of his best belovedjAbsalom, brought on the crisis which once more sent him forth a wanderer, as in the days when he fled from Saul ; and this, the DAVID 203 heaviest trial of his life, was aggravated by the impetuosity of Joab, now, perhaps from his complicity in David's crime, more unmanage- able than ever. The rebellion was fostered ap- parently by the growing jealousy of the tribe of Judah at seeing their king absorbed by the whole nation. For its general course, see Ahithophel. The final battle was fought in the " forest of Ephraim," which terminated in the accident leading to the death of Absalom (I8.6-9). Judah was reconciled, and David again reigned in undisturbed peace at Jerusa- lem (20.1-22). (c) The closing period of David's life, with the exception of one great calamity, may be considered as a gradual pre- paration for the reign of his successor. David's census, carried out against Joab's warning, brought three days' pestilence (24. iff.), and the vision of a destroying angel over the threshing-floor of Araunah (Oman), a wealthy Jebusite, marked out the spot as site for the future temple on mount Zion, the centre of the national worship, with but slight interruption, for more than 1,000 years. A formidable con- spiracy to interrupt the succession broke out in the last days of David's reign, which de- tached from his person two of his court, who from personal offence or adherence to the ancient family had been alienated from him — Joab and Abiathar. But Zadok, Nathan, Benaiah, Shimei, and Rei remaining firm, the plot was stifled, and Solomon's inauguration took place under his father's auspices (iK.l. 1-53)- By this time David's infirmities had grown upon him. The incident of the young Shunammite, Abishag (l.iff.), is apparently mentioned for the sake of the later incident of Adonijah (2.17). His last song is pre- served— a striking union of the ideal of a just ruler which he had placed before him, and of the difficulties which he had felt in realizing it (2Sam.23.1-7). His last words, as recorded, to his successor, are general exhortations to his duty, combined with warnings against Joab and Shimei, and charges to remember the children of Barzillai (iK. 2.1-9). He died, ac- cording to Josephus at the age of 70, and " was buried in the city of David." After the return from the Captivity, " the sepulchres of David" and "the house of the mighty men" were still pointed out, apparently near Siloam (Ne.3.i6). The above sketch shows us David in the capacity both of man and ruler as illus- trative of the transitional character belonging to his time. The blemishes in his conduct, at any rate to some extent, are attributable to. the cruel, hasty, and arbitrary element in human nature in which those who were pos- sessed of any species of power did not hesitate to indulge. Even his great sin in the matter of Bathsheba and Uriah, standing out single, and thus the more conspicuous, in his life, has for parallels numberless acts, at least equal in violence, in and after his day, just as his failure to control his children is a character- istic of the Eastern parent even at the present time. On the other hand, his general un- selfishness and righteous rule, his personal charm, his family affection, diplomatic skill, courage, generosity, and power of inspiring devotion in his followers at once indicate and help forward the advance towards 4 higher 204 DAVID, CITY OF level of cultivation than had previously ex- isted in Palestine. [a.w.s.] David, City of. [Jerusalem.] David, Towep of. [Tower of David.] Day. The Heb. yom denotes both the day- time and the period of 24 hours from sunset to sunset. The ancient Israelites reckoned the day from evening to evening (Lev. 23. 32). Some think the earlier mode of reckoning was from morning to morning, and base their opinion on Gen.l.5, quoting as traces of this arrangement passages in which day is mentioned before night (e.g. Lev. 8. ^5 ; 1K.8. 59; Ps.l. 2, 32.4, 42.3, 8[4, 91,55. io[ii] ; Is.60. II ; Je.9.i[8.23j,16.i3, 33.25 ; Lam.2.i8). For sacrifices the evening was reckoned with the preceding day (Lev.7. 15, 22.30). The day was not divided into periods of defined length, but its progress was marked by the use of descriptive terms. These were: (i) shahar, with 'aid, "to ascend," lit. " rising of the morning (star)," dawn (Gen. 19. 15). (2) hoqer, from a root meaning " to split or pene- trate," as the dawn does the darkness ; time of sunrise (cf. Gen. 19. 23, 32. 31). (3) "The heat of the day," about ten o'clock (Gcn.l8.i). (4) (ohdyayim, " the double light," or noon (43.16). (5) nesheph, the twilight breeze (1Sam.3O.17), or " the breeze of the day " (Gen.3. 8) before simset. (6) ' crebh, the setiing (of the sun), evenirig (E.x.l2.i8). " Between the evenings " denotes the whole period of the decline of the sun. [Passover.] Sunrise, noon, and evening are mentioned as times of prayer (Ps.55.i7[i8]). The Babylonians were far in advance of other Semitic nations in as- tronomical knowledge, and the invention of the sun-dial and division of the day into twelve periods is attributed to them (Herod, ii. 109). The Hebrews probably borrowed from this source both the division of the day into hours, and the dial (2 K. 20. 11 ; Is.38.8). The dial of Ahaz was probably a circular flight of steps surmounted by an obelisk which threw its shadow on to them. Since the shadow could either ascend or descend ten degrees (2K.2O.9), there must have been more than twenty steps, each marking some fixed portion of time. In N.T. times the division of the night into four watches, and of the day into twelve hours, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., was fully established : " Are there not twelve hours in the day ? " (Jn.11.9). The dllovving hours are men- tioned: 3rd, Mt.20.3; 6th, 27.45, Jii.*.6, 19.14; 7lh. 4.52; 9th, Mt.27.45,46 ; loth, J n. 1.39 ; nth Mt.20.6,9 The Jewish hour is divided into 1,080 parts of fixed quantity, used in calculating the time of Ni;w Moon. The Pirke R. EL vii. sjieaks of " large hours," equal to twc common ones, corresponding to the Assyrian kashu six of which went to a day and six to a night when day and night were of equal length (Smith, -4s.syr. Epon. Can. 19). [Creation ; Dial.] [n.n.] Day's Journey (Lx.5.3, etc.). The aver- age length (if a journey among Arabs, when changing camp with women, children, and flocks, does not exceed 10 or 12 miles ; but merchants, with pack animals, will traverse 15 to 20, and sometimes 30 miU^s in a day. The Sahhaiii Day's Joiiknkv did not exceed 2,000 steps, or afjout half a mile. [Weights and Measures.] DEACONESS The Jews considered 15 miles a longdistance, and spoke of a day's journey as only about 5 Roman miles. [Modin.] [c.r.c] Daysman, an old Eng. term common in i6th cent. (Spenser's Faerie Queene, ii. c. 8; 1551 ed. Bible in iSam.2.25 ; Holland's Livy, p. 137, etc), meaning umpire or arbitrator (Job 9.33), and derived from day, in the specific sense of a day fixed for a trial. Deacon. The word " deacon " (Siciko/'os) as a title does not appear to have been derived from any Jewish or pagan source. In the LXX. Slclkovos occurs in a general sense in Esth.l.io, 2.2,6.1,3,5; Pr.10.4; 4Mac.9.i7 ; and Staftrovia inEsth.6.3,5 ; iMac.11.58, with some complica- tions of readings as to Smkovos and iiaKovla. In N.T. Slo-kovos and diaKovia and diaxoviu are used frequently in a general sense. As a title 5idKovos occurs in Ph.l.i ; iTim.3.8-13 ; and possibly R0.I6. 1. [Deaconess.] On the na- ture of the office and the method of appoint- ment and the identification with the " seven men of good report " of Ac.6.2-6, see Church ; Laving on of Hands. Plumptre and Gibson in Smith, D.B. (2nd ed.), i. 738-741 ; Armitage Robinson in Encycl. Bibl. i. 1038- 1040 ; Gwatkin in Hastings, D.B. i. 574, 575 ; Hort, The Christian Ecclesia, pp. 198- 210 ; Stone, The Christian Church, pp. 266- 269, 273, 274, 280. [d.s.] Deaconess. It is possible that the word 8idKovos is used in a technical sense to denote a deaconess in Ro.l6.i,2, " I commend unto you Phoebe our sister, who is a servant IdioLKOvov) of the church that is at Cenchrea, that ye may receive her in the Lord, worthily of the saints, and that ye assist her in whatso- ever matter she may have need of you ; for she herself also hath been a succourer(7r/)0(rrdTtj) of many, and of mine own self." In view of the facts that diaKOvos is used constantly in N.T. in a general sense, and, apart from this passat,e, only in Ph.l.i and iTim.3.8-13 in a technical sense, and that there is nothing in this passage as a whole or in the word " suc- courer " which necessarily requires an official, it cannot certainly be determined that Phoebe filled the office of deaconess at Cenchrea. It is, however, likely that an oftice of deaconess, corresponding to that found in later history, existed in N.T. times, and that it is referred to in iTinL3.li. The A.V. translation "their wives " is there ob\iously incorrect ; and the alternatives are to take "women" (yvvaiKai) in a quite general sense for "women of the Christian community," which appears to be the meaning intended by K.V'., or to understand it to denote an uJra = festival of "light" (12 Ant. vii. 7). It is named but once in the Canonical Scriptures, Jn.10.22, mentioning that it was in winter. The Hanukka festival is still observed by orthodox Jews with the lighting of lamps in their households at night, beginmng with one light on the ist day and increasing daily to eight on the 8th day. The idea of dedication was not new: Moses had dedicated the altar (Num. 7.1 1 ) ; David is credited with " a Psalm of the Dedication of the House" (Ps.30, title), which probably refers to the removal of the ark to the city of David (2Sam. 6-12-15) ; Solomon dedicated the temple (iK.8.63). Jewish Encycl. iv. 23, s.v. Hanukkah. [j.d.e.) Deep, The (Lu.8.31 ; R0.IO.7). [Pit.] Deep. [Fallow Deer ; Roe.] Degrees, Song's of. [Psalms, Titles OF.] Deha'vites (Ezr.4.9 only) were among the colonists planted in Samaria after the completion of the Captivity of Israel. From their name, and from the fact that they are mentioned with the Susanchites (Susianians, or people of Susa) and the Elamites (Ely- maeans, natives of the same country), it is fairly concluded that they are the Dai or Dahi, mentioned by Herodotus (i. 125) among the nomadic tribes of Persia. Dekap'. The son of Dekar (Ben Dekar) was the ruler of Solomon's 2nd district (iK.4.9), including towns of Dan. [Palestine.] [c.r.c] Delaiah'. — 1. A priest in the time of David, leader of the 23rd course of priests (i Ohr.24.i8). — 2. " Children of Delaiah " were among the people of uncertain pedigree who returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel (Ezr. 2.60 ; Ne.7.62). — 3. Son of Mehetabeel and father of Shemaiah (Ne.6.io). — 4. Son of Shemaiah, one of the " princes " about the court of Jehoiakim (Je. 36. 12, 25). The name also occurs in A.V. as Dalaiah (iChr.3.24). Delilah' (Judg.l6.4-18), a woman of the valley of Sorek, loved by Samson. St. Chrysos- tom calls her his "wife" ; but this is improbable. She teased him until he told the secret of his strength, and then betrayed him. Her nerve and forethought were remarkable. She thrice failed without Samson's guessing her intent. She extorted an enormous sum from the Philis- tine lords (5,500 shekels of silver). Her treachery was revolting, for it was she " who began to afflict him " when his seven locks were shorn. Some commentators suppose that she was an Israelite ; but Sorek was in Philistine territory, and an Israelite would at once have connected Samson's powers with his Nazirite vow. [Samson.] [h.m.s.] Delug'e. [Noah.] De'lus (iMac.15.23) is the smallest of the islands called Cyclades in the Aegean Sea. It was one of the chief seats of the worship of DEMETRITTS ll. 207 Apollo, and was celebrated as the birthplace of this god and of his sister Artemis (Diana). Demas, a companion of St. Paul during his first imprisonment at Rome (Ph. 24 ; Col. 4.14). In the second imprisonment Demas forsook him, but it is not fair to conclude with Bunyan that apostasy from the faith is implied. [e.r.b.] Demetrius I. {Soter, = Saviour), king of Syria (162-150 B.C.), son of Seleucus IV. [Philo- pator), became king after defeating Antio- chus V. (Eupator) and putting him to death. He then obtained from the Romans recogni- tion of his position, though they had refused him assistance. At the instigation of the Hellenizing party in Judaea, Demetrius made their leader Alcimus high-priest, and sent four expeditions against the Hasmonaean party, who were true to their country and to their God. Bacchides, at the head of a Syrian army (161), succeeded in establishing Alcimus in Jerusalem, but, shortly after the Syrian withdrawal, was obliged to flee to Antioch. Demetrius sent Nicanor against Judas Mac- cabaeus, but the latter defeated him at Caphar- salama in 162. On Adar 13, 161 e.g., the Syrians were utterly routed at Adasa, near TETRADRACHM (ATTIC TALENT) OF DEMETRIUS I. Beth-horon, and their leader slain. Dreading another attack, Judas sent an embassy to Rome, and the Senate "made an alliance with him, promising to forbid Demetrius to prose- cute the war further. Meanwhile, however, Bacchides again invaded Palestine. Judas, with only 800 men, met him in battle at Eleasa, but was defeated and slain. His youngest brother, Jonathan, was then chosen as leader of the patriots, and still held out across the Jor- dan. Soon after Alcimus died, and Bacchides withdrew. In 158 he returned, but failed to put down the Hasmonaean party, and was compelled to conclude a treaty with Jonathan. " Thus the sword ceased from Israel." Deme- trius had aroused much popular odium by his tyranny, and in the insurrection of Alexander Balas, who was aided by Jonathan, he was defeated and slain in 150 b.c, after accom- plishing prodigies of valour. [w.st.c.t.] Demetpius II., surnamed Nicator and Ni- canor (the Victorious), king of Syria (146-145 B.C. and again 128), was the elder of Demetrius Soter's two sons. At the time when Alexander Balas rose in rebellion, his father had sent him to Cnidus, along with his younger son Antio- chus, to await the issue of the war, and to avenge his father should the rebellion for a time succeed. On attaining manhood, Deme- trius gathered a force of Cretans, and landed in Syria to claim the kingdom. Alexander, sunk in debauchery, and not expecting an attack. 208 DEMElPftltJg was deserted by the people of Antioch and by many of his own soldiers, and was slain. [Alexander Balas.] Ptolemy Philometor helped to seat Demetrius on the throne, giving him his daughter Cleopatra in marriage. Soon after his arrival in Syria, Demetrius renewed the war against Jonathan, whom Balas had made high-priest, and had invested with a purple robe. ApoUonius, governor of Coelo- syria, advanced to Azotus with a large army (147 B.C.), but was there routed by Jonathan, losing nearly 8,000 men. An interview then took place at Ptoleraais between Demetrius and Jonathan, in which Jonathan was con- firmed in his position. In 145, Trvphon, who had been an officer of Alexander Balas, brought Antiochus, the young son of the latter, from Arabia, where he had taken refuge, and re- belled against Demetrius. The people of Antioch rose in revolt, and Jonathan, disap- pointed in the hope that Demetrius would keep his promise to withdraw the Syrian garri- rison from the citadel of Jerusalem, joined Antiochus. With the assistance of his own brother Simon, he took possession of all Pales- tine as far as Damascus, and held it for Antio- chus. The latter confirmed Jonathan in his high office, and made Simon governor of the whole district between Tyre and the borders of Egypt (144 B.C.)- In the same year Jonathan defeated Demetrius' troops near Kadesh in Galilee, but in 143 Tryphon seized the high- priest by treachery, and murdered him. Si- mon was chosen, in his brother's stead, head of the Jewish state and high-priest. Tryphon then murdered Antiochus, and claimed the throne for himself. Simon joined Demetrius, who for a time got the better in the contest with Tryphon. In 138 Demetrius made war with Mithridates (.4rsaces VI). of Parthia, and, aided by Elanaites, Persians, and Bactrians, was for a time successful. At last, however, Mithridates captured him by treachery (141 B.C.), and sent him as an honourably treated prisoner to Hyrcania. Meanwhile Demetrius' brother, Antiochus Sidetcs, overthrew Tryphon, and became king of Syria (137 b.c). He en- gaged in a war with the Parthians, and this led Phraates II., who was then king, into alliance with Demetrius, who had married his sister Khodoguna. Demetrius was sent into Syria, with a Parthian army, to force Antiochus to re- treat, and he thus regained the throne (128 B.C.). But a rival claimant, Zabinas (who took the nameof Ale.xander), aided by Ptolemy Physcon of Egypt, soon after defeated him in battle near Damascus, and compelled him to flee to Tyre, where he was murdered rots ewovpavion. Eph.6. 12 ; cf. Mt. 18. 35) ; but, like Satan, they " go to and fro in the earth," deceiving, injuring, possessing men. They are specially powerful among the heathen, with whose divinities the\- are sometimes iden- tified (Deut. 32.17 ; Ps.106. 37 ; Ba.*.7 ; iCor. 10.20). Our Lord's allusion to them as haunt- ing waterless places (.Mt.i2.43), is perhaps metaphorical. A special class of demons is mentioned (2Pe.2.4 ; Ju.6), who are already chained in hell. " reserved unto judgment." Both writers call them " angels," and seem to follow the book of Enoch in identifying them with " the sons of God " of Gen. 6. 2. [Satan ; Demoniacai, Possession.] [c.ii.] Demoniacal possession is at once one of the most diflirnlt and most interesting of the minor problems furnished by Holy Scrip- ture. To deal effectively with the questions raised, we must first note the various cases in which a definite i)ossession of a human body by a si>irit, good or evil, is apparently alleged in the text. Th<^ first case historically is that of Saul (iSam.l6.i.i), who, when he turned from tiie right jiathway, was troubled by " an evil spirit from the Lord." In tiiis case the disease was intermittent ; the playing of David caused the siiirit to depart for a time. We may also note that the evil spirit is said to have been " from the Lord," but this may possibly be taken to imply that God had abaudoued him to evil, rather than that there DEMONIACAL POSSESSION DEPOSIT 209 was any direct sending of evil upon him (c/. Ac.7.42 ; Ro.1.28). When we come to N.T. we find a very different conception. No less than seven cases of direct possession by an evil spirit are alleged in the four gospels. These roughly divide into two classes, (i) We may take Mt.15.22 as representative of those (probably the greater number) in which there is a direct statement that a person is possessed of a devil, but no indication of the symptoms. These we may dismiss immedi- ately, as it is more than probable that the evangelist is simply using the phraseology of his time, and attributing a violent evil, the causes of which were unknown in his day, to demoniacal possession. The controversy with regard to the story of the Gadarene swine has received more notice than it deserves. Arch- bishop Trench says it " forms one of the chief stumbling-blocks in evangelical history," Dean Farrar that " we can gain nothing by speculating upon it " ; and the combat be- tween Mr. Gladstone and Prof. Huxley is in the memory of most. It is important to note that no narrator of the story was an eye- witness of the occurrence, but each was de- pendent upon outside information. Under these circumstances, is the theory that the demoniac, " in the parting paroxysm of his madness, hunted the swine over the precipice into the lake, imparting to them the fear which possessed him," quite so utterly ridicu- lous and untenable as is often supposed ? (2) Those in which our I^ord Himself deliberately speaks of an evil spirit possessing the patient present a much more serious difficulty. We may take Mk.9.17 as a specimen case. Here the symptoms are entirely those of ordinary epilepsy [Madness], were it not for the re- markable phrase in ver. 25, " He rebuked the evil spirit, saying rmto him. Thou dumb and deaf spirit." Hence the question arises, was our blessed Lord capable of speaking as though the youth were possessed by a devil, when as a matter cf fact he was suffering from an ordinary disease ? To say how far this question can be answered by the doctrine of the " kenosis " is not within the province of this article ; but the considerations that follow may partly remove the necessity. It is evident that it was customary to attribute anything incomprehensible to a possession of the devil from the fact that the Jews, whenever our Lord Himself did anything which they regarded as inexplicable, were exceedingly ready to accuse him of such possession (see Mt.ll.i8 ; Lu.7.33, etc.). It is curious that beyond the gospels there is hardly a mention in N.T. of demoniacal possession. The only definite cases are in Ac.l6.i6,19.i2,19.i3. In the last we have a definite case of an evil spirit who is at once capable of knowledge and of special opposition to our Lord. Vari- ous explanations of the whole matter have been offered by different theologians. Of these the least feasible appears to be the commonplace theory that while evil spirits had extraordinary powers during gospel times, these have since entirely ceased. Under what possible circumstances the laws of the spiritual world should be entirely re-modelled for a brief space it is hard to understand. The two arguments generally adduced in favour of this popular belief are, first, that the N.T. age was an age of miracle, and secondly, that it was an age of special dia- bolical activity. That a specially spiritual age is always a specially evil age is obvious from history and from reason alike, for it is reasonable to suppose that the powers of evil will be specially active when they are being most opposed. But to maintain, as some have done, that an age of miracle may be expected to be conciKxent with an age of xmaccustomed diabolic possession is as urureasonable as can be, for it presupposes that when this spirit of good is most active, then the powers of evil are given special facilities. It is surely much more reasonable to suppose that the common belief that the N.T. time was one of special manifestation of spiritual power (both good and evil) is incorrect, as affects kind though not degree. Naturally during the Incarnation of our blessed Lord, and the period that immediately followed that Incarnation, the power of God was more manifest in the world. But our Lord Himself deliberately disclaims that He was doing anything more in the way of miracle than should be done by His followers (see J n. 14. 12). And tradi- tion and history alike show that the age both of miracle and of diabolic activity by no means passed away with the Ascension or with the death of the apostles. Early pre- mediaeval and mediaeval records, however much we may discount them as supposititious, cannot be altogether explained without some theory of extra-natural interposition, and, indeed, even now there are so many things undreamt of in our philosophy which yet occasionally happen that he would be bold who would dogmatize on the subject. To sum up : It IS impossible to deny that there are cases of definite possession of a human body by a devil recorded in N.T. It is imreasonable to suppose that such posses- sion is restricted to N.T. times. It is im- possible to state when such possession ceased, or indeed that it has ceased at all. And finally, Science, while she offers no explanation of these occurrences, on the other hand, offers no definite contradiction of them, and we must wait for further elucidation till she has attained further knowledge. [f-J-] De'inophon,a Syrian governor in Palestine under Antiochus V. Eupator (2Mac.l2.2). Dena'plus (A.V. penny, pennyworth ; Mt.18.28,20.2,9,13,22.19 ; Mk.6.37,12.15,14.5 ; Lu.7.41,10.35,20.24 ; Jn. 6.7,12. 5 ; Rev. 6.6), a Roman silver coin, in the time of our Saviour and the apostles. It took its name from its being first equal to ten " asses," a number afterwards increased to sixteen. The earliest specimens are of about the com- mencement of the 2nd cent. e.g. From this time it was the principal silver coin of the commonwealth. In Palestine, in the N.T. period, numismatic evidence shows that de- narii formed the civil silver ciurrency. From the parable of the labourers in the vineyard it would seem that a denarius was then the ordinary Wages for a day's labour (Mt.2O.2ff.). Deposit. The contract whereby one leaves with another movable property for 14 210 DEPUTY safe custody, (i) Of inanimate objects : in case of theft the thief was to make double restitution to the owner. (2) Of animals : in case of death, injury, or cattle-Ufting with- out witness the depositary could clear himself by oath and make no restitution [Oaths] ; for theft he had to restore ; if the animal were torn in pieces he went free on production of the carcase. (3) Of inanimate objects and animals : in case of dispute as to an injury, the judges tried the issue between the owner and the depositary, and the unsuccessful party paid twice the value of the object to the other (Kx.22.6-i2[7-i3]). (4) A repentant depositary who had acted wrongly might voluntarily purge himself by restoring the deposit plus one-fifth and bringing a guilt offering (Lev. 6. i-7[5. 20-26)). [Crimes.] Parallels in Post, Grundriss, ii. 658 ff. [h.m.w.] The term occurs three times in N.T., R.V. marg. "deposit": in iTim.6.20, 2Tim.l.i4, of the Gospel ; in 2Tim.I.i2 of the whole being or the soul. It is used in the latter sense by Philo and Josephus. [h.h.] Deputy. [Proconsul.] Dep'be (Ac.t4-. 20,21, 16. 1,20.4). The exact position of this town has not yet been ascer- tained, but it was in the E. of the great upland plain of LvcAONiA, which stretches from IcoNiuM eastwards along the N. of the chain of Taurus, and near the place where the " Cilician Gates " formed a pass from the plain of Cilicia to the table-land of the in- terior ; and probably it was a stage upon the great road which passed this way. Three sites have been suggested, (i) Col. Leake supposed it to be Bin-bir-Kilisseh, at the foot of the Qara Ddgh, a remarkable volcanic moun- tain in the Lycaonian plain ; but this is almost certainly the site of Lystra. (2) In Kiepert's Map, Derbe is marked farther to the E., at a spot where there are ruins, and in the line of a Roman road. (3) Hamilton and Texier are disposed to place it at DivU, a little to the S.W. of (2) and nearer the roots of Taurus. Desert, a word sparingly employed in A.V. to translate four Heb. terms. (i) 'drdbhd [.-\rabahI (I':zk.47.8), and without the Heb. article. Is. 35. 1,6, 40. 3, 41. 19, 51. 3 ; Je.2.6,5.6 marg., 17. 6, 50. 12. (2) midhbdr. The usual translation is " wilderness," but " desert " in l':x.3.i,5.3.19.2; Num. 33. 15, 16; Deut.32.io; Job 24. 5; Is. 21. 1 ; Je. 25. 24. The midhbdr oiien designates a plateau with grass in springtime, bare in summer. (3) horbii (dry) is rendered " desert " in Ps.102.6 • Is. 48. 21 ; Ezk.13.4, but usually in A.V. "waste places" or "de- solation." (4) y.s^tnMon [Jksuimon], with the definite article. Without the article it occurs in a few passages of poetrv ; rendered " desert " (Ps. 78. 40, 106. 14 : Is. 43. 10,20). [c.r.c] Dessau (2Mac.i4.1r)), a village (not " town"), when' a battle appears to have been lost bv Simon, brother of Judas Maccabaeus. Kwald conjectures that it may have been . Adasa. [c.R.c] Deuel', father of Eliasaph, the " captain " of the tribe of (iad at the numbering of the jx'oplc at Sinai (Num. 1.14,7. 42, 47, 10. 20). In 2.14 the name ajipcars as Keuel, an inter- change of two very similar Heb. letters. The LX.X. has Raguel in all cases. DEtTTERONdMY Deuteponomy, the closing book of the law, or Pentateuch. It bears in Heb. the name d'bhdrlm ("words"), from the opening sentence. The Gk. translators named it Deuteronomion (" second law "), a designation not entirely appropriate, as the laws which the books con- tain are, for the most part, not new, but a re- petition or recapitulation (with enforcement) of " statutes and judgments " already given. The book, in its main part, consists of three hortatory discourses, purporting to have been delivered by Moses in the Arabah of Moab (" that is," the R.V. explains, " the deep valley recurring north and south oi the Dead Sea "), in the eleventh month of the fortieth year of the wanderings of Israel (I.3), shortly before his own death. The discourses, couched in a strain of eloquent and affectionate admonition and appeal, recall the great deeds of God in the history of the nation, and the longest of them embraces a rehearsal (12-26) of the princi- pal laws given by God to Moses at Horeb, as these were to be observed by the people in their settlement in Canaan. The three ad- dresses are fitted with a brief introduction and some connecting notes, and appended to them are Moses' Song and Blessing, and a narrative of his death on mount Nebo. — Contents. The general introduction states the time and place of the delivery of the discourses (1. 1-5). Then (i) 1.6-4.40 contain the first discourse of Moses. The earlier part (1.6-3) reviews the historical circumstances up to the time when the address was given, and 4.1-40 is an earnest, practical appeal. Subjoined to this address is a short account of the appointment of three cities of refuge E. of the Jordan (4. 41-43). (2) After an introduction (4.44-49), 5-26 record the second and longest discourse of Moses. This consists of {a) a recital of the Decalogue, and exhortations based thereupon, relating to the fundamental theo- cratic principles by which the nation was to be guided (5-11); and {b) a summary of the principal laws. The laws dealt with are mainlv, though bv no means exclusivelv, those in the'Book of the Covenant (Ex. 20-23)'. They are reproduced, not literally, but in the form of popular address, with occasional expansion, abbreviation, or modification, as the occasion required (Dent. 12- 26). .\ brief historical notice is interjiolated in 10.(>, 7. (3) 27-29.1 may be a conclusion to the preceding discourse, or may, lierhaps better, be regarded as introductory to, and prefacing, the third discourse, which properly begins in 29.2. Ch. 27 gives direc- tions for the inscribing of the law on great stones on mount Ebal, and for blessings and cursings on mounts (lerizim and Ebal respectiveh- ; and 28 solemnly expands the meaning of the blessing, and, with terrible em- phasis, of the curse. A concluding discourse follows (29.2-30), embracing a jiromise of restoration on reiHMitance (30.i-io). The people ar(> exhorted to choose between life and death (30.n-2o). (4) Ch. 31 narrates certain transactions of Moses consequent on these addresses —his farewell to the iieojile and commission of Joshu.i, and sjiecialh- his writing out of the law and delivery of it to the priests (vv. 1-15,24-27); then his writingof his Song by divine direction (IT. 16-23,28-30). Ch. 82gives the Song, and ch. 33 the Blessing of Moses. Ch. 34 recounts the circumstances of Moses' death, and ends with a eulogium upon him. — Deuteronomy has a unity of purpose and uni- formity of character and style which place it by itself among the books of the Pentateuch, with which, nevertheless, both in history and laws, it is closely connected. The style has the elevated, rhetorical, expansive character appropriate to hortatory address, and is marked by many peculiar expressions {e.g. " observe to do," " that it may be well with thee," " as it is this day," " a peculiar people," " love " of God, etc. The long lists usually given, however, require careful sifting). Critics distinguish it, in contrast with the styles of the so-called P and JE, by the symbol D. It has nearest affinity to the Jehovistic (J ) style (cf. Gen. 26. 5; Ex. 13. 3-16,15.26,19. 3-6, parts of 20,23.20-23, 34.10-26) ; but even the priestly (P) style sometimes takes on a Deuteronomic character (cf. Lev.26 ; Num.32). Only in one or two places are the P and JE writers thought to be discerned in Deuteronomy. Ch. 32.48-52,34. 1,8,9, are ascribed to P ; and 27.5-7 (groundlessly), 31.14-22,34. 10 are presumed to be extracts from J E. (On this nomenclature, see Pentateuch.) So well marked is the style of Deuteronomy, that till recent times the unity of the book was regarded as one of the settled results of criticism. Dr. Driver points out how " particular words and phrases, consisting some- times of entire clauses, recur with extraordinary frequency, giving a. distinctive colouring to every part of the work" (Deut. p. Ixxvii). Criticism has thought fit to challenge this unity, but without much agreement in results. Some think the original law-book (attributed to the age of Josiah) consisted only of 12-26 (Wellhausen, etc.). Some enlarge its contents to 5-26 (e.g. Kuenen, who also gives ch. 28 to D) ; while others reduce the kernel to 12-19, and explain the present extent of the book as the result of the labours of a " school " extending down beyond the Babylonian captivity (Oxford Hexateuch). Latterly a new theory has been propounded, which, discarding the division into "hortatory" and "legislative" parts, proposes to divide into sections marked by the use of the singular pronouns (Sg. ) and sections marked by the use of the plural pronouns (PL). (Thus Steuernagel, etc.) To this arbitrary theorizing and disintegration the unmistakable unity of style and phraseology of the book furnish an ali-sufficient reply. Taken as a whole, no book bears upon itself more clearly the marks of unity of authorship than Deuteronomy. With the unity of the book the question of its age and authorship stands in close connexion. That the book itself claims Mosaic authorship can hardly be disputed. The discourses are de- clared, apparently in good faith, to have been delivered by Moses, in the plains of Moab, to assembled Israel a short time before his death. It is further expressly attested that " he [Moses] wrote this law, and delivered it unto the priests the sons of Levi. . . . When Moses had made an end of writing the words of this law in a book until they were finished, Moses commanded the Levites, saying. Take this book of the law, and put it by the side of the ark" (31.9,24-26. Cf. 17.18 ; Jos.l. 7,8,24.26 ; 2K.14.5,6). Moses ©ETTTERONOMY 211 is said also to have written his Song (31.19,22), and presumably it is intended that the Blessing (33) was written by him also. It is granted at once that the expression " this law " cannot be pressed beyond Deuteronomy ; but there is no reason for supposing that it does not include the hortatory as well as the legislative parts of Deuteronomy (cf. I.5, where the expression plainly applies to all that follows). There is still the question, which is in itself a fair one, whether our present book of Deuteronomy cor- responds precisely to the " law " which Moses wrote, or may not be regarded as an inspired reproduction, in somewhat elaborated form, of briefer notes of the lawgiver (thus Delitzsch, etc.). The possibility cannot be denied; but there seems no reason why Moses should not have given the requisite literary form to his own addresses. The intensely earnest per- sonal note in the discourses speaks to their first- hand origin. When, passing the intermediate period, we come to the discovery of " the book of the law " in the reign of Josiah (2K.22), we find reason to conclude that the book then found in the temple was, or at least included, the book of Deuteronomy ; and there can be no doubt at all that the book then recovered was already old, and was taken by every one concerned (Hilkiah, Shaphan, the king, Hul- dah the prophetess, the people) to be a genuine book of the law of Moses (2K. 22. 8, 23. 2, 24,25). The provisions of the book conflicted with a multitude of interests. It was unsparing in its condemnation of idolatries and other practices of the time (2K. 22.13, 16,17) ; yet no one then, or after, raised a voice in protest against its claim to be a true Mosaic work. The alterna- tive supposition, adopted by leading critics, that the work was a " pious fraud " — a deliber- ate deception practised by Hilkiah and his circle on the king — can only be indignantly repelled. But if the book, in accordance with its claim, was universally accepted as Mosaic ; then, to what period, short of the age of Moses, can its origin be attributed ? When the con- tents of the book are examined, they are found, in a multitude of respects, to corroborate its claim to an early and Mosaic origin. Not to speak of linguistic peculiarities in this, as in other books of the Pentateuch (the so-called " archaisms "), it has often been pointed out that many of the laws in Deut. are quite unsuit- able to the times of Josiah, and that many more had no possible bearing on the assumed aim of the book — the centralization of worship and putting down of high places in Josiah's reign. Such are the commands for the destruction of the Canaanites (Deut. 7. i-6,20. 10-18) and of the Amalekites(25. 17-19), laws for the camp (23. 2-9), the warnings against choosing a foreigner for aking, and causing to return to Egypt (17. 15,16), etc. In the same direction point the impression constantly given of the recentness of the deliverance from Pharaoh, and the numer- ous references to Egypt (its diseases, usages, agriculture, threatening of Egypt as a punish- ment, 28.27,60,68, etc.), and even the command to write the law on stones on mount Ebal, and the blessings and cursings on Gerizim and Ebal. There is no mention in Deuteronomy of the " high places" of Josiah's age, and the assump- tion that the " Levites " for whom provision is 212 t)EtfTEllON6Mlf made in 18.6-8 are the " disestablished priests " of these high places is without a shadow of evidence. The book pronounced a very differ- ent sentence on leaders in idolatry (13). This prima facie evidence of the Mosaic authorship of the book of Deuteronomy can only be over- turned by the adducing of the strongest proofs to the contrary. Among such proofs cannot be reckoned the objection that the book represents too advanced a stage of literary composition for the age of Moses, for this begs the very question at issue — the literary capabilities of a leader like Moses. Writing was familiar to one trained in Egypt. [Pentateuch.] Nor is it a cogent argument that the last chapter of the book narrates the death of Moses. No one now holds that Moses wrote the narrative of his own death in ch. 34 ; but this only shows, what on other grounds it is reasonable to as- sume, that the book underwent editing and completion by other hands. Probably the framework and certain annotations in the body of the work are due to such editing. Nor, again, is it decisive of non-Mosaic authorship that Moses is said (l.i,5) to have delivered his addresses "on the other side Jordan" (R.V. "beyond Jordan"). Besides the local usage, determined by the position of the speaker, generally with some defining phrase to show which side was meant (4.41,46,49,11.30), " the other side Jordan " was a geographical ex- pression for the Moabite side of the river ; hence could be used by Moses himself, when speaking on that side (3.8). If the framework is due to later editing, the objection disappears altogether. The critics are very confident that Deuteronomy can be shown to be of earlier date than the Levitical law. Neither in the historical references nor in the laws, it is ar- gued, is the priestly code recognized. The older critical writers, with more reason, were convinced of the very opposite of this, that Deut. did presuppose the priestly history and laws. As points of contact with the P history may be mentioned, the allusion to the creation narrative in 4.32 (cf. Gen. 1. 27), to " seventy " as the number who went down to Egypt (Deut. 10. 22), to "twelve" as the number of the spies (I.23), to Moses and Aaron being de- barred from Canaan as a punishment (1.37,3.26, 4.21), etc. — all only in P ; with many special words and phrases, as " horses and chariots," " hard bondage," " stretched-out arm," etc. (4.34,11.4,26.6). Onlaws, see Pentateuch. A special case of alleged difference is the occur- rence in Deuteronomy of the phrase " the priests the Levites," and the non-recognition of the distinction in the other books between the " priests," the sons of Aaron, and the " Levites " as ministers to the priests. It may be sufficient here to point out that while, in Deuteronomy, an Aaronic priesthood and dis- tinctions witliin the tribe of Levi are implied (10.6,18.i-'S), it was natural, after the separa- tion of the tribe, that, in popular address, the whole tribe should be spoken of, in distinction from the people, as, collectively, a priestly tribe. The language in Deuteronomy suits a period when the earlier designation, " sons of Aaron," was being gradually dropped for ano- ther icientifying the priests more directly with their tribe. In truth, however, the phrase »EW " priests and Levites" is as little foimd in the other books as in Deuteronomy ; and in Levi- ticus itself the " Levites " are practically ig' nored. [Levitici's.] Occasionally, the term " Levites " is used, as in Deut., to cover both priests and Levites (Num. 35. 2, 6, 8). A princi- pal argument for the late date of the book is • that the law of the unity of the sanctuary in Deut. 12 is apparently unknown in the earlier history, and is opposed to the older JE law of Ex. 20.24, which permits sacrifices to be offered without restriction of place. There is, however, misapprehension here of both the law in Exodus and the law in Deuteronomy. The ideal of one sanctuary is present from the first (Ex.23. 14-19), and the law in Deuteronomy was not intended to take full effect till the Lord had given the people rest from their enemies (12. 10). Many of the sacrifices instanced as breaches of this law were sanctioned by theo- phanies, and others (as in the case of Samuel) belong to a period of religious disorganization. How far Deuteronomy is from contradicting Ex. 20. 24 is seen from its own command to erect an altar in the precise terms of that law (Deut. 27.5-7). Objections are drawn from alleged discrepancies between the historical notices in Deut. and those of the earlier books, and from like discrepancies between the laws in the dif- ferent codes. Most of the historical contra- dictions are far-fetched and unreal, and the discrepancies of laws, though sometimes occa- sioning difficulty, usually admit of reasonable explanation. The tithe-laws in Deuteronomy, in particular, present a different aspect from those in the Levitical Code. The Jews them- selves resolved the difficulty by the supposition of a " second " tithe for purposes of charity ; while the Levitical provision seems clearly pre- supposed in 18.2 {cf. Num. 18. 20-24). The very freedom used by the author in his handling of the laws points to the original law-giver, as alone entitled to use this liberty. 1 Law in O.T.] With Delitzsch we may hold that " nothing necessitates us to deny the Song [Deut. 32] to Moses" ; and. if the spirit of prophecy be ad- mitted, the same may be said of Moses' Blessing (33). The general argument for the early date of Deut. is strengthened by a study of the pro- phetic writings, which appear in many ways to show acquaintance with the ideas and phrase- ology of the book. This is true of both Amos and Hosea. Cf., e.g.. Am. 4. 6-10, 5. 1 1 with Deut. 28.i5ff. : Am.6.i2 with Deut. 29. 18 ; Am.9.14, 15 w'ith Deut. 30. ^ff. : Ho. 5. 10 with Dtut.l9.i4, 27.17: Ho. 8. 13 with Deut. 28.68; H0.I2.13 with Deut. 18. 18, 34.10, etc. Driver, Deut.; Alex- ander, Deut., in Pulpit Comm. ; Moller, Are the Critics Right? Deut., in Speaker's Comm. ; and sec Pentateuch. [J-o.] Devil. [Satan; Demon; Demoniacal Possession.) Hew. This is so copious in summer in Palestine that it suppliesto someextenttheab- sence of rain (Ecclus. 18. 16, 43. 22), and becomes important to the agriculturist. An instance of this copiousness is the well-known sign of (iideon (Judg.6.37fT. ). Tims as a prime source of fertilitv it is regard(>d as a divine blessing ((;cn.27.28 : I)eut.33.i3 ; Zech.8.12), and its withdrawal as a curse (iSam.l. 21 ; iK.17.i ; Hag. 1. 10). It is a frequent poetic image for DIADEM that which is gentle, penetrating, and refresh- ing (Deut.32.2 ; Job 29.19 ; Ps.133.3 ; Prov.l9. 12 ; Is.26.T9 ; Ho.14.5 ; Mi.5.7), or is a sign of night-exposnre (Can. 5. 2 ; Dan.4.i5fif.5.2i) ; while the speedy evanescence of the early dew typifies the transient goodness of the hypocrite (Ho.6.4,13.3). Diadem. The Gk. did8ri/xa signifies properly a badge of royalty, and was used originally to describe the silken fillet, which was fastened around the turban of the Persian kings (Xen. 8 Cyr. iii. 13). Thus LXX. uses the word to describe the crown DIBON, DIBON-GAD 213 OBVERSE OF TETRADRACHM OF TIGRANES, KING OF SYRIA. royal of Vashti(Esth.l.ir) andof Esther (2.i7), and also the distinctive decoration of the head, which was worn by the successors of Alexander as a token of their assumption of sovereignty (iMac.l.9,13.32). This strict use of the word is, however, not always observed by LXX., which describes Mordecai's robe of honour by the same term (Esth.8.15). In N.T. tlie Gk. accurately distinguishes between diadTfjiiia, the symbol of sovereignty, and ffTecpavos, the festal wreath. [Crown.] The former occurs in N.T. in Rev. only, where it is used for the rival dominions of the ex- alted Christ on the one hand (Rev. 19. 12) and of "the dragon" (12. 3) and "the beast" (13. i) on the other. This distinction, which A.V. failed to mark, has been brought out by R.V. (cf. Trench, N.T. Syn. xxiii.). [j.c.v.d.] Dial (Heb. ma'dloth, "steps"; 2K.2O. 11; Is.38.8; see marg. A.V. "degrees," R.V. " steps "). The word is also rendered in the same passages by " degrees " (2K.20.9,io ; Is. 38.8). Cyril of Alexandria and Jerome sup- posed the length of the shadow on a flight of steps to be intended. A Kassite boundary stone of nth cent. b.c. (De Morgan, Fouilles a Suse, 1 897-1 899, ii. p. no) represents (appar- ently as an emblem of the spring equinox) the segment of a circle divided into degrees ; and sun-dials were thus probably in use as early as the 8th cent. B.C. [c.r.c] Diamond (Heb. yahdldm), a precious stone, the third in the second row on the breast-plate of the high-priest (Ex. 28. 18, 39. II ), and one of the precious stones of the king of Tyre (Ezk.28.13). Our translation, " dia- mond," is derived from Eben Esra, and de- fended by Braun. Kalisch says, " perhaps emerald." It is practically certain that Pliny described the diamond as one kind of adamant, but very improbable that the gem should have been known in the countries bordering the Mediterranean before the days of Alexander the Great. At any rate, it is not likely to have been available for the high-priest's breast-plate at the time that was made. That it should have been engraved may be pronounced impossible. The art of diamond cutting is hardly older than the 15th cent, in Europe, though it may be of more ancient date and independent discovery in India. For shdmir, translated "diamond" in Je.17.1, see Adamant. [t.g.b.] Diana, a Roman goddess, regarded as identical with Artemis. In Asia there was an early indigenous deity to whom the Gk. settlers ascribed some of the characteristics of their own Artemis. She was, however, in the cult which had its highest development at Ephesus (where was her famous temple, the Artemisium), scarcely, if at all, a lunar deity, but a goddess who presided over generation and the procreative energy of mother earth. The traditional form of the image referred to in Ac. 19 is preserved on Ephesian coins. GREEK IMPERIAL COPPER COIN OF EPHESUS AND SMYRNA ALLIED ('O^lOTOia) ; DOMITIA, WITH NAME OF PROCONSUL. O*^'. .■ AOMITIA CCBACTH. Bust facing to right. Rez\: AN©Y KAICCN nAITOYOMONOIA ee ZMYP. Ephesian Diana. Some of the symbolism points to fertility and animal wild-life. The turret-crown appears to denote affinity with Cybele, which affinity is also marked by the orgiastic rites of her priests, the ^lEja^v^oi. But in spite of these rites, the religion of Ephesus seems to have contained some elements of austere purity. The epithet " great " was commonly ascribed to Artemis : hence the exclamation, " Great is Artemis of the Ephesians." The prevalence of her cult is not inaptly described in the words (ver. 27), " Whom all Asia and the world worshippeth." See A. B. Cook, Hell. Journ., 1895, p. 12 ; Farnell, Cults of the Greek States, pp. 480 ff. [Ephesus.] [a.r.] Dibla'im, father (or mother) of Hosea's wife Gomer (H0.I.3). Diblath' (R.V. Diblah ; Ezk.6.14 only). " From the wilderness towards Diblah " may refer to Beth-diblathaim, but four MSS. read RiBLAH, a town which has a wilderness to its E. Dibl in Upper Galilee is in a rugged region, but not in or near the wilderness. [c.r.c] Dibon', Dlbon-gad' — 1. A chief city of Moab immediately N. of the Arnon gorge. Now the ruined town Dhihdn, where the "Moabite Stone" was found by Rev. F. Klein on August 19, 1868. The city is first noticed in the Amorite song of triumph (Num. 21. 30) ; and, though in Reuben, was rebuilt by men of Gad (32.34). As Dibon- gad, it is the next stage N. of Iim (33.45) in the region given to Reuben (Jos. 13. 9, 17), but held by Moabites after about 890 b.c. (Is. 15. 2 ; Je.48.i8,22). The Moabite Stone, erected by king Mesha (see 2 K. 1.1,3.4-27) about the 214 DIBRI same date, records the beginning of the retreat of Israel from iMedeba even in Ahab's reign, and the final Moabite triumph over all the plateau to Jahaz — as to which Mesha savs, " I took it, that I might add it to Dibon." —2. (Ne.11.25.) [DiMON.] [C.R.C] Dibri', a Danite, father of Shelomith, i (Lev.24.ii). Didpachm. [Money ; Shekel.] Didymus {the twin), the Gk. translation of Aram, ti'iina = Thomas (Jn. 11. 16, 20. 24, 21. 2). Diklah' (Gen. 10. 27 ; iChr.l.21), a son of Joktan, whose settlements, as those of the other sons of Joktan, must be looked for in Arabia. The Heb. signifies " a palm-tree," hence perhaps Diklah is a part of Arabia containing many palm-trees. Dilean', one of the cities in the lowlands of Judah (Jos.15.38). An unknown site, [c.r.c] Dimnah' (Jos. 21. 35). Apparently for KiMMOx (iChr. 6. 77). Dimon', The ^vaters of, in the land of Moab (Is. 15. 9). Gesenius thinks Dimon may stand for Dibon, just as Dimonah be- comes Dibon (Ne.11.23) : but there is a play on the sounds Dimon and dam {blood) in the passage cited. [c.r.c] Dimonah', a city in the S. of Judah (Jos. 15.22), apparently the Dibon of Ne.ll.25. Dinah', the daughter of Jacob by Leah (Gen. 30. 21). She accompanied her father from Mesopotamia to Canaan, and, going " to see the daughters of the land," was violated by Shechem, sou of Hamor the chieftain of the territory (Gen. 34.) Her age at this time, judging by the subsequent notice of Joseph's age (Gen. 37. 2), may have been from 13 to 15, the ordinary period of marriage in Eastern countries. Shechem proposed to make the usual reparation by paying a sum to the father and marrying her (Gen. 34.12). But the crown of the offence consisted in its having been committed by an alien against the favoured people of God ; he had " wrought folly in Israel " (34.7). Hamor, who acted as his deputy, proposed the fusion of the two peoples by intermarriage and commerce. The sons of Jacob availed themselves of the eagerness of Shechem to effect their revenge : they demanded, as a condition of the proposed union, the circumcision of the Shechemites. The latter assented : and on the third day, when the jiain and fever resulting from the operation were at the highest, Simeon and Levi, own brothers to Dinah as Josephus observes, attacked them unexpectedly, slew all the males and plundered their city. Jacob expressed abhorrence of this act both at the time and on his death-bed (Gen. 34. 30, 49., 'i-7)- Dinaites, mentioned in the letter of Kcliuin, the chancellor (Ezr.4.Q), among the inhaldtants settled in the cities of Samaria by " the great and noble Asnapper." Cheyne, however, thinks that it is not properly an ethnic name, but that the LX.X. rightly renders it " judg<'S." from the root dr. He considers the word to be a transliteration of the Persian title dahdhar. The Dinaites have been identified with various peoples bearing somewhat similar names. [f-J-F.-J-I Dinhabah' (Gen. 36. 32; iChr.l..t3), perhaps Dhdneh in N. Ldom. [Ldom.J [t-K.c.J.^ DISCIPLES Dionysia (in Latin, Bacchanalia), the feast of DjoHysKi' or Bacchus. In 2Mac.i4.33 Nicanor threatened to destroy the temple in Jerusalem and erect " a temple unto Dionysus for all to see" ; and in an earlier chapter (6.7) Antiochus enjoined that, when the Dionysia came, the Jews were " to go in procession in honour ot Dionysus, wearing wreaths of ivy." Dif)nysus was the god of wine, and his worship, which had many Eastern features, was a blend of orgies and mysticism. In the Hel- lenic cult there were four Dionysia — the rural, the Lenaean, the Anthesterian, the urban festivals. The first and second are associated with the origin respectively of Gk. comedy and Gk. tragedy. The festival, especially in later times, was celebrated with wild ex- travagance and licentious enthusiasm. Mae- nads— male and female worshippers — crowned with ivy and bearing the thyrsus, went in pro- cession. In 186 B.C. the Roman senate for- bade the Bacchanalia; but, notwithstanding, Antiochus (see above), in 168 b.c, enjoined its observance on the Jews. [a.r.] Dionysius, a member of the council of Areopagus, converted by St. Paul (Ac. 17. 34). There is early evidence for his having been entrusted with the rule of the Church in Athens (Euseb. H.E. iii. 4). He is not identical with Dionysius of Paris (St. Denis), who lived in the 3rd cent., nor was he the author of the celebrated theological treatises current under his name, which are first mentioned in 6th cent. [e.r.b.] Dionysus. [Dionysia.] Dioscorinthus (2Mac.ll.21). Perhaps the Diosciirux of the Cretan calendar (c/. V'ulg. and A.V. marg. Dioscoriis) = the .Macedonian Dystrus — i.e. the month immediately before Xanthicus. Smith's D.B. (vol. ii. p. 417, ed. 1893). Diotpephes. His refusal of hospitality to certain travelling evangelists (3jn.io) led to the writing of that epistle to Gaius. [e.r.b.] Disciples. Only once in O.T. (Is.8.i6, ev 8i8aKToh fxot', LXX.). Very frequent in N.T. (/j.a6vT-ns.m., ixa07iTpia f., of Tabitha, Ac. 9.36), in (iospels and Acts only. As in classical Greek, a disciple is a learner who follows and imitates his master ; a pupil (e.g. in art). It is used (1) of the followers or pupils of others than Christ, e.g. Moses (Jn. 9.28), John the Baptist (Mt. 9. 14,11.2), Pharisees (Mk. 2.18). When used of the personal followers of our Lord, it is often (2) equivalent to " apostles " — thus the Twelve are often called the disciples (Mt.26.i8), or the twelve (or eleven) disciples (Mt.28.i6 ; Lu.9.i). [ArosTi.E.] Often (3) it includes a wider circle of ]>ersonal adherents (J n. 6. 60, 66), e.g. Joseph of Arimathaea (I9.38) ; not seldom it is difficult or imixissible to decide precisely between (2) and (3). After the Ascension the word is used constantly in Acts as (4) ecpiivalent to Christian, where the disciple was not a personal follower of Jesus in His lifetime, e.g. Timothy (AclB.i), Mnason (21. 16). Once it is even used of men "bap- tized unto John's baptism " (Ac.i9.1-3), unless here the word is used proleptically. After N.T. times the word seems to be disused exie()t liistoricaily. [cct.] DISCUS Discus, a circular plate of stone or metal, made for throwing as an exercise of strength and dexterity. The neglect of the altar for DISCOBOLUS. (Osterley, Denk. der alt. Kunst, vol. i. No. 139.) this game by the priests is mentioned as an instance of the Hellenizing influence of Jason (2Mac.4.i4). [Hellenist.] Diseases. [Medicine.] Dish. In Judaea and among the Bedouin Arabs, guests handled their food with the fingers, as they still do in Egypt and many other countries in the East. Each person broke off a small piece of bread, dipped it in the dish, and then conveyed it to his mouth together with a small portion of the meat or other con- tents of the dish. To pick out a delicate morsel and hand it to a friend is esteemed a com- pliment, and to refuse such an offering contrary to good manners. J udas dipping his hand in the same dish with our Lord was showing especial friendliness and intimacy. [Bason.] Dishan', a Horite " duke," youngest son of Seir (Gen. 36. 21, 28, 30 ; iChr. 1.38,42). Dishon'. — 1. The fifth son of Seir (Gen. 36.21,26,30; iChr.1.38). — 2. ThesonofAnah and grandson of Seir (Gen. 36. 25 ; iChr.l.38, Dishan.) The geographical position of the tribes descended from these patriarchs is un- certain. Knobel places them to E. and S.E. of the gulf of 'Aqaba. Dispepsion, The Je^vs of the. The real starting-point in the dispersion of the Jews was the deportation of the inhabitants of J udaea to Babylon in 597 b.c. [Captivities OF THE Jews.] The people of Israel had been deported at an earlier date (722 b.c), but do not seem to have had any status in the land to which they were carried, and are scarcely even mentioned as a part of the Diaspora. St. James addresses his letter to the Twelve Tribes, and St. Paul speaks of the same number as still in existence (Ac. 26. 7 ; cf. Mt. 19.28, Rev.7.5-8). The term Diaspora was technically used of all members of the race who lived bevond the limits of Palestine. DISPERSION, THE JEWS OF THE 215 The Jews asked whether our Lord spoke of going " unto the Dispersion among the Greeks " (Jn.7.35), and St. Peter writes to the " sojourners of the Dispersion " (iPe.l.i, R. V. ). At the beginning of the Christian era the Diaspora was divided into three main gioups — Babylonia, Egypt, and Asia Minor, (i) Babylonia. This ranked highest in the esteem of the Jews. It was the oldest, since it repre- sented the large community of wealthy Jews who declined to return with Ezra to the desolated city of their fathers. It was nearest to Jerusalem, and was the first to receive of&cial commimications from the Sanhedrin. There was also the bond of a common language, Aramaic. Alexander the Great confirmed all their former privileges (11 Ant. viii. 5). It was through them that Zoroastrian influences passed into the re- ligion of the Jews. After the destruction of Jerusalem, Babylonia was the spiritual centre of Judaism for several centuries. Its aca- demies were famous, and it was the seat of the prince of the Diaspora. (2) Egypt. In many respects the most important group of the Diaspora was that in Alexandria, reaching out along the African shore of the Mediter- ranean, and as far S. as Ethiopia. There were Jewish settlers in Egypt at an early date (Je.41. 17,43.7), but it was under Alex- ander that the colony was permanently founded. He placed 8,000 Jewish soldiers in the Thebais, and assigned three out of the five wards of the new city Alexandria to the Jews. His successor continued the same policy of placing Jews in Egypt, and Philo estimated their number at not less than one million. About 160 b.c. Onias, a priest of Aaronic descent, built a temple at Leontopolis in imitation of the one in Jerusalem. They were citizens possessing full rights, and ecclesiastical affairs were controlled by a Gerousia of 70 members and an ethnarch, subject only to the Great Sanhedrin in Jeru- salem. To this community are due the Gk. translation of the O.T., a number of apocry- phal writings, and the Greco-Jewish philo- sophy. (3) Asia Minor, etc. Large com- munities of Jews existed in all the countries of the Orient (Philo, Legatio ad Caitim, § 36), fresh evidence of which is being constantly brought to light. During the 3rd and 2nd cents. B.C. great numbers of Jews were sold into slavery and were subsequently redeemed by their co-religionists. When freed, they usually settled in the places where they were living at the time, and so formed new com- munities. So long as the temple stood, the Jews of the Diaspora looked to Jerusalem as the centre of religious life. They made pilgrimages to the holy city (Ac.2.9-11), and sent large contributions for the temple ser- vice. The Dispersion prepared the waj' for the spread of Christianity, not because the Jews were indifferent to the claims of their religion and more disposed to new teaching — the experiences of the Apostles on their mis- sionary journeys disproves that — but rather as the result of their proselytizing efforts. There were proselytes in large numbers in every country of the Dispersion — St. Paul found them in Antioch, Thyatira, Thessa- 216 DIVINATION ]oiiica, and Athens (cf. Josephus, 7 Wars iii. 3); and thus the Jews, by spreading the knowledge of the one God, prepared the Gentile world for the reception of God's revelation of Himself in Christ. [h.h.] Divination may be said to run through all the history recorded in the Bible, until and in- cluding the casting of lots for a successor to JudasIscariot{Ac.l.24),asamethod, permitted and encouraged, of " inquiring of the Lord." Within the covenant, no less than without it, the worshipper sought (in the crises of his life) guidance from the Deity, and this guidance was vouchsafed in various ways. The three most important methods of divination among the covenant people, at any rate before the build- ing of the temple, are mentioned in connexion with the abandonment of Saul (iSam.28.6), " and when Saul inquired of the Lord, the Lord answered him not, neither by dreams, nor by Urim, nor by prophets." Of these the dream was personal, and any individual in any station of life might receive direction by a dream ( J udg. 7. 13-15 ; cf. Mt. 1.20,2.13, 19,27.19). The use of Urim was official, the religious head of the nation casting lots on behalf of its civil head ; and the prophet's function was to supplement the ordinary channels of divine government by extraordinary interpositions — when the priest- hood fails in the sons of Eli, Samuel is raised up to be prophet ; when David falls into sin he is reproved by the prophets Nathan(2Sam. 12. 1 -14) and Gad (aSara. 24.13), who indicate punish- ments impending. All other forms of divination were alien to the spirit of the covenant (Deut. 18.10, II ; c/. "Saul had put away those that had familiar spirits, and the wizards, out of the land," iSam.28.3 ; Is. 8. 19), and indicated, when used by the covenant people, sympathy with idolatry. Such forms are divination by a cup (Gen.44.5), rods(Ho.4.i2), arrows, theliver, and teraphim (Ezk.21.2i ; 1Sam.i5.23 ; Zech.lO.2). There were also oracles (2K.I.2-6), possibly at every place named Debir, the holy of holies itself being designated "the oracle" (1K.6. 16 ; Ps.28.2). There was a professional class of diviners, varieties within which were those whose inferiority was manifested when com- pared with Joseph (Gen. 41. 8, 39), Moses (Ex. 7.11,12), Daniel (5.ii). Their methods included converse with the dead (Lev. 20. 6 ; Is.19.3) and serpent charming (Je.8.17), as well as the muttering of formulae (2K.9.22 ; Mi. 5. 12, etc.). Balaam, in his resistance to God, had resource to "enchantments" (Num. 24.1), and there are frequent references in the Acts to the conflict between the apostles and various professors of divination : Simon Magus (8.9), Bar-Jesus (13.6,8), the slave-girl at Philippi (16. 16), the vagabond Jew exorcists and other dealers in magic at Ephesus (19. 13, 19 ; 2Tim.3.8,i3. [Magic] [c.k.d.b.] Divinity of Ciinist. [Incarnation ; John, Gospel of.] Divorce. Our Lord indicates that divorce was not admissible in the original institution of marriage as given by God in the time of man's innocencv. " From the beginning it was not so " (Mt.19.8). After the Fall, it appears, from the earliest laws and records of peoples, that divorce must have become very general. It was ajnceded by the regulation of DIVORCE Deut.24.i-4 to the Israelites. It was then no doubt the permission of an existing practice, not easy of removal : " Moses, because of the hardness of your hearts, suffered you to put away 3'our wives " (Mt.19.8). The ground of divorce assigned was 'erwath ddbhdr (A.V. " some uncleanness," R.V. " some imseemly thing," LX.\. dffxvtJ-O" TrpaypLa). The later schools of Jewish doctors were at variance as to the meaning of the expression. The school of Shammai understood it as "grave moral fault," while the school of Hillel extended it to include trifling causes — e.g. if the wife burnt the food she was cooking for her husband. The question addressed to our Lord by the Pharisees (Mt.19.3) may refer to this difference. The husband, by the law of Deut., was to write the wife " a bill [or, book] of divorcement, and give it in her hand, and send her out of his house " (Deut.24.i). She might then marry again. After such marriage, if she should again be set free by death or divorce, the former husband might not take her back. The law of Deuteronomy thus (a) required a ground of divorce, (6) pre- scribed a formal bill of divorcement, and (c) practically made the act irrevocable. In all this the legislation was doubtless in the direc- tion of restraint, not in that of encourage- ment. [Family.] In the moral enactments of the Sermon on the Mount our Lord expressly revokes the concession of divorce. " It hath been said, Whosoever shall put away his wife, let him give her a writing of divorcement. But I say unto you, That whosoever shall put away his wife, saving for the cause of fornica- tion, causeth her to commit adultery ; and who- soever shall marry her that is divorced com- mitteth adultery"' (Mt.5.32). In this passage our Lord permits a man to put away his wife for the one cause of fornication (vopvda). There is, however, no expressed sanction of the remarriage of the man, even in this case; while the woman put away is an adulteress if she marry again. One passage (Mt.19.9) is very commonly quoted as giving sanction to the remarriage of the man in the one allowed case of putting away : " Whosoe\er shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry another, committeth adultery ; and whosoever marrieth her which is put away doth commit adultery." This is the reading of theTextus Reccptus ; but the extant MSS., as also the Versions and Fathers, show here great variations. B omits " and shall marry another," and reads " whosoever shall put away his wife, saving for the cause of fornica- tion, causeth her to commit adultery." Sup- posing the Textus Rer.eptus to give the true reading, various explanations have been given of it. (i) Keble supposed the verse intended for Christ's Jewish hearers, and not for His own folhiwcrs. (2) Von Dollinger regarded the specified exception ir-opvda as meaning not adultery, but pre-nuptial unchastity. (3) Others regard the specified exception as to be read only with " shall put away," and not with "shall marry another." (4) Others understand the remarriage of the man in this case to be allowed. Those who adopt this view have to meet the difficulty arising from the second half of the verse, " he that marrieth DIZAHAB a woman put away committeth adultery." The marriage bond, if it exist at all, exists for both husband and wife ; and if the woman be not free, it seems to follow that the man also must be bound. The passage in Mt.l9 is the only passage in the gospels in which any sup- port for remarriage after divorce can be thought to be found. Other passages bearing on divorce are Mk.l0.2-i2 ; Lu.l6.i8 ; R0.7.1-4 ; iCor.7.10,11,39. The Western Church has in history claimed that Christ taught the entire indissolubility of marriage; while the Eastern Church has in practice admitted divorce for a variety of causes. For Bibliography, see Marriage. [o.d.w.] Dizahab', a place in the desert, mentioned (Deut.l.i) as one limit of the 40 years' wander- ings in the desert. Robinson indentified it with Dahab, a cape on the W. shore of the gulf of ' Aqaba. The Heb. may mean " place of gold " — in Arabic Dhahab, vulgarly pronounced Dahab. Gold has been found in this region. [c.r.c] Doctops. [Rabbi.] Doctpine is used in N.T. to translate both Sidaxv and 5i5aaKa\la, though in Tit.l.g Hort translates " holding fast by the word which is faithful according to the teaching (Sioaxriv), that he may be able both to exhort in the doctrine {oiSacrKaXia) that is healthful and to convict the gainsayers " (The Christian Ecclesia, p. 191). Thus the " teaching" would be that of Christian principles of morality and religion, and the " doctrine " would mclude exhortation which is sound, not (like Rabbinical teaching) concerned with trifles, and uttered in a spirit of narrow exclusiveness. We may contrast with it dogma, which is used in N.T. of a decree issued by those in authority (Lu.2. i; Ac.17.7; of Moses, Heb. 11. 23; Eph.2.15 ; Col. 2. 14 ; of apostles, Ac.16.4). It represents an authoritative exposition of a doctrine when reflection has drawn out all that can be dis- cerned in it. We must always remember, however, that Christianity did not come into the world as a system of doctrine but as a Life. The value of teaching, condensed in exhorta- tion and imposed by authority, is in exact proportion to its moral motive power.' It was the men who had lived with Christ who taught other men to worship Him. It was their ex- perience of His goodness which led them to set such store by His words. So it came to pass that reflection followed experience, and char- acteristic doctrines of Christians about God and man, and the true relations between God and man, grew into shape as a system of thought, not formally nor logically complete in N.T., but based on that common agreement of mind among all the saints to which N.T. bears satisfactory testimony — the more pre- cious very often because it is incidental. Pre- cisely in the same way as the apostles' teaching was commended to the consciences of men by the beauty of holiness in their fellowship, so their earnestness in exhortation gave moral influence to their decisions on questions of truth or duty. The outline of teaching (Ro. 6.17) on which the apostles were agreed, though it was not 3'et summarized in any fixed form of words, included the true doctrine of God, the life and work of Christ, and the reve- DODANIM 217 lation of the Holy Spirit. Preaching to Gen- tiles, they began with the doctrine of the true God, in opposition to numberless heathen deities. Preaching to Jews, they found a com- mon basis of faith in the God of their fathers, and proceeded at once, as indeed when preach- ing to Gentiles, to speak of Jesus as the Messiah — crucified, risen, exalted ; of the gift of the Spirit ; of baptism for the remission of sins. The only trace of a form of creed in N.T. is the confession of Jesus as the Lord, as the Son of God (R0.IO.9 ; iCor.12.3 ; ijn. 4. 15). This is supported by the confession put on the lips of the eunuch in Ac. 8. 37 : " I be- lieve that Jesus is the Son of God." This is found only in the Western text, and has been put in the marg. of R. V. But this reading was known to Irenaeus, and probably represents the form of Baptismal Creed in the church of Asia Minor, from which Irenaeus drew his tradition. Attempts to find a longer form in St. Paul's epistles, e.g. iTim.6.13, breakdown. The reference to a beautiful confession to which Christ Jesus bore witness before Pontius Pilate, is probably to the Lord's avowal that He was a king (Jn.l8.36). This would imply that Pilate was mentioned in St. Paul's teaching, but not necessarily in his creed. There is a reference to the Holy Ghost in the context of 2Tim.l.i4 ; but the majority of creed-like pas- sages have nothing which in any way corre- sponds to the third division of the developed creed. At the same time, St. Paul's belief both in the Personality and the Divinity of the Holy Ghost was as definite as his belief in Christ as Risen. We find the seed-thoughts which ripen into the later creed-forms, and should be therewith content. There are other set types of teaching — in the form of a chronicle (Mk.l6. Qff.), with proofs (1C0r.i5.3-7) ; almost stereo- typed catechetical answers to questions (iPe.3. i8ff.) ; fragments of primitive hymns (iTim. 3.16). But these show the freedom of utter- ance consistent with precise agreement on fundamental facts of spiritual experience, " the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost " (2C0r.i3.14). Again be it said, it was the moral motive power of such experience which attracted men, so that the words of the apostles were with power, and their decisions obtained the binding force which the consciences of many generations have been glad to acknow- ledge. J. F. Bethune Baker, Introd. to Early Hist, of Christian Doctrine (1903) ; A. E. Burn, The Apostles' Creed (1907). [a.e.b.] Do'cus, a " little hold " near Jericho (i Mac.l6.15, cf. ver. 13) built by Ptolemy the son of Abubus. The name still remains attached to the copious and excellent springs of 'Ain-Duk, which burst forth at the foot of the mountain of Quarantania ((3;a'(iMac.l5.ii,i3.25). [Dor.] DOVE'S DTJNG Dopcas. [Tabitha.] Dopy'menes, father of Ptolemy, surnamed Macron ( I Mac. 3. 38; 2.Mac.4.45). Probably the same D.who fought against Antiochusthe Great. Dosith'eus. — 1. A priest and Levite whom the concluding verse of the LX.X. Esther (Est. Apoc.ll.i) states to have brought the book to Egypt. — 2. One of the captains of Judas Maccabaeus in the battle against Timo- theus (2Mac.l2.i9,24). — 3. .\ soldier of Bace- nor's comjiany, who was cut down while at- tempting to capture the opposing general Gorgias (12. 35). ^-4. An apostate Jew, who frustrated a plot against Ptolemv Philopator (3Mac.l.3). ' [CD.] Dothan' (Gen. 37. 17), Dotha'im (the two wells), a place not far from Shechem (ver. 13) on the trade route from Gilead to Egypt (ver. 25), where Joseph was put in the pit, or well (bor; ver. 24). It lay in a pastoral region, and was visible far off (vv. 15,16,18), but was near a mountain (2K.6.17). Do- thaim (Jth.4.6,7.3,18,8.3) was in open country near Bethulia, on N. not far from hills. The Onomasticon places it 12 Roman miles (actually 10 English) N. of Samaria. It appears to be the Thuthina of the lists of Thothmes III. (No. 9), noticed \wit\\ Rdba (10). Vandevelde found it at Tell Dothdn, in the plain S.W. of Jenin. There is a large mound, a good well, and a second one which is called " well of the pit." These are S. of the mound. .\ few terebinths grow near (Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 169, 215). [c.R.c] Dove (Heb. yond). The first mention of the dove occurs in Gen. 8 ; the rapidity of its flight being alluded to in Ps.55.6 ; the beauty of its plumage in Ps.68.13 ; its dwelling in the rocks and valleys in Je.48.28 and Iizk.7.i6 ; its mournfulvoiceinIs.38.i4,59.ii and Na.2.7'; its harmlcssncss in Mt.l0.i6 ; its simplicity in Ho. 7.1 1 ; and its amativeness in Can. 1.15,2.14. Doves, or rather pigeons, as we commonly call them, are kept in a domesticated state in many parts of the East, the pigeon-cote being a universal feature in the houses of Upper Egypt. The wild species indicated in the above passages is the rock-dove, or rock- pigeon (Columba livia), the parent stock of all the numerous domesticated breeds, which abounds in suitable situations in Palestine throughout the year. [Turtle-dove.] [r.l.] Dove's duns' (hiryydnim). Various ex- planations have been given of 2K.6.25, which describes tiic famine f)f Samaria as so great that " an ass's head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver, and the fourth part of a cab of dove's dung for five pieces of silver." Bochart argues that hiryydnim denotes a species of cicer, " chick-pea," which he says the Arabs call usnuH. and sometimes improperly " dove's or sparrow's dung " ; but Celsius, who advocates the literal interpretation, has shown that this identification is erroneous. Dove's dimg was of threat value in the E. as a manure for quick- ening the growth of esculent plants, particu- larly melons. Harris quotes to this effect from Tavernier, p. 146; and sec Bisiiop's /'fr';»a. i. 202. It was also used in earlv times in the tanners' art. Pliny refers to the former of these uses : " The dung of foulcs there kei)t, was suf- ficient to heipe their hard and hungrie grounds. DOWRY In the second degree of goodnesse, Columella raungeth Pigeons dung gathered out of done cotes. . . . Others preferre the dung of Pigeons before any other " (xvii. 9). Robert Greene, in A Quippe for an Upstart Courtier, says to a tanner : " You haue your Dooues dung, your Marie, yourAshenbarke and a thousand thinges more to bring on your Leather apace " (ante 1592). There is a marginal note in an early Bible (Oxford, 1679) : " The Ebrewes write that they burned it in the siege for lacke of wood." This seems to be unnoticed by Harris and other reference-books. The identification still needs decision. [h.c.h.] Dowry. [Marriage ; Family.] Dpaehm (aMac. 4.19, 10. 20, 12. 43 ; Lu.15.8, 9), a Gk. silver coin, varying in weight on account of the use of different talents. The Jews must have been acquainted with 3 talents, the Ptolemaic, the Phoenician, and the Attic. The drachmae of these talents weighed respectively, during the period of the Macca- bees, about 55 grs. troy, 58-5, and 66. [Money; Piece of Silver ; Weights ; Wages.] Dpag'on. A. v., apparently following Vulg., renders as " dragon " two Heb. words tan and tannin, which appear distinct in meaning. The former is used, always in the plur.. in Job30.29; Ps.44.i9; Is. 13. 22, 34.13,35.7,43.20 ; Je. 9. II, 10. 22, 14.6,49.33, 51. 37; Ezk.32.2 (marg.); and Mi. 1.8. It is applied to creatures inhabiting desert places, and fre- quently coupled with ostriches and wild beasts. It seems probably to have been a mammal, and may not improbably have been the jackal. [Fox.] tannin (cf. tannim in Ezk.29.3) seems to refer in most cases to a large aquatic animal, and in some instances denotes the crocodile. [Leviathan.] In Gen. 1. 21 the word is used of the great sea-monsters. On the other hand, in Ex. 7. 9, 10, 12, Deut.32.33, Ps.9i.13, it refers to land-serpents of a deadly kind. " Dragon " is applied metaphorically in Rev. 12.38. to " the old serpent called the Devil, and Satan," the description of the " dragon" being dictated by the symbolical meaning of the image rather than by reference to any existing creature. The reason of this scriptural symbol is to be sought not only in the union of power with craft and malignity, of which the serpent is the emblem, but in the record of the serpent's agency in the Temptation (Gen. 3). [r.l.] Dpag-on \Vell (Ne.2.13). The LXX. renders the Heb. 'en hat-tannin, " spring of figs." It lay outside Jerusalem on W., where also Josephus places the Serpent's Pool (5 Wars iii. 2). No spring is known now on this side of the city. The Mamilla Pool may be meant. [c.r.c] Dpam. [Daric] Dreams, the more or less coherent ac- tions of the mind when the body is asleep, have always formed a fascinating study and problem. To the untutored savage all dreams are real, and aU equally real. They are regarded as direct visions — revelations from another sphere. Naturally these are classified under two headings — first, those dreams that come unsought, the ordinary dreams of the ordinary man ; and secondly, what may be called " professional " dreams, the product of the skilled soothsayer or prophet who laid DRESS 219 himself out to obtain an insight into futurity by this as well as by other means. That the divine will is sometimes made manifest to men by means of dreams is beyond question. Jacob's dream at Bethel (Gen. 28. 12), the revelation to Abimelech about Sarah (20. 3), the appearances to St. Joseph (Mt.l.20, etc.), the noted absence of any special dream when Saul was abandoned of God (iSam.28.8-i6), the coupling of dreams and visions as marks of the Advent of the Messiah (Jl.2.28 ; Ac.2. 17), are fairly conclusive testimony to any one who values the testimony of Holy Writ. Nor would it be reasonable to question the matter. If " our waking thoughts are our own," it is none the less true that at times they are consciously influenced both for good and evil by unseen powers outside of ourselves, and it is a priori probable that in a similar fashion our sleeping thoughts may be similarly in- fluenced. Naturally, it is also probable that as a people becomes more civilized and there- fore more spiritualized, the use of dreams as a channel of revelation will become less fre- quent ; for as men learn to find out the will of God through His laws, there is less need of an extraordinary manifestation of that will. The difference between the religious and the superstitious aspects of this subject is very marked. Religion discriminates between dream and dream when man sleeps, exactly as between thought and thought when he wakes, recognizing in each case a possibility of divine intervention, but always chary of claiming that intervention in any specific case without the amplest proof. Superstition, on the other hand, always wildly crying out, not for the revelation of God, but for omens and portents, sees in every strange occurrence that which it wishes to see, and finds in every dream an omen sent by it knows not Whom, to de- clare it knows not what. " Its object is not to know the will of God but to forecast the future, and its method of doing so is neither religious nor scientific — not religious, for it makes no attempt humbly to approach the Throne of Grace ; and not scientific, because for the patient study of the laws by which God governs the universe it substitutes a system of jumping at conclusions " (Hastings, D.B., 5 vols. 1904). Like superstitious people to-day, the heathen of old had regular codes for the interpretation of dreams. But every time the manner of interpretation is alluded to in Holy Scripture there is a distinct disavowal of anv method except divine guidance (see Gen. 40.8,41. 16; Dan.2.28, etc.). [f.j.] Dress. I. Materials. The earliest and sim- plest robe was made out of the leaves of the fig-tree, sewn together so as to form an apron (haghord ; Gen. 3. 7). Later on skins of ani- rnals (kuthnoth) supplied a more durable material (3. 21). Skins were not wholly dis- used at later periods ; the " mantle " worn by Elijah appears to have been the skin of a sheep or some other animal with the wool left on. It was characteristic of a prophet's office from its mean appearance (Zech.13.4 ; cf. Mt.7.15). Pelisses of sheep-skin still form an ordinary winter dress in the East. The art of weaving hair was known to the Hebrews at an^^early periodJEx. 26-7,35. 6) ; the sackcloth 220 DRESS used by mourners was of this material. Joha the Baptist's robe was of caniel's hair (Mt.3.4). Wool {semer) was introduced at a very early period, the flocks of the pastoral families being kept partly for their wool (Gen. 38. 12) ; it was at all times largely employed, particularly for the outer garments (Lev.i3.47 ; Deut.22.ii ; 2K.3.4; Ezk. 27. 7,34.3, etc.). Probably the ac- quaintance of the Hebrews with linen dates from the period of the Captivity in Egypt, when they were instructed in the manufacture (iChr.4.2i). After their return to Palestine we have frequent notices of linen. Silk was not introduced until a later period (Ezk. 16. 10,13 ; Rev. 18. 12). The use of mixed ma- terial, such as wool and flax, was forbidden (Lev.i9.19 ; Deut.22.ii). — IL Colour and Decoration. The prevailing colour was the natural white of the materials, sometimes brought to a high state of brilliancy by the art of the fuller (Mk.9.3). It is uncertain when the art of dyeing became known to the Hebrews; the dress worn by Joseph (Gen. 37. 3, 23) is variously taken to be either a " coat of divers colours," or with bright-coloured patches, as still worn. The notice of scarlet thread (88.28) implies early acquaintance with dyeing. Not only the Egyptians but also the Babylonians had carried the art of weaving and embroidery to a high state of perfection, and the Hebrews knew of various methods of producing decorated stuffs. The elements of orna- mentation were : (i) weaving with threads previously dyed (Ex. 35. 25) ; (2) the intro- duction of gold thread or wire (Ex.28.6ff.) ; (3) the addition of figures. [Handicrafts, (6).] Robes decorated with gold (Ps.45.i3) and, at a later period, with silver thread (c/. Ac. 12. 21) were worn by royal personages ; other kinds of embroidered robes were worn by the wealthy both of Tyre (Ezk. 16. 13) and Pales- tine (Judg.5.30; Ps.45.14). The art does not appear to have been maintained among the Hebrews ; the Babylonians and other Eastern nations (Jos. 7. 21 ; Ezk. 27. 24), as well as the Egyptians (Ezk. 27. 7), excelled in it. Dyed robes were imported from foreign countries (Zcph.1.8), particularly from Phoe- nicia, and were not much used on account of their expensivencss ; purple (Pr.31.22 ; Lu. I6.19) and scarlet (2Sam.l.24) were occa- sionally worn by the wealthy. The sur- rounding nations were more lavish in their use of them ; the wealthy Tyrians (Ezk. 27. 7), the Midianitish kings (Judg.8.26), the Assyrian nobles (Ezk. 23. 6), and Persian officers (Esth.8. 13) are all represented in purple. — IIL The Names, Forms, and Mode of wearing the Robes. The general characteristics of Oriental dress have preserved a remarkable uniformity in all ages. The modern Arab dresses much as the ancient Hebrew did ; there are the same flowing robes, the same distinction between the outer and inner garments (the former heavy and warm, the latter light, adapted to the rapid and excessive changes of temperature in those countries), and the same distinction between the costume of the rich and the poor, consisting in the multiplication of robes of a finer texture and more ample dimensions. The costume of the men and women was very similar ; there was sufficient difference, however, tojnark the DBESS sex, and it was strictly forbidden to a woman to wear tlie appendages, such as the staff, signet -ring, and other ornaments (or, according to J osephus, the weapons) of a man, or for a man to wear the outer robe of a woman (Deut.22.5). We shall first describe the robes common to the two sexes, and then those peculiar to women, (i) The kuttoneth was the most essential article of dress. It was a long, loose gown, of linen or wool, with long sleeves, unfortunately translated "coat" in A.V. It was girt by a girdle, and the fold formed by the overlapping of the garment served as an inner pocket. The annexed drawing (fig. i) represents the I-ig. I.-tGVI'TIA\ .MAN. simplest style of Oriental dress, a kuttoneth without a girdle, usually reaching to the ankle. (2) The sddhin appears to have been a wrapper of fine linen (Judg.l4. 12 ; Pr.3i.24 ; Is. 3.22; c/. Mk.l4..si). (3) The m''j/ was an upper or second garment, shorter than the first. As an article of ordinary dress it was worn by kings (iSam.24.4), prophets (iSam. 28.14), nobles (Job 1. 20), and youths (iSam.2.19). The term may, however, be used in these pas- sages for any robe worn over the kuttoneth. [Mantle.] Where two garments are men- tioned (Lu.3.11) as being worn at the same time, the second might be a m'''il ; the pros- perous wore two ixirCivai), but the practice was forbidden to the disciples (Mt.lO.io; Lu.9.3). The dress of the middle and upper classes in modern Palestine illustrates the customs of Jthe^Hebrews. (4) The ordinary outer garment {'abdyah in Arab.) is a square cloak with arm-holes. The size and texture varies with the means of the Weafer. The Heb. tetms referring to it are : simld, some- times put for clothes generallv(Gen.35.2,37.34 ; Ex.3.22,22.9; Dent. 10.18; Is.3.7,4.1); beghedh, which is more usual in speaking of robes of a handsome and substantial character (Gen. 27. 15,41.42 ; Ex.28. 2 ; iK.22.io ; 2Chr.l8.9 ; Is. 63.1) ; k'-stith, where covering or protection is the prominent idea (Ex. 22. 26 ; Job 26.6,31.19) ; and lastly, l''bhush, usual in poetry, but specially applied to a warrior's cloak (2Sam.2O.8J, priests' vestments (2 K. 10. 22), and royal ap- parel (Esth. 6. 11, 8. 15). Another term, madh, is specifically applied to a long or "spreading" cloak (Judg.3.i6; 2Sam.20.8), and to the priest's coat (Lev. 6. 10). The beghedh might be worn in various ways, either wrapped round the body, or worn over the shoulders, with the ends or " skirts " hanging down in front ; or thrown over the head, so as to conceal the face (2Sam.i5.30 ; Esth. 6. 12). The borders of garments were finished with a fringe and bound with a purple ribband (Num. 15. 38). The dress of women differed from that of men only as to the outer garment, the kutloneh BUESS 221 EGYPTIAN WOMAN. being worn equally by both sexes (Can. 5. 3). The names of the distinctive robes of women were : (i) mitpahath {veil, wimple, A.V.), a kind of cloak (Ru.3.15 ; Is. 3.22) ; (2) ma'dfdpkd {mantle, E.V.), another kind of cloak (Is. 3. 22) ; (3) fdn'tph {hood, A.V.), ap- ^^pk hi ,m\ ] Mm 1 1 Fig. 3. — PALESTINE FELLAHAH. parently the head Veil hanging down be- hind the heels. [Head-dress.] (4) rddhidh {veil, A. v.), the face veil (Is.3.23 ; Can. 5.7), otherwise called cdiph (Gen. 24.65, 38. 14, 19) or camimd (so R.V. ; A.V. locks ; Can. 4. 1,6. 7 ; Is. 47. 2) ; (5) p'thighil {stomacher, E.V.), a term of doubtful origin, but probably a v/aist- shawl (Is. 3. 24). The garments of females were terminated by an ample train (so R V. ; skirts, A. v.), which concealed the feet (Is. 47. 2 ; Je.13.22). Figs. 2 and 3 illustrate some of the peculiarities of female dress ; the former is an Egyptian woman (in her walking dress) ; the latter represents a dress, probably of great antiquity, still worn by the peasants in Pales- tine. We add a few remarks as to equiva- lent terms in English, kuttoneth answers in many respects to "shirt." In sacerdotal dress "alb" exactly meets it. w«^'IZ may perhaps be best rendered " gown." In the sacerdotal dress a more technical term might be used : " vestment," in its specific sense (= the cha- suble, or casula), would represent it very aptly. sddhin = " linen wrapper." simld we would render "garment," and in the plur. "clothes," as the broadest term of the kind; beghedh "vest- ment," as being of superior quality ; l''bhush "robe," as still superior; madh "cloak," as being long ; and malbush " dress," in the specific sense of fine dress. In female costume mit- pahath might be rendered " cloak," ma'dtd- phd " mantle," pHhighil " cummerbund." The dresses of foreign nations are occasion- ally referred to in the Bible ; that of the 222 DI&BSS Persians is described in Dan. 3. 21 in terms which have been variously understood, but Which may be identified as follows: (r) the sarbdlin (A.V. coals) = drawers, which were the distinctive feature in the Persian as compared with the Heb. dress ; (2) the pattish (A.V. hosen) = inneT tunic; (3) the karb'id (A.V. hat) = upper tunic, corresponding to the m''il of the Hebrews: (4) the I'bhush (A.V. garment) — cloak, perhaps worn, like the beghedh, over all, though the modern Arab. libs is a very common word, signifying " dress " generally. In addition to these, a robe of state of fine linen, takhrikh, is so called from its ample dimensions (F,sth.8.i5). References to Gk. or Rom. dress are few : the x^n^i'S (2Mac.i2.35 ; Mt.27.28) was either the paludamentum, the military scarf of the Roman soldiery, or the Gk. chlamys itself, which was introduced under the Emperors ; it was especially worn by officers. The travelling-c/oa/i referred to by St. Paul (2 Tim. 4. 13) is generally identified with the Rom. pacnula, of wiiicli it may be a corruption. [Cloki:.] It is. however, otherwise explained as a travelling-case for carrying clothes or books. — IV. Special Usages relating to Dress. DRINK, STRONG The length of the dress rendered it inconveni- ent for active exercise ; hence the outer gar- ments were either left in the house by a person working close by (Mt.24.i8) or thrown off when the occasion arose (.Mk.lO.50 ; Jn.13.4 ; Ac.7. 58) ; in the case of a person travelling, the under garment was girded up (1K.I8.46 ; 2K. 4.29,9.1 ; iPe.1.13) by passing it between the legs and through the girdle in front (see illustration to our art. Cushi) ; on entering a house the upper garment was probably laid aside and resumed on going out (.A.c.12.8). In a sitting posture the garments concealed the feet ; this was held to be an act of rever- ence (Is. 6. 2). The number of suits possessed by Hebrews was considerable ; a single suit consisted of an under and upper garment. The presentation of a robe in many instances amounted to installation or investiture (Gen. 41.42; Esth.8.15 ; Is.22.2i); on the other hand, taking it away amounted to dismissal from office (2Mac.4.38). The production of the best robe was a mark of special honour (Lu. 15.22). The number of robes thus received or kept in store for presents was very large, and formed one of the main elements of wealth in the East (Job 27.16; Mt.6.19; Jas.5.2), so that to have clothitig = to be w'ealthy and powerful (Is. 3. 6, 7). On grand occasions the entertainer provided becoming robes for his guests. The business of making clothes devolved upon women (Pr.31.22 ; Ac. 9. 39) ; little art was re- quired in what we may term the tailoring de- partment ; the garments came forth for the most part ready made from the loom, so that the weaver siijiplanted the tailor. [Sandal.]- Dpink, Strong". The Heb. shekhdr, in its etymological sense, applies to any intoxicating beverage. We may infer from Can. 8. 2 that the Hebrews were in the habit of expressing the juice of other fruits besides the grape to make wine; the pomegranate, there noticed, being probably one out of many fruits so used. From Jerome and other sources of information we find that the following beverages were known in later times to the Jews, (i) Beer, largely consumed in I'^gyjit under the name of zythus, and thence introduced into Palestine. It was made of barley ; certain herbs, such as lupin and skirrett, were used as substitutes for hops. (2} Cider, noticed in tiie Mishna as «/'/''/t'-Ji'/»ir. (3) Honey-wine, of which there were two sorts — one consisting of a mixture of wine, honey, and I^cpper ; the other a decoction of the juice of the grape, termed d' bluish (honey) by the Hebrews and (/(7).s- by the modern Syrians. (4) Dale-wine, whicli was also manufactured in Egypt, was made bv masliing the fruit in water in certain prnpiirtions (cf. Mishna, Trumoth xi. 2 ; Sabbath xx. 2). (5) Various other fruits and vegetables are enumerated by Pliny as sup- plying materials for factitious or home-made wine, such as figs, millet, the carob fruit, etc. It is not imjiroitable that the Hebrews applied raisins to this purpose in the simi)le manner of the Arabians — viz. by jnitting them in jars of water and burying them in tiie ground until fermentation takes place. The use of strong drink was forl)itlden to the jiriests (Lev. 11. 9) and to those imder the Nazirite vow (Num. 6.3 ; cf. Ln.1.15), and even to the mother who was bearing a child destined to be a Nazirite DROMEDARY (Judg.13.4 ; cf. iSam.1.15), and its evil effects are especially set forth in Pr.20.i,31.4,5, and Is.5.11, 22-24,28.7. Dpomedapy, the translation in A.V. of the Heb. words bekher or bikhrd, rekhesh and remdkh. As to the two former terms, see Camel, rekhesh is interpreted in our version by "dromedaries" (iK.4.28), "mules" (Esth.8. 10,14), and " swift beasts " (Mi.l.13) ; but there seems no doubt that it denotes a superior kind of horse. remdkh (Esth.8. 10) is properly a " mare." [ Horse.] [r.l.] Dpusilla, youngest daughter of Herod Agrippa I., and wife of Aziz, king of Emesa. Like both her sisters Bernice and Mariamne, she left her first husband ; seduced to do so by Felix, who married her. Her career gives point to the mention of her presence when St. Paul reasoned before her of righteousness, self-control, and judgment to come (Ac. 24. 24^25). [E.R.B.] Duke. The Heb. word so translated in A.V. means simply " chieftain," and is applied to the tribal leaders of Edom (Gen. 36. i5ff.)andof J udah (Zech. 12. 5f.; A.V. governors, R.V. chieftains). [j.c.v.d.] Dulcimep (Heb. sumpdw'yd), a musical instrument mentioned in Dan. 3. 5, 15. Rabbi Saadia Gaon describes the sumpdwyd as the bag-pipe, an opinion adopted by the majority of Biblical critics. The same instrument is still in use amongst peasants in the N. W. of Asia and in S. Europe, where it is known by the similar name, sampogna or zampogna. With regard to three of the musical terms used in Dan. 3 and represented by "harp," "psaltery," " dulcimer," it has been contended that they are Gk. in origin and that the last of them is at the most only as old as Polybius. But it is extremely difficult to argue simply from the non-occurrence of a word in earlier surviving Gk. literature ; and as more becomes known of the ancient trade-routes it seems more and more certain that there was an interchange of musical instruments and their names, as of other things, between E. and W. More than one Gk. musical instrument, at any rate, has an Eastern origin for its name. See also Semitic Languages. [h.a.r.] Dumah'. — 1. A son of Ishmael (Gen. 25. 14; iChr.1.30). — 2. The town in the N.W. part of Arabia called Dumat-el-Jendel is no doubt the Dumah of Isaiah (21. 11), and signifies "the stony silence." — 3. A city in the mountains near Hebron (Jos. 15. 52). Now ed Domeh, a ruin 10 miles S.W. of Hebron. [c.r.c] Dung- was, and is, used in the East not only as manure, but also as fuel. The manure was mixed with straw (Is. 25. 10), or was the sweepings (Is. 5. 25 marg. ; cf. R.V.) of roads, which were collected in heaps outside the walls of towns at fixed spots (hence the Dung Gate at Jerusalem, Ne.2.13) in readiness for use on the fields. The manure was applied to trees by digging about their roots and inserting it (Lu.13.8). In the case of sacrifices the dung was burnt outside the camp (Ex. 29. 14 ; Lev. 4. 11,8. 17 ; Num. 19. 5) : hence the ex- treme opprobrium of the threat in Mai. 2. 3. Particular care was taken in the law to enforce cleanliness with regard to human ordure (Deut.23.i2ff.) : the worst threat that could £AB,INd^ 223 be used against a house was that it should become a "draught house" (2K.IO.27) or a " dung-hill" (Ezr.6.11 ; Dan. 2.5, 3. 29). PubUc establishments of that nature are still found in the large towns of the East. The difficulty of procuring fuel in Syria, Arabia, and Egypt has made dried cow's and camel's dung a valuable substitute : it produces an equitable heat, and is used for heating ovens and for baking cakes (Ezk.4. 1 2, 1 5). In Ph.3.8,(r/fi>/3aXa is refuse of any kind ; cf. Ecclus.27.4. Dung- Port. [Jerusalem.] Dung-eon. [Prison.] Dupa', the plain where Nebuchadnezzar set up the golden image (Dan.S.i), has been some- times identified with a tract a little below Tek- rit. on the left bank of the Tigris, where the name Dur is still found. Prof. Oppert placed Dura to the S.E. of Babylon, in the vicinity of the mound Dowair or Duair. Possibly it is connected with the Semitic-Babylonian durti, " fortification," i.e. one of the great walls de- fending the city. The position of the town called burn is unknown. [t.g.p.] Dust. [Mourning.] Dyeing. [Handicrafts, (8).] E Eagle (Heb. nesher). The Heb. nesher (lit. to tear or rip open with the beak) = Arab. nisr, which is the designation of both the eagle and the griffon-vulture (Gyps fulvus) ; but there is little doubt that in most of the numerous passages where " eagle " occurs in A.V. the vulture is intended. Confirma- tion of this is afforded by Mi.l.i6, where "en- large thy baldness as the eagle [nesher] " can scarcely refer to aught else than the bare head and neck of the griffon-vulture. There is, how- ever, a possibility that in some cases the word may be used in a wider sense to denote eagles also ; although the fact of the existence of several distinct Heb. words for diurnal birds of prey is somewhat against this view. [Gier- eagle; Ospray; Ossifrage.] Griffon-vultures, of which several species, or perhaps races, are recognized, have a wide range in the warmer parts of the Old World, and are abundant in Palestine, where their large size and soaring flight make them conspicuous objects. They would accordingly be sure to attract the attention of even primitive people. Nisroch of the Assyr. sculptures, alluded to in 2K. 19.37 and Is. 37. 38, is the deification of nisr. [Semitic Languages.] In Mt. 24.28 and Lu. 17.37 " vultures " would be a better rendering of derol than is "eagles"; for although some of the smaller eagles found in Palestine, such as the short-toed eagle [Circaetus cinereus), feed largely on carrion, these would certainly form but a small minority of any assemblage of birds of prey gathered round a carcase. [r.l.] JS'anes (iEsd.9.2i), a name which stands in the place of the sons of Harim, Maaseiah, and Elijah, in the parallel list of Ezr.lO.21. Eaplng (Gen. 45.6; Ex. 34.21 ; Dent. 21. 4; iSam.8.i2 ; Is.3O.24 'cf. Ezk.36.34). The Heb. words signify to "work" ( 'dbhadh ) and ' 'plough' ' 224 EARNEST (hdrash), the former elsewhere readered " to till." The English of A.V. (see Skeat, Etymol. Diet. s.v. Ear [3]) is the old English eren, " to plough," as used by Chaucer, and in Piers Ploughman. [c.r.c] Earnest (aCor.l. 22,5.5 ; Eph.l.14). The Gk. dppafiibv = Heb. irdbon, a word which was introduced by the Phoenicians into Greece, and also into Italy, where it reappears a; arrhaho and arrha. It may again be traced in the French arrhes, and in the old Eng. EarVs or Arle's money. The Heb. word was used generally for pledge (Gen.38.i7), and in its cognate forms for surety (Pr.l7.i8) and hostage (2K.I4.14). The Gk. derivative, how- ever, acquired a more technical sense, as the part-payment of a contract to be hereafter fully carried out. Eappings. The word nezem, by which these ornaments are usually described, origin- ally referred to the nose-ring (from ndzdm, " to bore"), and was thence transferred to the ear- ring. The material was generally gold, and their form circular. They were worn by women and by the young of both sexes (Ex. 32. 2). It has been inferred, but without certain justifi- cation, from this passage and from Judg.8.24, that they were not worn by men. The earring appears to have been regarded with super- stitious reverence as an amulet (Is. 3. 20). For this reason they were surrendered with the idols by Jacob's household (fien. 35. 4). Chardin de- scribed earrings, with talismanic figures and characters on them, as still existing in the East. Jewels were sometimes attached to the rings. The earrings still worn in Eastern countries are often very large ; hence they formed a hand- some present (Job 42. 11), or offering for the service of God (Num. 31. 50). EapthenAvape. [Handicrafts, (4).] Eapthquake. Earthquakes, more or less violent, are of frequent occurrence in Pales- tine, and numerous traces of seismic action are visible in the features of that country. The valley of the Jordan marks the course of an ancient fracture in the earth's crust, and volcanic lavas are found in several directions. The instances recorded in the Bible are, how- ever, but few. Of these the most remarkable occurred in the reign of Uzziah (Am.l.i ; Zech.14.5), which Josephus (9 Ant. x. 4) connects with the sacrilege and consequent punishment of that monarch (2Chr.26.16ff.). The phenomenon, as described by Josephus, bears a strong resemblance to that foretold by Zechariah, and possibly the earlier event may have suggested the imagery of the prophet. An earthquake occurred at the time of our Saviour's death (Mt. 27.51-54) which had the effect of opening the graves and constituted one of the most terrifying accompaniments of that sublime event. Earthquakes are not unfrcquently accompanied by fissures of the earth's surface, and such an occurrence may have rent the rocks and opened the sepulchres in the valley of the Kidron. The destruction of Korah and his company (Num. 16. 32) would seem to be due to the same cause, and may be paralleled by a similar occurrence in Italy, 1783 A.I)., when the surface of Calabria was devastated, and chasms, opening in the ground, swallowed up many people, [a.a.r.] EBONY East. In Heb. represented by two words, (i) qedhem, "in front," the usual Oriental description of that direction : W. being "behind," N. "to left," and S. "to right" (see Job 23.8,9). [Kedemah; Bene-kedem.] (2) mizrdh, "the rising of the sun" (Jos. 11. 3, etc.), especially as contrasted with the W. or " sea." This word is used 73 times, while qedhem occurs 25 times in O.T. [c.r.c] Eastep (Ac. 12.4). This rendering of to 7rd(Txa is retained only here in A.V. from older versions ; R.V. renders it correctly " the Pass- over." [Passover.] [h.h.] Eastepn Sea. [Salt Sea ; Sea.] Ebal'. — 1. One of the sons of Shobal the son of Seir (Gen. 36. 23 ; iChr.l.40). — 2. Obal the son of Joktan (iChr.l.22 ; cf. Gen. 10. 28). Ebal, Mount. The " bare " mountain, N. of Shechem (Ueut.ll.29,27.4,13). On it were placed stones covered with plaster, on which the law was written. The Samari- tans read Gerizim for Ebal, and believe that Joshua's altar (Jos.8. 30,33) was on Gerizim. The summit is 3,077 ft. above sea-level, 1,400 above Shechem ; it is thus 227 ft. higher than Gerizim, and is very rocky and barren (Surv. W. Pal. ii. p. 147). [c.r.c] E'bed. — 1. (Many MSB., and the Syr. and Arab, versions, have Eber), father of Gaal (Judg.9.26,28,30,31,35). — 2. Son of Jonathan ; one of the Bene-Adin who returned from Babylon with Ezra (Ezr.8.6). Ebed-melech ('ebhedhmclekh), an Ethio- pian eunuch of king Zedekiah, who secured Jeremiah's release from prison (Je.38.7,39.i6). The name, which means "king's servant," may have been derived from his official position, or = "servant of God." Gray {Heb. Names, 147) thinks that at this time the heathen deity Moloch would ha^'e been so familiar to the Hebrews that they would have ceased to use the similar title melekh (king) of the God of Israel. He suggests that as the eunuch was an Ethio- pian, he may have been named " Servant of (the god) Moloch " by heathen parents. [b.f.s.] Ebene'zep [stone of help), a monument of victorvset upbySamuel (iSam.4.i,5.r,7.i2) on the same site where Israel had been defeated in Eli's time. It stood " between Mizpeh and Ha-Shen " [Sue.v], or between Tell Xasbeh and 'Ain Sinia (6 miles apart), near Bethel on a very high ridge. [Abel, i; Beth -car.] [c.r.c] E'bep. — 1. In Gen.lO the nations known to Israel are traced back, each to a single ances- tor, who bears the name of the nation and has sprung from one of the sons of Noah. [Races.] In ver. 21 Eber represents the Hebrews, and appears here and in iChr. 1.18,19 as the great-grandson of Shem. This figurative method oi genealogy, which is found also in other nations, is a natural expression of the patriarclial stage of social progress. This same eponymous ancestor appears again as a poetic synonym for the Hebrews in Num.24. 24. — 2. The name appears in the Chronicler's «ene.ilugi( s, once in the Gadite tables (iChr.5. 13. Hihek) and twice in those of Benjamin (iChr.8.12,22). — 3. A priest in the days of Joiakim (\e.l2.2o). [j.c.v.n.] Eblasaph'. [Abiasaph.] Ebony (Heb. hobhntm) occurs only in Ezk. 27.15, 'IS one of the valuable commodities im- EBRONAH {jorted into Tyre by the men of Dedan.' The best kind of ebony is yielded by the Diospyros ebeniim, a tree which grows in Ceylon and S. India ; but many trees of the natural order Ebenaceae produce it. It is not known what tree yielded the Ethiopian ebony. Pliny says (xii. 4) : " Herodotus [iii. 97, 114] assigneth it rather to Ethiopia; and saith, That every three yeares the Ethiopians were wont to pay by way of tribute unto the kings of Persia, 200 billets of the timber of that tree, together with gold and yvorie. . . . Ebene was a rich tribute, and deserved the third place, after Gold and Ivorie." Vergil (Georg. ii. 116) says that India alone yields black ebony ("it will not grow elsewhere," Pliny). [h.c.h.] Ebponah' (R.V. Abronah), a halting-place of the Israelites in the desert, immediately preceding Ezion-geber (Num. 33. 34, 35). Eca'nus (R.V. Ethanus), one of the five swift scribes of Ezra (2Esd.i4.24). Ecbat'ana (Aram, 'ahnfthd). Though many of the best commentators understand this word, inEzr.6.2, as meaning " in a coffer, " there is little doubt that it is a place-name, and that one of the two Ecbatanas is intended. In the Apoc. Ecbatana is frequently mentioned (Tob. 3.7,14.12,14; Jth. 1.1,2; 2Mac.9.3, etc.). Two cities so named seem to have existed in ancient times — one the capital of Northern Media, the Media Atropatene of Strabo ; the other the metropolis of the larger and more important province known as Media Magna. The site of the former appears to be marked by the very curious ruins at Takht-i-Sulayman (lat. 36° 28', long. 47° 9' ) ; while that of the latter is occupied by Hamaddn, one of the most important cities of modern Persia. There is generally some diffi- culty in determining, when Ecbatana is men- tioned, whether the northern or the southern metropolis is intended, as they lie sufliciently near to one another for geographical notices usually to suit either site. The northern city was the " seven-walled town " of Herodotus, who describes it as the capital of Cyrus (Herod, i. 98, 99, 153); and it was thus most PLAN OF ECBATANA. Jlxp/arta/wri. 1. Remains of a fire-temple. 5. Cemetery. 2. Ruined mosque. 6. Ridge of rocl< called "the Dragon." 3. Ancient buildings with shafts and capitals. 7. Hill called " l~awilah," or " the Stable. 4. Ruins of the palace of Abakai Khan. 8. Ruins of Kalisiah. 9. Rocky hill of Zindani-Soleiman. ECCLESIASTES, THE BOOK OF 2^0 probably there that the roll was found which proved to Darius that Cyrus had really made a decree allowing the Jews to rebuild their temple. The peculiar feature of the site of Takht-i-Sulayman is a conical hill rising to about 150 ft. above the plain, and covered on its top and sides with massive ruins of the most antique and primitive character. A per- fect enceinte, formed of large blocks of squared stone, may be traced round the entire hill along its brow ; within there is an oval enclosure varying from 800 yds. to 400 in diameter, strewn with ruins, which cluster round a re- markable lake. On three sides — S., W., and N. — the acclivity is steep and the height above the plain uniform, but on E. it abuts upon a hilly tract of ground, and is here but slightly elevated above the adjacent country. The northern Ecbatana continued to be important down to the 13th cent, after Christ. By the Greeks and Romans it appears to have been known as Gaza, Gazaca, or Canzaca, " the treasure city," on account of the wealth laid up in it ; and by the Orientals as Shiz. Its decay is referable to the Mogul conquests, c. 1200 A.D. ; and its final ruin is supposed to date from c. 13th or i6th cent. In 2Mac. (8.3, etc.) the Ecbatana mentioned is undoubtedly the southern city, now represented both in name and site by Hamaddn. Situated on the north- ern flank of the great mountain called formerly Orontes, and now Elwend, it was perhaps as ancient as the other, and is far better known in history. It was the Median capital of Cyrus, and from the time of Darius Hystaspis re- mained the chief city of the Persian satrapy of Media, and the summer residence of the Persian kings. The Ecbatana of Tobit is thought by Sir H. Rawlinson to be the northern city, Takht-i-Sulayman. Ecclesiastes, The Book of, called in Heb. qoheleth, translated by LXX. eKKX-qaiacFT-qs, or the Preacher, a translation adopted by Vulg. and very generally approved of by the best critics, although tlie exact sense of the Heb. is still disputed. The Heb. form is probably an intensive, and hence is fem. Several names of the same formation oc- cur in the later books — e.g. Ezr.2.57 ; Ne.7.57, 59. Fem. proper names of the same formation are likewise foimd — e.g. iChr.4.8,7.i8. The word qoheleth is used as a fem. in Ec.7.27, but the reading there is prob- ably erroneous. The book is much later than the period of Solomon, as is proved both by the language of the original, and by the contents of the work. The name Solomon was assumed simply as a literary device, and not as a pious fraud or forgery, and traditional Solomonic utterances may form some of the 15 226 ECCLESIASTES, THE BOOK OF ECCLESIASTES, THE BOOK 6f bases of the work. But Solomon is spoken of in it in a manner which shows that when the book was written that monarch had long passed away. The name of such a man— marked out in the sacred writings as most renowned for wisdom — was most suitable to be employed as setting forth the principles of wisdom not only to his own age, but to the ages after him. The writer of the book of Wisdom followed the example set to him by his great predecessor. The latter work, which in its opening chapters might be described almost as an Anti-Ecclesiastes (see especially Wis. 2), opposes the false and superficial interpretation placed upon the statements of Kohelethby the materialist free- thinkers among the Jewish students of Alexan- dria, and puts in the mouth of Solomon, whose history is ably sketched by the later writer after the analog^' of the earlier, sentiments of a very different character. [Philosophy.] Although, therefore, the book hasbeen regarded in ancient times as the production of Solomon — and it has been suggested that it was written in the days of his penitence— it is impossible to ujihold any such theory in the light of modern criticism. Even in ancient times there are not a few indi- cations that Jewish scholars were by no means unanimous on that subject. Many passages in the work contain what may be regarded as actual disavowals of Solomonic authorship,and the facts which the writer describes as the cir- cumstances of the time in which he himself lived, point to a much later period. Many orthodox scholars of more modern times have therefore placed its authorship in the last cen- tury of the Persian period (440-336 e.g.). The portion which is written under the form of a Solomonic autobiography extends only to the end of ch. 2. It describes the vanity of all earthly things, and points out that there is no actual progress in the affairs of men — nothing really new — everything in human life being merely a repetition of that which has taken place already. Solomon is introduced as one who, though a king.had in his own lifetime discovered by personal experience the vanity of wisdom, pleasure, and riches ; such being described as an evil exercise which God has given to the sons of men (1. 13), and but vanity and a striving after wind. The writer argues that, although tiiere was, no doubt, an advantage in wisdom, yet the wise man must at last die like the fool ; and a wise king may have a successor who will turn his wisdom intofiiolishness. Cheerful enjoyment of life, with (iod as his guide, is the only thing fit to be striven for (2.24[25],3.i2,i3[i4,i5J) ; yet even that is vanity, as man cannot ensure it. We maintain, desi)ite all that has been written to the contrary, that the word "eternity" (the rendering of the word in all other passages of O.T.) in 3.1 1 affords a far better sense than " the world," wiiich is given in the text of A. V. and R.V., contrary to the judgment of the American revisers. Man, viewed as belonging only to this world, is short-sighted and power- less in the sight of Him Who is the arranger and disposer of all things and of all events that happen to men. Left to himself, he is like the brute that perishes ; and (iod shall judge him at last, after He has duly tested him — for " there is a time for every work there" (8.17). For man, blind as he is with regard to that which shall be after him, there is nothing better than that he "should rejoice in his works." Koheleth turns in ch. 4 to review that which hinders his cheerful enjoyment, such as man's oppression by his fellow man (4.1-3). Rivalry and useless toil prevent that enjoyment ; and yet, in spite of all, this companionship is preferable to the life of a solitary worker (7-12). The striving after the wind is strikingly exemplified in the enthusiasm of the people for anew king (13-16), while "van- ity " is seen in their worship of God, and in their delight in making vows which are not per- formed (5.2-7[4.i7-5.6J). The vanity of striv- ing after riches is seen by what is done under de- spotic rule (5-8,9[7,8]) by rulers who know not that the cultivation of the land is of the highest importance. But after all, riches are in them- selves of little real advantage, and are collected together only to be scattered by others (5. 10-20 [9-19]). The section closes with the commenda- tion of a cheerful and contented life as the gift of God. In the next section the writer shows that man may have riches, and have no power of en- jiH'ing them ; the desire after such is insatiable, and man has also in this life to deal with God, Who is stronger than he. God knows the future, and is working towards a certain end ; but man does not know what is good for him in life, or what shall happen after him (6. 10-12). In 7.1-6 arc set forth divers proverbs, which speak of things which man ought to prefer above others; and teach that patience and wisdom are the best preservatives in oppression and adver- sity. Both prosperity and ad\ersity are or- dained of God for His own purposes. Man would do well therefore to rejoice in the day of prosperity, and in the day of adversity to con- sider why Ciod has permitted even that. The section is closed by insisting upon the import- ance of " the middle mean," and the practical usefulness of wisdom (7.1-24), and in speak- ing briefly but emphatically of " the wicked woman " by whose snares men are caught (7. 25-29), the writer does not indulge in any tirade against the female sex, but describes in the strongest colours the ruin wrought in all ages by immorality. (The true wife, who is man's helpmeet, is described in 9.7-9.) He then re- turns to his general theme, and urges again the benefit of wisdom in days of oppression, such as those in which he lived. This is the thought pervading ch. 8. in which he again refers to the fact that there is a God that judgeth the earth, and that it will ultimately be well for those that fear God. God's works man cannot com|->rchend, and He apparently often permits the same fate to happen to all (8-9.2). In close connexion with this subject Koheleth glances at the state of the dead, as far as then revealed: again re- turning to the great practical conclusion of the importance of a contented and happy life, notwithstanding the fact that man knows not the time allotted to him, and that death falls upon him suddenly. The story of the poor wise man, and the wisdom by which he was able to save his little city from ruin — a parable based upon the historical fact recorded in 2Sam.2O.15- 22 — is here suitably introduced as a proof of the power of wisdom, and of the ingratitude often displayed to benefactors (Ec.9.13-15). A few proverbs, loosely connected.are strung together EOCLESIASTES, THE BOOK OP in lO.i-ii. The benefit to be derived from the talk of the wise is there pithily described, and the detriment that comes from the foolish talk of fooUsh men (IO.12-15). But worse than all these is the misery caused to a land by a foolish king. Even, however, under such cir- cumstances, prudence is urged; and the people ought not to provoke a foolish king by curses (10. 16-20). In general, it is noted that there is real wisdom in beneficence. And, though the future belongs to God, man — while he can — ought to labour, and to enjoy himself in the sight of his Maker (11. 1-8). Koheleth then breaks into a song briefly describing the days of life, which ought to be spent by man as ever mindful of the great judgment of God, and of his Creator, especially in the days of youth. We do not agree with those who interpret ch. 12 of the approach of old age. It com- pares rather the days of evil (or of death) to a sudden storm, which darkens the whole face of nature, makes the keepers of the house tremble, thegrinding-maids (see R.V. marg.) cease their work, and spreads dismay among the ladies at the lattices ; singing women cannot enliven in such a case ; fears above and fears beneath be- set the path to the grave. After a mere earthly storm, nature reawakens, the almond-tree blos- soms, and the locust crawls forth ; but for man there is no such awakening. In the storm he disappears ; for the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit to the God Who gave it (12). The epilogue (I2.3-14) has been variously interpreted. Some regard it an addition to the work by a later writer, others as an integral portion of the book. We are of the latter opinion. The writer seems in it to throw off the mask of Solomon, and describes himself as " a wise man " who lived and thought for the people's good. Collections of the words of the wise are like goads, driving on those who attend to them ; and the words of men fully versed in such collections are like nails firmly driven in. For the "collections" are really given by the One Shepherd, Who leadeth His people like a flock. The end of the whole matter is, "Fear God, and keep His commandments." There is a day of God's judgment, though foolish man may not bear it in mind, and, because there is such, there is a life after death. Thus there is recognized the light that will ultimately dispel the dark- ness which later revelation shows to have been in great measure removed by the coming of the Life and the Light of men. The literature on Ecclesiastes is very extensive. Jerome's com- mentary is still worthy of study. The days of the Reformation produced manycommentators. Luther wrote on it (in 1532) a work of consider- able size and of practical merit. See also Mercer (1573), Drusius (1635), M. Geier(i668), Schmidt (1691), Zirkel (1792). More critical were the works of Knobel (1836), Herzfeld (1838), Heiligstedt (1848) in Maiurer's Comm., Vaihinger (1858), Hengstenberg (1859), De- litzsch (1875, grossly misrepresented in the English transl.). H. Graetz' (1871) very fanci- ful work was the basis of E. Kenan's brilliant but utterly mistaken exposition (1882). Other works are those of Kleinert (1883), Seigfried (1898), F. Buhl (1890), and Menzel (Der griech- ische Einfluss auf Prediger, 1890), who denies such influence. Among English comm. of in- ECCLESlASTICtrS 227 terest are: Th. Preston (1845), C. D. Ginsburg (1861), which contains the fullest description of the literature up to that date ; Thos. Tyler (1874, much enlarged in 1899), E. H. Plump- tre (1881), C. H. H. Wright (1883), Bradley (1887), and T. K. Cheyne (1887). Among the critical comm. or monographs on Ecclesiastes of special importance may be noted Leimdorfer, Die Prediger Sal. in hist. Beleachtimg, 1892 ; Euringer, Der M assorahtext der Kohel-krit. untersucht, 1890 ; Dr. E. Klostermann, Deli- bri Coheleth Vers. Alex., 1892 ; A. Dillmann, Ueber diegriech. U ebersetzung derQohel., the two last-named are decisive against Graetz' theory — that the present text of the LXX. is that of Aquila— a theory which has been defended by Kenan. [c.h.h.w.] Ecclesiastieus is the title in the Latin versions of the book called in the LXX. " The Wisdom of Jesus the son of Sirach." An en- tirely new phase has passed over the history and interest of this remarkable book since the discovery of the fragments of the Heb. text by Mrs. Lewis in 1896 in St. Catharine's mon- astery at Sinai. At present, some 39 chapters out of 51 have been recovered from 4 different Heb. MSS., and many years must elapse before the fresh light thus thrown upon the book is explored and its results classified. Apart from this discovery, Ecclesiastieus is, perhaps, the most important book in the Apocrypha. " It exhibits Jewish thought and religion at a period otherwise almost unknown." It is im- portant as illustrating Judaism in its transi- tion state between O.T. and N.T., and for its influence for generations upon the religious life of both Jew and Christian. At least two of the best-known hymns of the Church are de- rived from its pages, the Jubilee rhythm of St. Bernard (partially translated in the well- known " Jesu, the very thought of Thee " — Ecclus. 24.20 f.) and the German " Now thank we all our God " (Ecclus. 50. 22-24) ; whilst the Greek and the Roman Churches place it in the canon. Whilst it was never received among the 24 books of the Heb. Bible, it had a pro- minent place in the Greek and Latin, in the former of which it is commonly grouped with the other poetical books (e.g. in Cod. B the order is " Ps., Prov., Eccles., Can., Job, Wisd., Sirach, Esth."). The order in the present edi- tions of the Eng. Apoc. is due to the German translation of 1529 (Zurich). The name, Ec- clesiastieus, the ordinary title since Cyprian, is doubtless derived, as Kufinus points out, from its frequent use by the early Church, especially in the instruction of catechumens. It was for the Jews of Alexandria first, and then for the Christians, the favourite book of ecclesiastical edification, " the summary of all the virtues," as Eusebius first calls it. In Cod. B the title is " The Wisdom of Sirach " ; in Codd. ACS "The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach." In the Heb. text we read at the end, " Hitherto the words of Simeon ben Jeshua who is called ben Sira. The Wisdom of Simeon ben Jeshua, ben Eleazar, ben Sira." The question of the original title, therefore, is unsettled, and the newly discovered texts only add fresh diffi- culty as to the author's name. According to Jerome, its original title in Heb. was " Pro- verbs." The textual criticism of the book 228 ECCLESIASTICTTS presents a deeply interesting problem, as may be seen from a cursory glance at K.V., where some 80 marginal notes are to be found ; and there is evidence that some dislocation has taken place (probably a misplacement of leaves) in the copy from which all the Gk. MSS. hitherto known have been derived, though this does not account for the extraor- dinary divergences in the Gk. texts, which are carried still further in the ancient versions and patristic quotations. When the frag- mentary Heb. text was discovered, it was naturally hoped that more definite light would be thrown upon the strange -variations of the existing versions, but Margoliouth (followed by Bickell) declared, after careful examination of all the fragments that had come to light, that the Heb. was not the original, but a retrans- lation of the Gk. Later opinion, however, seeks to modify this assertion, and leans rather to the theory that the Heb. preserves, to a larger degree than was thought at first, frag- ments of the original. Little is known of the author beyond what is told us in the preface of the book, which states that the Gk. transla- tion was made by his grandson in Egypt " in the reign of Euergetes," for the instruction of those " in a strange country who were previ- ously prepared to live after the law." The probable interpretation of this is that the grandson went to Egypt in the 38th year of the king Euergetes (132 b.c), i.e. Ptolemy V'lII. Physcon, and the translation was issued a little later. Jesus the Son of Sirach, when speaking of Simon the high-priest (50.i-2i), would then be drawing from his own recollection of Simon IL, whose high-priesthood ended c. 199 B.C. Some scholjirs, however, prefer to identify the Euergetes mentioned with Ptolemy IIL Euergetes (247-222), and the high-priest, in that case, with Simon L, the Just (310-290). — Contents. The book is a fine example of Jewish "wisdom literature," and consists of a collection of gnomic sayings, modelled, in all probability, upon the canonical book of Proverbs. It has been considered the chief exemplar of primitive Sadducee- ism, a theory which has found corroboration in the Heb. text, in which, after 50.12, there is an addition in the form of a hymn, praising the sons of Zadok, " O give thanks unto him that chose the sons of Zadok to be priests, for His mercy endureth for ever." The author speaks with respect of the religious hterature of the past, and acknowledges himself to be but " a gleaner after the grape-gatherers." None the less, he thinks he has something to give to his readers of that wisdom which comes from God. In spite of his heterogeneous mixture of subjects, there lies at the back of them all the central thought of that which is true wisdom, viz. the placing of human conduct in its right relationship to Ciod. The book may be roughly divided into two unequal halves : first, 1-13. 14 — the Sayings of the Wise, introduced in ch. 1 by an eulogy on Wisdom, and closing with the praises of Nature (I3.15-43.33) ; second (44- 50.2), the praises of the .Mighty Men, to which is added an epilogue (5O.22-29), and a final Song of Praise (51). In the course of his writ- ing the author discusses most varied questions in the realm of practical morality — e.g. friend- EDEN ship, women, anger, servants, children. The Song of Nature is a very powerful composition, whilst the poem dealing with the roll of Israel's heroes is obviously imitated in Heb.ll. The author's ethical and social teachings have remained popular, and in some of them he approaches very near those of the Gospel. The epistle of St. James also shows acquaintance with Ecclesiasticus, and there are other possible allusions in N.T. The early Christian writers made a very extensive use of the book. Eder- sheim in the Speaker's Commentary ; Schech- ter Taylor, The Wisdom of Ben Sira ; Nestle, in Hastings, B.D. (5 vols. 1904). [s.n.s.] Kclipse of the sun. No historical notice of an eclipse occurs in the Bible, but there are passages in the prophets which have been supposed to allude to such phenomena (Am.8.9'; Mi.3.6 ; Zech.14.6). J1.2.io and 3.15 can scarcely refer to an eclipse, since a striking feature of such an occurrence is the visibility of the stars during the total phase. [Locust.] The darkness that overspread the world at the Crucifi.xion cannot be attributed to an eclipse of the sun, as such events can only take place at new moon, and the moon was full at the time of the Passover. [a.a.r.] Ed (Jos. 22. 34). The children of Reuben and Gad (or Joshua, according to LXX.) " named " this altar as a " witness " ('edh) ; but it is not very clear where it stood. Ap- parently it was E. of Jordan, near the Jericho ford (ver. 11); the LXX. understands " above Jordan," " at the geliloth of Jordan," " op- posite " Israel and Canaan (W. Palestine). There are many rude dolmens and monu- ments on the spurs E. of Jordan. [cr.c] B'dap, Tower of (R.V. Eder ; Gen. 35. 21). Jacob's first halting-place between Beth- lehem and Hebron was " beyond the tower Eder." According to Jerome it was 1,000 paces from Bethlehem. It stands perhaps for Bethlehem itself in Mi. 4.8 (A.V. tower of the flock ; see R.V. marg.). [cr.c] Eddias (iEsd.9.26) = Jeziah. Eden, a Gershonite Levite, son of Joah, in the days of Hezekiah (2Chr.29.i2,31.i5). Eden, the place where lay a garden which was the first abode of man. According to Gen. 2. 8-14, this garden was planted " in Eden eastward," and a river went forth from Eden to water it, and thence " divided and became four heads." The first was Pison, " which compasseth the whole land of Havilah," a place producing good gold, bdellium, and onyx stone {shuham). The second river was Gihon, " which compasseth the whole land of Cush." The third was Hiddekel (the Tigris), which floweth before Ass>Tia." The fourth river is simply described as the Euphrates {p'rath). The identity of the last two has never been dis- puted, and the difficulty was to find a water- way into which flow four streams, two of thera being these well-known rivers. The theories are too numerous tv give details of all, even if to do so could be regarded as serviceable. Philo the Jew (born c. 20 n.c.) was the first who ventured upon an allegorical interpreta- tion : Paradise darkly shadows forth the governing faculty of the soul ; the tree of life signifies religion, the inunortalizer ; the four rivers are the virtues of prudence, temperance, EDEN courage, and justice, the main stream being the generic virtue, goodness, which goes forth from Eden, the wisdom of God. One of the Heb. traditions enumerated by Jerome makes Para- dise to have been created before the world, and therefore beyond its limits. To all appear- ance, however, the writer of the account in Genesis intended to describe a place which existed, or which he believed to exist. Jose- phus thought that the ocean-stream believed to surround the earth was the source from which the four rivers flowed ; whilst according to others it was the Shatt al-'Arab, which, how- ever, is of too late formation to be taken into consideration. Those who place Eden in the highlands of Armenia see in the river from which the four streams diverge " a collection of springs," or a well-watered district. Others explain it as the Caspian Sea. Josephus, Eusebius, and many others identified the Pison with the Ganges, and the Gihon with the Nile. That the Pison was the Indus was held long before that identification was revived by Ewald and adopted by Kalisch ; Rashi sug- gested the Nile, and Philostorgius the Hy- daspes ; the advocates of the Armenian posi- tion of Eden identify it with the Phasis. Col. Chesney identified the Halys and the Araxes with the Pison and Gihon ; and the country within the former was the Havilah, " that which borders on the latter being the still more remarkable country of Cush." According to Golius, Jihun is the name given to the Oxus, which has therefore been assumed to be the Gihon by Rosenmiiller, Hartmann, and Michaelis. But the Araxes is called, by the Persians, Jihun ar-Rds, and has therefore likewise been identified with it by Reland, Calmet, and Col. Chesney. Probably, how- ever, the latest theory of Ass>Tiologists is the most satisfactory. The river which became four heads is the Persian Gulf, which is called ndru marratu, " the bitter river," in the in- scriptions. As the Shatt al-'Arab did not anciently exist, the Tigris and the Euphrates flowed immediately into it. Eden was thus the land of Babylonia itself, the plain of which was called edina, Semitic edinu, by the ancient inhabitants. Indeed, one of the names of Sippar, or a city in connexion therewith, was Sippar-edina. The Pison and the Gihon were identified by Sir Henry Rawlinson with the Uknu and the Stirappu, streams (or canals) mentioned by Tiglath-pileser III. in con- nexion with the Tigris and the Euphrates in S. Babylonia. Later, however he identified the Pison with the Arahtu, and the Gihon with the modern Jukha, which runs from the Euphrates W. towards Abu-Shahrein. Fried. Delitzsch also identified the Gihon with the Arahtu (Gu- handi), but he thought the Pison to" be the Pallukatu, the Pallacopas of classical geo- graphy. The Arahtu, however, is now iden- tified with a canal in the city of Babylon. These two rivers must therefore be regarded as still uncertain. As to the position of the garden, though uncertain likewise, something may nevertheless be said. The Babylonians apparently regarded it as identical with Eridu, " the good city," now Abu-Shahrein, originally near the mouth of the Euphrates. In this city 4 sacred plant was supposed to EDEB 229 grow, probably a kind of vine, in appearance like the sacred lapis-lazuli. In the sacred house, which was like a forest, its shadow extended, and no man entered within it — it was the sun-god Tammuz who dwelt there, between the mouths of the rivers (the Tigris and the Euphrates are apparently intended) which are on both sides. The ideograph for this city, when turned the right way, shows a central stem with branches, suggesting a tree or vine. Whether it is this tree which is represented on the Bab^'lonian cylinder-seals and the bas-reliefs of Assyria is uncertain, but not unlikely — indeed, one of the cylinder- subjects shows the tree (a date-palm), with figvues apparently about to pluck the fruit, and a serpent behind one of them (see our illustration under Fall). The Babylonian " Garden of Eden," therefore, if not " east- ward," was at least south-eastward in Eden. For the rest, the land of Havilah which the Pison encompassed has been explained as the "sandy " portion of N. Arabia, extending towards the Egvptian frontier (cf. Gen. 10. 29, 25.18; iSam.15.7)- The "bdellium " (b'^dholah) produced there is probably the budulhu of the Assyro-Babylonian lists of edible plants, and the s^o^aw-stone seems to be the Assyrian sdnitu, which is said to have been brought from the desert E. of Egypt'. Prof. Sayce suggests that the Gihon nay be the Kerkha, which rises E. of the Tigris in the mountains of Luristan, the home of the Kossaeans (Assyr. Kassi), whosenamemaybeconnected with that of Cush. Both the Kerkha and the Kurun anciently flowed into the Persian Gulf. In a Babylonian exercise-tablet, Pardisu or Papa- DisE appears as the name of a country. This word was possibly borrowed from the Persian, and is preceded by Maganu, probably Magan or E. Arabia (Havilah), and followed by Bit- Napsanu. See Delitzsch, Wo lag das Fara- dies ? and Savce in Hastings, D.B. (vol. i. 1898). ' [T.G.P.] Eden. — 1. One of the marts which supplied Tyre with richly embroidered stuffs (Ezk. 27.23). It is associated with Haran, Sheba, Asshur, etc. In 2K. 19.12 and Is.37.i2 "the sons of Eden who were in Telassar " are men- tioned with Gozan, Haran, and Reseph as victims of Assyrian greed of conquest. Telas- sar is possibly the Til-Asurri mentioned by Esar-haddon, which is regarded as having been situated in Upper Mesopotamia. This would support the identification of Eden with the Assyrian Bit-Adini, an Aramean state about 200 miles N.N.E. of Damascus. Michaelis suggested the modern Aden as the Eden of Ezekiel ; an identification lately revived by Margoliouth. — 2. Beth-eden, " house of Eden " (Am.1.5), was probably a country residence of the kings of Damascus. Ewald identified it with the Paradise of Strabo. Michaelis suggested Ehden, 20 miles N.W. of Ba'albek ; and Driver favours this same site or the Bit-Adini, quoted above. Others, in- cluding Farrar, have suggested Beit al-Janna, " the house of Paradise," S.W. of Damascus, on the E. slope of Hermon, not far from Mejdel. [t.g.p.] E'dep. — 1. (Jos.15.2i.) A city of Judah probably on the border of Edom. Henderson 230 EDES suggests the ruin 'Addr, 5 miles S. of Gaza, but this is near the sea, not near Edom. — 2. A Merarite Levite in the time of David (iChr. 23.23,24.30). [C.R.C] E des (iEsd.9.35) = Jadau. Ed na, the wife of Raguel (Tob.7.2, etc.). Edom {red), Edomites, Idumea. Esau asked Jacob to give him " the red, the red" (Gen. 25. 30), and received first the red pottage, and afterwards the red land of Edom, so called probably from the red sandstone mountains of mount Seir ("rough" mountain); thus he became " father of the Edomites " (Gen. 36. 9,43), and he is himself called Edom {vv. 8, 19). Edom is the mountain plateau S. of Moab and E. of the broad Arabah Valley, stretching from the Zered stream (Wddy el //esv) near the Dead Sea to the gulf of 'Aqaba at Eloth (iK.9.26), 100 miles N. and S., and about 20 miles from mount Hor (Num. 20. 23) eastwards to the desert. The plateau is called the "field" or "pasture" (sddi) of Edom (Gen. 32. 3 ; Judg.5.4). It rises to 5,300 ft. above sea-level E. of Petra, and slopes gently E. to the desert (midhbdr), while on W. steep ridges, with cloven gorges, fall towards the Arabah, which slopes S. to the Red Sea and N. to the Dead Sea, from a watershed (S. of Petra) where the level is about 600 ft. above the Red Sea. The rugged mountains, in- cluding Hor (4,580 ft.) and the granite peaks in the S. (4,200 ft.), originate the later name (Gebalitis, 2 Ant. i. 2 ; 3 Ant. ii. i), still given to the jebdl or " mountain region." On the underlying granite and porphyry rise cliffs of red and yellow sandstone surmounted by hard limestone, while soft yellowish limestone forms the plateau above. The rain sinks through this to pour down the gorges of hard stone in such brooks as Zered. The plateau is bare, with scattered bushes of broom and hibiscus, and grass in spring ; but remains of an oak forest occur on it near Petra ; and in places where there is water — as at Tophel, Maon, and Petra — the olive, fig, pomegranate, and vine are still grown. The mountains are covered with snow in winter (see Job 6.16, Uz being in Edom ; Lam. 4. 21). The capital at Petra is half-way N. and S. on the W. border. [Sela.] It is identified by Josephus (4 Ant. iv. 7, vii. i) with Kadesh-barnea, which was on the border (Num.20. 16). and with Reqem {many coloured), a name taken from the remarkable colouring of the sandstone. The Targum of Oukclos agrees, and Keoem-de-gaya {of the ravine) is the present el ]i. Other places in Edom include Iim ('.iimeh), Tophel (Tulileh), BozRAH {Buseireh) towards the N., and Maon {M'dn) S.E. of Petra, with Elath {Ailah) on the Red Sea shore. In the 4th cent. B.C. the increased power of the Edomites caused the name Edom to be extended over the desert to the W. ; and about 168 b.c. Idumea reached W. even to Adoraim and Mareshah (13 Ant. ix. i) and N. to Hebron, Beth-zur being the border fortress of the Jews (iMac.4. 15,29,61,5.3,65.6.31 ; 2Mac.i2.32 ; Mk.3.8). — Inhabitants. The first inhabitants were Ho- RiTES, or " cave-dwellers," called " children of Seir " (Gen. 36. 20 ; Deut.2.i2), who were conquered by the sons of Esau. The Ben Hasaa picture in Egypt (12th dynasty, i.e. EDOM, EDOMITES earlier than .\braham) represents nomads from Aduma with a gazelle and an ibe.x as presents, driving asses, armed with spears and bows, and playing on a ten-stringed harp. They appear to be Semitic, and the later Edomites were akin to the Hebrews. After the Captivity Petra became the capital of Ishmaelite Arabs from S.E. called Nabatheans [Nebaiotii], trading as a free people with Egypt and Assyria, and powerful in the Sinaitic desert. The Edomites worshipped many gods of the " children of Seir " (2Chr. 25.14,15,20), and Arab deities such as 'Aud (Uz), the chief one apparently being Qaus, or Qushi, " the bow god " — probably the sun — whom Josephus calls Koze (15 Ant. vii. 9), and whose name perhaps appears in those of the Edomite rulers Qaus-malka, Qaus-gabri, and Costobarus. The Edomite language appears to have been Araraean even before the spread of the Nabatheans. — History. The original inhabitants obeyed " dukes " or " leaders " {'alluphim ; Gen. 36. 15 ; iChr.l.54), and these, among the children of Esau in the time of Moses, were organized under a king (Ex.15. 15 ; Num. 20. 14) ; one of these " dukes " found " hot springs " (R.V.) in the desert (Gen. 36. 24). Israel respected the Edomite inde- pendence and, passing S. from Kadesh-barnea, struck E. to the main N. trade-route on the plateau, which led from Eloth (Deut.2.8) to IjE-ABARiM i'Aimeh) on the border of Moab (Num. 33. 44), near the source of the border stream Zered (Num. 21. 12). The names of eight Edomite kings ruling before Saul are given (Gen. 36.31-39 ; iChr. 1.43-51), their native places being Diniiabah (perhaps Dhdneh), Bozrah {Biiseireh), .\vith {'Aimeh), Rehoboth on the Euphrates, and Pau (Pai). Hadad, the last of these kings (iChr.l.50 ; iK. 11.14-22), or a son so named, fled from David to Egvpt, and returned with a royal bride after David's death. Edom was then restricted to moimt Seir (Jos. 15. i ; Judg.5.4). It was attacked by Saul (1Sam.i4.47). and conquered for David by Joab (2Sam.8.i3,i4 : iChr.18. 12,13) after a great battle in the " valley of salt " (see R.V. marg. 2Sam.8.i3). Solomon had a trading fleet in Eloth of Edom ( i K.9.26 ; 2Chr.8.i7), and the king of Edom aided Jehoram and Jehoshaphat early in the 9th cent. B.C. in their attack on the S. border of Moab (2 K. 3. 8, 9, 20), where an unex- pected stream flowed down the valley — pro- bably the brook Zered. A few years later Joram of Judah was defeated in an attempt to quell a revolt in Edom (2K.8.20 ; 2Chr.21. 8-10) ; but Amaziah, late in the same century, took Sela (Petra) after another battle in the "valley of salt" (2K.I4.7 : 2Chr.25.19)- In 734 B.C. Tiglath-pileser III. <>f Assyria conquered Qaus-malka. king of Edom ; and in 715 B.C. Sargon advanced thence against Thamud Arabs to the S. Sennacherib, in 702 B.C., claimed .Airammu of Edom as a tributary, and Esar-haddon received tribute about 680 B.C. from Qaus-gabri of Edom. The S. Arabs invaded Edom about 650 b.c. on their way N. while .\ssur-bani-pal was weakened by his brother's rebellion in Baby- lon, but the Nabatheans took the side of the Assyrian monarch, so that Edom escaped EDREI his subsequent revenge when Babylon fell. After 600 B.C. Edom appears to have regained freedom, though impoverished (Mal.1.4) by the wars ; and the Nabatheans contended with the Gk. kings of Asia (see Dan. 11. 41), though the Idumeans were defeated by Judas Maccabaeus at Akrabbim (iMac.5.3 ; 12 Ant. viii. i). and finally compelled to become cir- cumcised (13 Ant. ix. i) about 139 B.C., under Simon the brother of Judas. Idumean power increased greatly in 47 e.g., when Antipater became ruler of Palestine, and his son Herod — regarded only as " half a Jew " (14 Ant. xv. 2) — established his own brother-in-law, the Idumean Costobarus, priest of Koze, as ruler of Idumea and Gaza (15 Ant. vii. 9 ; 20 Ant. ix. 4). The Romans held Petra after 105 a.d., and Edom then became a Roman province ; but the Nabatheans retained considerable independence, and were enriched by trade. Their capital was at Petra, but their rude inscriptions in the Sinaitic peninsula continue as late even as the 4th cent. a.d. Coins of kings bearing the names Malik, Hareth, Dabel, Gamalith, and Sukaminth have been found (Taylor, Alphabet, i. pp. 328-332) belonging to the later ages of Idumean freedom. The Idumeans introduced into Jerusalem in 70 a.d. (4 Wars iv. i) proved an element of weakness to the Jews. Edom was indeed always re- garded as an enemy by Hebrews from the time of Moses, and Edomites probably aided the Babylonians to reduce Jerusalem c. 600 b.c. SeeNum.24.i8; Ps.60.8,83.6,137.7;Is.ll.i4,34. 5-7 (Idumea, R.V. Edom), 63. i; Je. 9. 26,25. 21, 27.3 (king of Edom c. 600 B.C.), 40. 11 (Jews in Edom c. 588 b.c), 49.7,13,18,20,22; Lam. 4. 21; Ezk.25.i2,32.29 (kings of Edom c. 568 B.C.), 36-5 (Idumea, R.V. Edom); JI.3.19 (Edomite violence against Israel c 700 b.c) ; Am. 1.6, 2. 1 (the bones of a king of Edom burned for lime c. 760 b.c), 9.12 ; Ob. 1,9 (mount Esau); Mai. 1.4. These notices agree with the history, as above, and with the Ass>Trian statements. [Nebaioth.] [cr.c] Edpe'i. — 1. One of the two capital cities of Bashan (Num.21. 33 ; Deut.l.4,3.10 ; Jos. 12. 4), where a victory was gained by the Israelites over the Amorites under Og their king. The ruins of this ancient city still bear the name ed Der'adh at a town of 4,000 in- habitants 25 miles E. of Gadara (Schumacher, Across the Jordan, pp. 121-148) — 2. A town allotted to the tribe of Naphtali, and situated near Kedesh (Jos. 19. 37). Probably the village Y'ater, 11 miles W. of Kedesh. [c.R.c] Education. There is no contemporary account of Hebrew education till c. 200 a.d., nor ought we to expect one of a subject that would not suggest itself for description ; but we can gather from inference much clearer information than might be expected. It is evident that the education of children was commanded by God (Ex. 12.26,13. 8. 14 ; Deut. 4.9,10,6.2,7,20,11.19; Sus.3; Josephus, Contra Apion, 17); also that till after the Captivity the parents, both father and mother, were the teachers. [Family.] It is probable that the boast of Jesus the son of Sirach (prolog.) is correct, that the Hebrews "ought to be com- mended for learning and wisdom " : though their education was confined in character, as EDUCATION 231 the subject of teaching was always the law. According to a very late description (Pirke A both V. 21), boys at 5 years old began to learn the Scriptures, at 10 the Mishna, at 13 they became subject to the whole law, at 15 they entered the Gemara. There is no certain evidence that boys were taught reading and writing before the Captivity (J udg. 5. 14 does not help us; see R.V.), but it is highly probable ; the alphabetical psalms and also the fact that the Hebrew language before the invention of the vowel points was extremely difficult to read seem some evidence of this. Schools there were none in this period [Schools of Prophets] ; but that the people generally were educated is evidenced by, e.g., the commercial and intellec- tual activity of the reign of Solomon. With the return from the Captivity a new era in the history of education begins, due chiefly to Ezra the scribe. Synagogues are built and increase rapidly, and were primarily schools, and the scribes were teachers who did their work well, though not at first as elementary teachers ; but elementary education soon be- came general, and it was considered unpatri- otic and irreligious not to be able to read. The education of girls was not neglected ; see Pr.31 for a compendium of their instruction. Educa- tional literature was now largely developed (c/. Ecclus. and Wisdom) ; the first teachers' hand- book was the Proverbs ; and earlier than this the terms " teacher " and " scholar " (iChr.25. 8) marked recognized divisions of society. Children were given elementary education in the synagogue or in a room attached ; they sat on the ground round a teacher on a seat. Thus our Lord Himself must have been taught, though His first teacher would be His mother. — Education in N.T. Our Lord gave to chil- dren, as He did to women, their proper place in His Church. In schools such as our Lord must have attended, reading (with careful attention to pronunciation) and writing were taught, and probably some knowledge of Greek was imparted ; but from our Lord's condemna- tion of the scribes and His frequent criticism of the current explanations of the command- ments we gather that education had degener- ated into the worst kind, viz. merely mechani- cal teaching. Naturally there are no specific regulations as to the instruction of children in N.T. (the Church had to do with older people in its first days), yet there is much about teaching and teachers, though the distinct office of catechist dates from some centuries later. The function of teaching might be exercised by any man, whether apostle, prophet, or presby- ter, though the ability is recognized as a separate gift. It was exercised by laymen (we know that in the 3rd cent. Origen was a teacher before he was ordained), and appar- ently by women — see Tit. 2. 3, where the technical word diddcTKoKo's (in contemporary Gk. a school word) is used. It is not without significance that our Lord is often called by this title. In the following passages also dtddaKaXos or diddaKiv is used: Ac.l3.i, at Antioch were certain prophets and teachers ; Ro.2.20, iCor.12.28,29, first apostles, second- arily prophets, thirdly teachers; Eph.4.ii, apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers; iTim.l.7,2.7 ; 2Tim.l.ii,4.3 ; Heb, 232 EOLAH 5.12; Jas.3.1; cf. also Ro.12.7. From these we gather tha. there was no fixed nor definite place for the 5i5d(r^•aXos, but that the work of teaching was looked upon as one of the most important in the Church. There are three prominent facts with regard to education in the Bible, (i) It is by the command and sanction of God the Father. (2) It was the practice of God the Son. (3) It is now to be considered as the work of the Holy Spirit, Who is guiding into all truth. The subsequent history and development of education are outside our present range. The following books mav be referred to: Didache. 15, and Dr. Bigg's Com- mentarv, p. 27f. : Diet, of Christian Antiq.. "Catechumen " ; Bishop Wordsworth, Ministry of Grace ; Church Work. 93 ff. (Oxford Lib. of Practical Theology) ; Harnack's ed. of the Didachr, Weizsacker, Das Apostolische Zeitelter; Edersheim, Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah. [b.r.1 Eg'Iah', one of David's wives, and mother of his son Ithream (2Sam.3.5 ; iChr.3.3). Ac- cording to Heb. tradition, she was Michal. 'Eglsiim, a place named only in Is. 15. 8, apparently as one of the most remote points on the boundary of Moab. Probably the same as En-eglaim. Elg-lon {c'rcle). king of Moab. He op- pressed Israel, and was assassinated bv Ehud (Judc;.3.i2ff.). [Ehud.1 [h.m.s.I Eg-lon', a town of Judah in the low country (Jos. 15. 30). Eglon was one of a con- federacv of five towns which under Jerusalem resisted Israel by attacking its ally Gibeon (Jos. 10). The name survives in the modern Allan, a mass of ruins in the plain 16 miles N.E. of Gaza. [c.R.cl Egypt (mirrayim or erec mifrayim; A i'7ii7rTos; Aegyptus), a country occupying the N.E. angle of Africa between N. lat. 31° 37' and 24° i', and E. long. 27° 13' and 34° 12'. Its limits ap- pear to have been very nearly the same imder the Pharaohs ; the most southern province was the district around the city of Elephantine, which was built opposite the present city of Aswan. — Nantes and Divisions. The common name in the Bible is mirravim (Gen. 10.6, 12. 10), or the land of mirrayim (Gen. 13. 10 ; Ex.7. 19, etc.) in a dual form. There has been much dis- cussion about this name, which is not Egvptian, and has been interpreted as meaning the two enclosures, the two districts, or the two basins. The dual form is in accordance with the Egyp- tian custom of considering Egypt as divided into two regions — the S., which is always named first, and the N. The usual emblem of royalty is double — the reed for the S. and the wasp for the N. [Mizraim.] Another name met with in Scripture is " the Land of Ham " (Ps. 105. 23, 106. 22), which refers to Ham, one of the sons of Noah, and has a great likeness with the Egyptian name of Kern or Kemi, the hieroglyphic for which is the tail of the croco- dile, and means " the black one," from the colour of the black soil. It is doubtful whether the name Rahah (Ps.87..i,89.io ; Is.Sl.o) always means Egypt. [RAiiAn.] The name \lyvnro%, which in Homer is applied to a river, seems to be a transcription of the word Ageh or Akeb, one of the names of the Nile. The superficies of the land is at present over 11,000 EGYPT sq. miles, equal to 7,300,000 acres, of which 4,625,000 are cultivated. The area of culti- vated land is probably a good deal smaller than in ancient times, especially in the Delta, where lake Menzaleh covers a considerable space, part of which was called " the Garden of Egypt," and where the WadyTumilat, which is now nearly barren, was a flourishing land with important cities. The extent of the cultivated area is not exactly the same every year, since it depends entirely for its irrigation upon the inundation of the Nile. From a very remote period the land was divided into adminis- trative districts, called by the Egyptians hesep or tesh. and by the Greeks nomes. The capital was the abode of the divinitv peculiar to the province. The number of the nomes has varied, chiefly in the Delta. The later hieroglyphical lists give 42 or 44, Upper Eg\'pt and Lower Egypt having each 21 or 22. — General A ppearance ; Plants and A nimals. Eg\Tot, as Herodotus says, is a gift of the Nile. It is a long valley, extremely fertile, owing to the inundation. A little below the present city of Cairo the valley expands into the Delta, a vast level plain, watered by two branches of the Nile, and numerous canals. In former times the river had seven branches. Rain is not infre- quent on the northern coast ; while in Upper Egypt there are only one or two showers in a year, though they have occurred more fre- quently of late years. Rockv and barren deserts bound the valley on both sides. Some geological changes have occurred even in historical times. N. of Suez the ground has risen, causing the Red Sea, or the Arabian Gulf, which extended as far as the middle of the isthmus, to retreat to its present limits ; while near the Mediter- ranean coast it has sunk. Several ancient cities lie beneath the waters of lake Menzaleh. The wealth of the land has always been agri- cultural. In all times Egypt produced great quantities of corn. It often happened that, like Jacob and his children, the neighbouring nations had to draw corn from Egypt. There are in the tombs detailed pictures of breaking up the earth, ploughing, sowing, harvest, threshing (which was simply treading out by oxen or cows unmuzzled), and storing the corn in granaries. The EgN^itians grew vines more than at present, and had various sorts of wine, each having its special name. These came from the Delta and from the oases in the Libyan desert. The olive-tree and date-palm were also cultivated. The Egvptians had quantities of live-stock — oxen, sheep, goats, and asses ; also various kinds of domesticated antelopes, besides many birds, geese, ducks, pigeons, cranes, but not the common fowl. Our information ns to the tenure of land is de- rived chiefly from documents of the Ptolemaic epoch. But the C.k. kings seem to have made very few innovations. It appears that a great quantitv of land was owned by the king, who made grants to the temples and to his officers; private property existed, but probably most of the agricultural population were tenants. The land surveying of the Egyp- tians was very advanced ; it was absolutely necessary in a country where the landmarks were often carried away by the inundation. An important income was also derived from EGYPT the fisheries, especially those of lake Moeris, a basin outside the valley occupying part of the present province of the Fayiim. Trees were very few — the date-palm, the acacia (one of which, now called sunt, has a useful wood), and the sycamore are nearly all that are seen. The cereals mostly cultivated are the wheat and the dura. Its fruits and vegetables have been famous since ancient times, especially its melons and onions ; we see presented as offerings grapes, figs, pomegranates, cucum- bers, and lentils. The papyrus provided a flourishing industry. It probabl)' came from the Upper Nile, and was used for making paper ; it was also boiled and eaten as food ; light boats for navigating the canals were made of its stalks. It has now disappeared entirely from Egypt. Several plants have been discovered in the wreaths of mummies which do not belong to the flora of Egypt ; among them the so-called persea (Mimusops Schimperi), an Abyssinian tree cultivated for its red berries. Cattle were probably more abundant than at present. The Egyptians had several breeds of oxen, both hornless and horned ; and they seem to have domesticated animals which are no longer so used — the sculptures show large herds of several kinds of antelopes (e.g. the leucoryx) of which they ate the flesh, and which were sacrificed with the oxen. Goats and sheep were very abundant ; swine are found as early as the 4th dynasty, but disappear afterwards. The camel is never seen in the pictures ; while the horse appears only after the invasion of the Hyksos, who probably brought it from Mesopotamia. The horse throve so much in Egypt that it was exported to the neighbouring countries. We hear of Solomon obtaining horses for his chariots from Egypt (2Chr.l. 16,9.28). The horse was used also for ploughing. Asses were very numerous, as they are now. We can trace on the monuments dogs of various breeds, such as hounds for hunting the gazelle, mastiffs, and spits. Wild animals abounded in the desert — hyenas, jackals, foxes, and wolves. The lion was found farther N. than now. The cat was a sacred animal, but was not domesti- cated ; the kings and the rich liked to have strange animals brought to them — the giraffe, a kind of leopard used for hunting, and ele- phants. The chase of the hippopotamus is often seen in the pictures. It is quite possible that in old times this huge animal came down as far as the Delta. Among the birds the falcon, the vulture, the ibis, the plover, were sacred, as being the emblems of divinities. The chase of water-fowl was a favourite sport of the rich. The crocodile is usually called in the Bible a dragon ; it was found in large numbers, but has now retreated above the second cataract. It played a most important part in religion ; like the hippopotamus, it was in some places the emblem of Typhon or Set (the evil principle), and therefore regarded as impure. In other places it was an object of great reverence, fed by the priests and wor- shipped as a god. [Nile.] The serpent also was considered as an emblem of eternity and of royal power ; there are several kinds in the country, some of them, like the horned asp or cerastes, very dangerous. Frogs are very EGYPT 233 numerous ; one goddess had a frog's head. The tadpole is the hieroglyphic sign for 100,000. The scorpion also was sacred. It is common among the ruins. Its sting is dangerous, chiefly in summer. Clouds of locusts are rare ; they are more frequent in Nubia than in Egypt. Flies and mosquitoes are among the permanent plagues of the country. — In- habitants. The old inhabitants certainly be- longed to the Caucasian race, and to the branch of the Noachian family called Hamite, or some- times Cushite. The great number of skulls which have been found in the graves of various epochs show that they were not Negroes, al- though some anthropologists pretend to have recognized a negroid influence in the type. The question of the cradle of the Egyptians is much discussed. For a long time they were considered as invaders coming from Asia through the isthmus of Suez. But since the prehistoric civilization, the Stone Age, has been discovered along the whole valley of the Nile, it is impossible not to consider the bulk of the population as being autochthonous, of African origin. A foreign element may have mixed with them and contributed to develop their civilization, as the Aryans have done in some parts of Europe. These foreign con- querors, whom some consider to have been Semites, others Hamites, must have come from Asia or Arabia, either through the har- bour now called Kosseir and the valley of Hamamat, or more S. through Abyssinia or Somaliland. After having reached the Upper Nile, they came down the river and arrived in Egypt, where they settled. The Egyptian traditions point to conquerors coming from the S. For them the W. is the right side — that is, they turn towards the S., which is always men- tioned before the N. They seem to have been closely connected with the land of Punt, the African coast of the Red Sea. They had a strong individual character, and a deep con- tempt for the strangers whom they could not reduce to slavery. They speak of the " vile " Cush and the " vile Kheta " (Hittites). — Lan- guage. Their language is known to us from its earliest time. We have inscriptions of the first three dynasties ; but not until the fourth have we texts of any length. This writing lasted until Roman times, during a period of more than 4,000 years ; and considering that long duration it may be said that there has been Uttle change in the language. It belongs to the Hamitic branch, as do the Berber and some languages spoken in the Soudan and Abyssinia, e.g. the Galla, Bedja, and Somali. It has some affinities with the Semitic lan- guages, but must not be called Semitic. The writing is hieroglyphical. It is a transition from the picture-writing to the phonetic. A sentence is generally a mixture of three kinds of signs — the ideographic, the syllabic, and the alphabetical ; hence there is no orthography in our sense of that word. A word may be spelt in various ways in the same text. Hiero- glyphics have also an ornamental purpose, they are the accompaniment of sculpture, they are used on the monuments and in sacred books; but such writing being difficult and slow, the Egyptians adopted for common use a shorthand which is called by the (^uite inade- 234 EGYPT quale name of "hieratic," and in which there is an equivalent for each hieroglyphical sign. Under the 22nd dynasty there appeared a new siinplification, the "demotic," parallel with a modification in the language. The signs are difficult to recognize, but there are still the three kinds. The Egyptians never adopted a purely alphabetical system, until they rejected entirelv their own script, and adojited the Gk. alphabet with four additional signs, which constitutes the Coptic alphabet. Then the language was much altered under the in- fluence of Greek. Coptic, which was spoken and written b\' the Christians, is still the sacred language of the Copts, who read their prayers without understanding the meaning. It seems to have only ceased to be a spoken lan- guage at the end of the i8th cent. — Religion. The religion has often been viewed in a false light, owing to the Greeks having translated into their own language the names of Egyptian gods, thus giving an utterly false idea of their nature and attributes. It is not a well co- ordinated system, even if we consider only the doctrine of the priests. It is pre-eminently a worship of nature and of its leading manifesta- tions. The chief god, to whom, more or less, all the attribiites of the deity are given, has a different name according to the localities — he is called Amon at Thebes, Tum at Heliopolis, Phtah at Memphis, Horns at Edfu, Hathor at Denderah. But if we study the character and attributes of each, we find that, with slight differences, they are very much alike. They differ in their names and in their residences, and must have been originally the local gods of the several tribes which settled in the country and whose union constituted the em- pire. They were identified with the most beneficial elements — the sun, earth, and water. All manifestations of nature, all natural forces, were gods, but they are not separated from the creator ; they are his limbs : hence the pan- theistic character of the religion is evident. The cosmogonic doctrine is that of Heliopolis, which seems to have been adopted more or less throughout the land. The moral character, which is absent in nature-gods, is found in one of these — viz. Osiris, the judge of the dead. His worship seems to have originated at Abydos. It is before him that the judgment scene described in the Book of the Dead has to take place. The heart of the deceased is weighed in his presence, while the deceased declares that he has not connnitted one of .^2 great sins, thus certainly pointing to a high moral law. The fate of the soul after death is something very vague. It is described in the Book of the Dead (a copy of which, written on papyrus, was often put with the mummy) ; sometimes it is painted on tin; walls of the tomb. The deceased may go through many transformations, he may enjoy great felicity, encounter great dangers, from which he will be delivered by magic words ; but there is no definite future, nothing to which every one is subjected. The human personality consists of tliree elements — the body, the ka or image (wliic.h follows man even during his lifetinu^), and th(! soul. None of these three elements must perish, or the person himself would be EGYPT preserved from corruption. This is the reason for mummification. The Egyptians adopted as emblems of the gods the figures of animals. The falcon was the re]>resentative of Horus, the ibis of Thoth, the ram of .\mon. Two sacred bulls were worshipped : .\pis at Mem- phis and Mnevis at Heliopolis. The Egyptian religion had a very complicated ritual, a con- siderable number of festivals and ceremonies, and a powerful body of priests. Under the Romans it degenerated into gross superstition and magic, and therefore fell into disrepute. — Government. The government was monarchi- cal. The king, whose fiower was limited by law and custom, succeeded to the throne by inheritance ; he was at the same time the chief priest and the head of all that was connected with religion. On the sculptures he is always represented as fulfilling the duties of a priest. Queens occasionally occupied the throne. We have only scanty information as to the laws of Egvpt during the Old and Middle Empire. Under the Theban dynasties we have records of trials where capital punishment was fre- quent. Our knowledge of the civil law of Egypt is chiefly derived from the demotic con- tracts. Under the Ptolemies it was apparently most precise and definite ; it probably had a much older origm, as the Macedonian kings imitated what had been done by their native predecessors. — Antiy. The Egyptians were not a warlike people ; during the first dynas- ties we see thena defending themselves against foreign invaders, especially the Sinaitic Bed- ouin. They had then no regular army ; the troops consisted of levies mostly untrained and undisciplined, among which were negroes from the Soudan. But after the country had been freed from the foreign rulers, called the Hyksos, the kings became conquerors, espe- cially under the iSth dvnastv, the most power- ful of all. The kings had to fight the Ethio- pians, their neighbours on the S. who were subjects of Egypt, but who generally revolted at each change of reign, and in the E. the nations of Palestine and Mesopotamia. At that time the Pharaohs had a trained army in which chariots played an important part. The infantry was armed with lances and a kind of falchion, and had large shields ; the light infantry were the archers, who had also hatchets. louring the 19th dynasty the Pharaohs began to enlist foreign mercenaries : the Shartana (who wore a metal helmet and who were a Mediterranean nation), and the Mashouash or Maxyos from .\frica (who be- cami" a guard like the pretorians or the janis- saries). During the 26th ilynastv Greek and Carian mercenaries continually increased in uun\ber in the l'"gvi)tian armies, which in the wars against the Persians were almost entirely composed of these foreigners, who could make their own conditions and could greatly in- fluence the succession to the throne. — Do- ineatic Life. As to the domestic life of the Egyptians, we derive much information from the pictures in the tombs. A striking feature is the high ])osition occu]iied b\' women ; we often see them represented with their husbands, and styled " a palm of loveliness," " beloved bv her husband." Monogamy was certainly annjhilatpd ; especially must the body be | the rule, but not for the kings, with whom PLATE XII *Hi. Thoth. Anubis. ¥ Hathor. p. 234i] GODs OF EGYPT, WITH THEIR SYMBOLS. P.:ot,s i,y .Vanseii. EGYPT EGYPT 235 DISCIPLINED TROOPS OF THE TIME OF THE 18TH DYNASTY. (Wilkinson.) polygamy seems to have been frequent for political motives. A marriage between two royal families was generally the token of an alliance between the two states. The manner of life was that of a highly civilized people ; they seem to have been of a merry and cheer- ful nature. They liked social amusements, banquets where the guests were amused by instrumental music, songs, and dancing girls. They practised sports, in which the women took part. They had several games, one of which was draughts. Their funeral cere- monies varied according to the rank of the deceased. There was a procession, and the mummy, lying under a canopy on a boat, was carried across the Nile. On the shore it was put on a sledge drawn by cows, which brought the coffin to the mountain. It was accom- panied by waiting-women, by attendants, and by a priest reading the Book of the Dead. The Embalming of the body lasted many days ; this was the occupation of families of embalmers who dwelt at Thebes, on the W. side, among the tombs. — Literature and Art. There is an Egyptian literature of a very varied character. We know of several libraries built in the temples, which contained the so-called hermetic books, the sacred books attributed to Thoth, of which Clemens Alexandrinus says there were 42 ; they were songs in honour of the gods, descriptions of the royal life and its attributes, astronomical works and horo- scopes. The books of the hierogrammatist re- ferred to the art of writing, the geography and course of the Nile. The books of the Stolistes were devoted to all the ordinances concerning religious worship. The sacred books par excellence were those which contained the laws and everything concerning the gods and the education of the priests. Medical science was also the subject of six hermetic books. The Book of the Dead is a collection of hymns and prayers supposed to be pronounced by the deceased when he reaches the other world ; they describe all that may happ^en to the soul after it has been separated from the body. This book dates from the beginning of the em- pire, and was still placed with the deceased in Roman times. Religious and funeral books are by far the largest part of th<; literature, but we have besides pap^nri on mathematics, on moral teaching, descriptions of travels, many tales (of which the old Egyptians seem to have been very fond), magical books, correspond- ence between a teacher and his pupil, and what we call poems, i.e. narratives written in a poet- ical style, though we have not yet recognized actual verse. Unfortunately, we have no his- torical books, except merely a papyrus giving a list of kings with the number of years of their reigns. This precious document, called the Annals of Turin, is in a very fragmentary state. Egyptian art is perhaps the oldest we know. It has certainly a native origin ; we cannot trace in it any foreign influence. It reached a high point of development when many of the neighbouring nations were still barbarians ; but after that did not progress, probably because the Egyptians never culti- vated art for its own sake and never strove to reach ideal beauty. Art was always subserv- ient to religion ; it was considered as a luxury and as something secondary. In architecture, the art in which the Egyptians have siurpassed most of their neighbours, they aimed chiefly at duration, and wished to impress men, not by the beauty of the constructions they raised, but by their colossal and gigantic proportions. In sculpture they showed remarkable skill in working very hard stones ; they made very good portraits in stone or wood, but they never got rid of what are called conventions — re- mains of the childhood of art which they thought it unnecessary to shake off. These conventions are still seen in pictures and also in relievo. Both of these are intended as a kind of language for the eye, therefore are always accompanied by their explanation in hieroglyphics. Decorative art takes an im- portant place among their industries. J ewellery was carried to a point of perfection which is even yet unsurpassed in some respects ; and the furniture lately found in royal tombs is truly remarkable both for its good taste and excellence of workmanship. Egyptian linen had a great repute ; we have many specimens of the art of the weaver in the mummy cloths, of which there are various qualities, but they are not generally coloured. The early Copts seem to have preserved the tradition of tf)e 236 EGYPT tissues in brilliant colours, which they used for I their religious garments. — Magicians. The Bible often speaks of the magicians of Egypt (Gen. 41. 24 ; Ex.?. 11, 8.18). Magic certainly played an important part in the religion of the country, and the magicians who belonged to a college or high school were much considered. We see them occasionally in the processions which took place on the great festivals ; they rank with the highest class of priests. [Magic] — Chronology. There are few subjects upon which the views of Egyptologists vary more than upon chronology. It is based on as- tronomy ; and although we have a few astronomical representations, they are so in- termingled with mythology that it is hardly possible to make any use of them. According to the idea first advocated by Lepsius, the Egyptian had 2 different years, a vague year consisting of 12 months and 5 intercalary days, and a fixed year of 365^, days. These years originally began on the same day, the ist of the month Thoth (July 20, Greg.), with the heliacal rising of Sothis ; but as after 4 years there was a difference of one day between the 2 years, it is admitted that they made use of the Sothiac cycle, 1,460 fixed years corre- sponding to 1,461 vague years. After that lapse of time the 2 years began again on the same day. It has been denied that the Egyp- tians knew that cycle ; however, Brugsch maintains it, and states " that the corre- spondence of the vague year with the fixed year is indicated through the phases of the moon, the stations of the sun, the beginning of the seasons, and the rising of certain stars." Mahler bases his new system of chronology on dates fixed by the phases of the moon. It is extraordinary how little importance the Egyptians seem to have attached to astron- omy, except as connected with religion ; no eclipse is recorded, we do not even know their word for it. Nor are we much more fortunate with historical chronology. Our best docu- ment is the before-mentioned Annals of Turin, which is broken into 164 pieces. We have three sculptured listsof kings, two of which come from the temple of Abydos ; they give the names of the predecessors of Scti I. The largest one is still in situ, but although it is trustworthy as to the order, whole dynasties have been omitted. According to tradition, the temple lists were used by a Seberinytic priest called Manetho, who is said to have written three books of Egyptian records {{nro/j.ur]fj.aTa) under Ptolemy Philadelphus. He divided the history of Egypt into 30 dynasties, giving for each king the length of his reign ; but as his lists have come to us f)nly third-hand, through the Chris- tian chronographers, the numbers he gives are hardly reliable, and but seldom agree with those found on the monuments. However, his divisifin into 30 dynasties has been preserved, the 30th being that of the last native Pharaohs, when Egypt was finally conquered by the Persians. Several authors have accepted the numbers of Manetho, others have shortened considerably the time assigned by him to various dynasties. The first historical king is dated by the following authors thus : Manetho, 5613 ; Lepsius, 3892 ; Mariette, 5,004 ; Pf qgscb, 4400 ; Petrie, ^777 ; I^d. Meyer, EGYPT 3315. — History. We now give a very brief sketch of the history, insisting chiefly on the general features and on the facts connected with Scripture. During the last ten years a great deal has been discovered concerning the prehistoric state of Egypt, when the race which occupied it had not advanced beyond the Stone Age. We cannot but suppose that there was an invasion coming from Arabia, which may not have been very numerous, but which conquered the native race, after which civilization began to grow. The first historical king is Mena or Menes. His name has been CARTOUCHE UF MENA. found in hieroglyphics, but our only informa- tion as to his life is from Gk. writers. He is said to have come from This, in Middle Egypt, and to have founded Memphis, called after his name Mennefer. The very few monuments which we have of the first three dynasties are found mostly in tombs at Abydos. With the 4th dynasty we see a sudden development of every art and of literature. Then the p>Ta- mids were built and the graves adorned with magnificent sculptures, such as have not been surpassed at any time in Egyptian history. This brilliant period lasted through the 4th, 5th, and 6th dynasties, and is one of those of which we have the greatest amount of informa- tion. Afterwards there is a gap. We know hardly anything of the succeeding dynasties until the loth, when a few monuments show us that the empire was divided and that the central power was probably Heracleopolis. The nth dynasty took Thebes as its capital and founded this city's influence. The 12th dynasty extended its rule far into Nubia ; but we then already see the beginnings of the peaceful invasion of foreigners, evidently from the E., who later on came in increasing num- bers, conquered the country, and established rulers of their race. These invaders have been called Hyksos ; they evidently came from Mesopotamia. They very soon adopted the civilization of their subjects, in everything ex- cept religion, and this exception is the reason for their always remaining an object of hatred to the native Egyptians. As the kings were Mesopotamians, they received with favour their kindred the Hebrews. The Hyksos rulers form the 15th and i6th dynasties. It was during their rule that Abraham came into the country, and afterwards Joseph and his family, who were settled in the land of Goshen. The Christian chronograiihcrs say that it was under A])ophis, one of the last of these kings, that Joseph was raised to his high position. Very soon afterwards the Egyptians shook off the foreign power, and native Pharaohs came back to the throne. The i8th and 19th dynasties were those of the great conquerors. The oppressor of the Jews, the king " which knew not Joseph" (Ex. 1.8), was probably Ramses II., and it seems probable that the Exodus took iilace under his son Mcnephtah. Several times afterwards the Israelites came in contact with (be Egyptians. T^e be«id o| EGYPTIAN, EGYPTIANS the 22nd dynasty, Sheshonk, called in Scripture Shishak, invaded Palestine under Rehoboam, and carried away the treasures of the temple (iK. 14.25 ; 2Chr.l2.2,9-ii). A record of his campaign is engraved on a pylon at Thebes. The first king of the 25th dynasty, Shabaka, called in Scripture So, received messengers from Hoshea, king of Samaria (2K.17.4) ; but after Samaria had been taken by Sargon, Shabaka was routed at Raphia by the As- syrians. His son Shabatak also was beaten by the Assyrians, and was driven from the throne of Egypt by Tirhakah, the Ethiopian who was the persevering, though finally un- successful, foe of the Assyrians. There was some revival of the Egyptian power under the 26th dynasty, the Saites who came to the throne with the help of Greek and Carian mercenaries. The second king, Necho, wishing to invade Assyria, asked Josiah to let him pass through his territory. Josiah tried to opposej him, ^ut was defeated and killed at Megiddo (2Chr.35.20) ; the conqueror made Jerusalem tributary and put Jehoiakim in the room of Josiah his father (2 K. 23. 29-35) ; Necho himself was routed by Nebuchadnezzar. After the 26th dynasty come the struggles of Egypt against the Persians, with alternations of successes which freed Egypt for a time, and of defeats which made her subject to the great king, until, at the end of the 30th dynasty, Nectanebo was compelled to fly to Ethiopia before Artaxerxes Ochus. He was the last Pharaoh ; after him Egypt became a Persian satrapy and was conquered by Alexander. Since Nectanebo no native ruler has ever EKRON 237 f^ AAAAA/" ( ^-^^--^ CARTOUCHE OF NEKHT-NF.B-F (NECTANEBUS II.). reigned over Egypt, and the prophecy of Ezekiel has been hterally fulfilled, " There shall be no more a prince out of the land of Egypt" (Ezk.3O.13). When Joseph "took the young child and his mother by night and de- parted into Egypt" (Mt.2.14; cf. Lu.l.8o), the coimtry had ahready been for several years a province of the Roman empire. [On.] [e.n.] Egyptian, Eg-yptians. The word most commonly rendered Egyptians (nitfrayiin) is the name of the country, and might be so translated in many cases. The " Egyptian " of Ac. 21. 3 8 was a false prophet who, five years before, had led an attack of deluded Jews and hireling assassins (sicarii) upon Jerusalem, and had been suppressed by FeUx (Josephus, 20 Ant. viii. 6; 2 Wars xiii. 5; and Speaker's Cotnm. on Acts, I.e.). Bhi', head of one of the Benjamite houses, according to the list in Gen. 46. 21. He seems to be the same as Ahi-ram in the list in Num. 26.38, and if so, Ahiram is probably the right name, as the family were called Ahiramites. In iChr.8.1 the same person seems to be called Aharah, and perhaps also Aher in iChr.7.i2. Ehud' (strong). — 1. Son of Bilhan, a Ben- jamite (iChr.7. 10,8.6) ; see below. — 2. (Judg.3. i2ff.) It was probably after the inter-tribal war, when Benjamin wa? weak, that Eglon king of Moab, allied with Ammon and Amalek, seized Jericho and oppressed the Israelites (or some districts) for 18 years. Then Ehud the son of Gera, a left-handed Benjamite, was sent with a present (tribute). On returning Ehud left his followers at Gilgal by the quarries (terminal columns, perhaps those mentioned Jos. 4. 20). He stole back to Eglon, professing to have a secret. When the atten- dants had withdrawn from the summer-parlour (roof-chamber), Ehud said his message was from God. The king rose in reverence from his chair ; and Ehud drew the double-edged dagger, concealed by his clothes on the right thigh, and using his left hand stabbed the fat king with such violence that he could not with- draw the blade. He then went out, locking the doors, and escaped unnoticed, probably by the external staircase. It was some time before Eglon's servants dared to fetch the key. [Key.] Meantime, Ehud had gone through Gilgal to Seirath (R.V. Seirah) in mount Ephraim. There he raised the people to seize the fords. Ten thousand Moabites were slaughtered, and the land had rest. That the act was not avenged is natural. The power of Oriental kings is personal. Their deaths often lead to a disputed succession. Doubts have been cast on this narrative on the grounds that Gera (Gen. 46. 2 1 and iChr.8.3) andEhud (iChr. 7.10) are the names of Benjamite clans ; but even Budde allows that Ehud may have been a hero who gave his name to a clan. Josephus has embellished the story more suo. He fixes the assassination at Jericho. Sayce (Early Hist, of the Heb. 290) places it at Gilgal, which is consistent with the text. Moore suggests the other side of Jordan. His suggestion is not inconsistent with the text, and would account for the fact that Ehud was in time to intercept the Moabite garrison at Jericho. It is noteworthy that Ehud is styled deliverer, not judge, and no approval of his action is ex- pressed, [h.m.s.] E'kep, a descendant of Judah (iChr.2.27). Ek'pebel, a place named in Jth.7.i8 only with Chusi (probably Kuzah). It appears to be the village 'Aqrabeh, E. of Kuzah, from which the district of Acrabattine took its name. [Arbattis.] [c.r.c] Ekpon', one of the five cities of the Philis- tine lords, not conquered by Joshua (13. 3). It lay on the borders of Judah and Dan (15. ri, 45,46) : it was given to Dan (19. 43), but not conquered (LXX. Judg.l.i8), and it was held by PhiUstines in the time of Samuel (iSam.5. 10,6.16,7.14,17.52). It had a shrine of Baal- ZEBUB (lord of flies) or Baal-zebul (lord of the disk). It was still a Philistine town in 8th cent. B.C. (Am. 1.8), and about 610 e.g. (Zeph.2.4), with a king even in Jeremiah's time (J e. 25. 20), and after the Captivity (Zech. 9.5, 7). It is now the small village 'Aqir, 6 miles W. of Gezer, with a modern Jewish colony hard by. In 734 B.C. Tiglath-pileser III. took Ekron, but in 703 B.C. it revolted from Assyria, and gave up its king, Padi, to Hezekiah. Sennacherib took it the next year, and impaled the in- habitants outside the walls, setting up again Padi — whom Hezekiah surrendered — as a king faithful to Assyria. The name means " bare," and the village is on a low bare hill, with a well 238 EKRONITES to N. As Accaron (1Mac.lO.89) it is noticed as given by the king of Antioch to Jonathan the Hasmonaean c- i.^j b.c. [c.r.c] Ek'ponites (Jos. 13. 3 ; iSam.S.io), in- habitants of Ekron; in iSam.S.io the LXX. and Josephus read Ascalon. El, Eloah', Elohim', Elyon'. El {'el), the most primitive Semitic word for God (or a god) in the O.T. It appears in Mehujael, Methusael, Mahalaleel, before the Flood, in Bethel and Israt'/ in the latter part of Genesis, in Elisheba, Eliezer, and several names of leaders of the Exodus in Num.1, and comes down to the N.T. in Immanuel, the name of our Saviour in connexion with His Virgin Birth. It is found in O.T. with the definite article, the El, where the Supreme God, or the God of Israel, is meant. In a few places it is applied in Isaiah to an idol, but is very rare in the plur., and does not seem to be used of gods in a wider sense. It is joined with titles of deity, e.g. with Elyon {Most High), and specially with Shaddai {Almighty), and with attributes of Jhvh, as jealous, merciful, compassionate, faithful. But it is never used as Elohim is in O.T. narrative, but in discourse or personal relation, or in direct address to the Deity. The root of El suggests the idea of strong or strength. Eloah {'eloah), properlv the sing, of Elohim, but very seldom joined with Elohim, as though they were sing, and plur. Is.44.6, 8 shows both words: '"There is no Elohim beside Me. . . . Is there an Eloah beside Me ? . . . There is no Rock ; I know not any." Eloah and Elohim are held to be deri- vatives of El, but the precise sense is not known. Eloah occurs 41 times in the dialogue of Job, where every speaker except Bildad uses it, and appears in parallel with Shaddai 10 times. It is never found in Genesis or in the narrative of any book in O.T. Its Aramaic equivalent is Elah, or Elaha, in O.T. Elyon ('elyon), unlike the preceding words, is not a word for God, but a name or title of the Ueity. Grammatically it is an adjective, signifying higher or highest, and used, like Shaddai the Almighty, for the Most High ((iod). It first appears in Gen. 14, in connexion with Mclchize- dek, who was priest of El-Elyon, i.e. of God Most High. In this connexion Abraham joins it with Jhvh. It reappears as a patri- archal word in Balaam's prophecy, between El and Shaddai. Moses also uses it with Shaddai in Ps.91.i. In the historical portions of O.T. it is applied to common objects — the higher gate, the upper pool or chamber, etc. In Deuteronomv it is aiiplied prophetically to Israel, in the I'salter to David, apparently as a type of the Messiah (Ps.89.27), but otherwise only to the Most High. See Shaddai for further illustration of the patriarchal use of the three i)receding words. Elohim {'elohim) by derivation and nxeaning belongs to El and Eloah, vet by usage holds a place in O.T. which is absolutely unique : it is the only narrative word for God in O.T. Side by side with this stands another no less surprising but equally certain fact, that the only narrative Name 0/ Elohim (God) is JHVH. In the antediluvian portion of Genesis (1-11 inclusive) no word for God occurs except Elohim, and no name of (iod except JiivH. Only in the names .Mahalaleel, Mehujael, Methusael, do we see traces of El, EL AS, VALLEY OE the root word of Elohim. The last O.T. his- torical writer to whom any large influence in its composition is assigned is also the greatest purist. Ezra, in Chronicles and in the book which bears his name, does not even employ Adonai as a title of the Supreme Being. Elo- him in his Hebrew, Elaha in his Aramaic, and Jehovah for the name of God, are all that he admits. Even in Ps.ll9, which can hardly be assigned to any one else, he uses Jhvh 24 times, and Elohim but once (ver. 115). Elo- him as a plur. is used of gods in general, or persons who are God's ministers of justice and rule to men (" I said. Ye are gods," explains this), but far more frequently (quite 12 times as often as any other term) for god in O.T. Elohim stands as a plur. of distinction {pluralis excellentiae) with sing, verbs, adjectives, and pronouns. The narrative use of Elohim is most easily observed in Job and the Abrahamic portion of Genesis. In the narrative of Job, the word for deity is Elohim, and the name of the Deity is Jhvh. In the dialogue Elo- him and Jehovah occur often enough to show that the speakers were acquainted with them. But the terms in common use among Job and his friends, including Elihu, are El, E!loah, and Shaddai. Even Jhvh, answering Job i)ut of the whirlwind, conforms to this use. And in Genesis the same facts are apparent. The narrator keeps to Elohim and Jhvh. The speakers throughout the story make use of El, Elyon (not Eloah, which occurs but twice in the Pentateuch : in Dcut.32), and are ac- quainted with Elohim, Adonai, Jhvh, and of course with El-Shaddai, but come by slow degrees to the use of Elohim, and never become familiar with Jhvh. The only determined Elohist in (iencsis is Joseph, who — though his own name (spelt Jehoseph in Ps.82) is sugges- tive of Jhvh (see Gen.3O.24) — never names J HVH, but only Elohim. In the face of these facts, is it possible to divide the sacred narrative between writers who are either Je- hovists or Elohists, but not both ? TheO.T., as it stands, has one word for God, Elohim, in the narrati\-c, from first to last. In the narra- tive this Elohim has one name, Jhvh; ex- cepting that in iK.S.io, 2K.7.6, and Dan. 1.2. He is called Adonai, which He always is by the Jews in reading the O.T., unless the word .\donai precedes, and then they say Elohim. No such writer as an Adonaist having yet been suggested, these three passages do not affect the question. TheO.T. narrative, as we have it, is J HVH-lvlohistic from first to last. [c.H.w.] E'ia (il':sd.9.27) = Elam, 4. Eladah', a descendant of Ephraim (iChr. 7.20). Elah' 1. The fifth duke of Edom (Gen. 36.41 ; iClir.1.52). — 2. The father of Shimei, 4 (I K. 4.18). — 3. Sou and successor of Baasha, king of Israel ( i K.I6.6-10) ; his reign lasted for little more than a year {cf. ver. 8 with 10). He was killed, while drunk, by Ziinri, in the house of his steward .-^rza, who was probably a confederate in the I'lot. — 4. F'ather of Hoshe.i, tiie last king of Israel (2 K. 15. 30, 17.1 ). — 5. rhesca)nd S(mof Caleb (iChr.4.i5)- — 3. .A Benjamite, son of Uzzi, dw(!lling in Jerusalem in th'man) who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lb.26). Eliahba', a Shaaleonite, one of the Thirty of David's guard (2Sam.23.32; iChr. 11-33)- Ellakim' (whom God sets up). — 1. Son of Hilkiah ; master of Hezekiah's household ("over the house," as Is.36.3), 2K.I8. 18,37. He succeeded Sheona in this office, with the warm approval of Isaiah (Is. 22.15-23). Its important character is indicated through its tenure by Jotham, when heir-apparent (2K. 15.5), cf. major domus under the Merovingian dynasty. Eliakim was a good man, as is shown by his conduct on the occasion of Sennacherib's invasion (18.37,19.1-5), and in the discharge of the duties of his high position (Is. 22.21). But it is certain from the descrip- tion of the office in Is. 22, and especially from ver. 22, that it was the king's house, and not (as the LXX. and Jerome) the House of God, of which Eliakim was prefect. — 2. The original name of Jehoiakim king of Judah (2K. 23.34; 2Chr.36.4). — 3. A priest in the days of Nehe- miah, who assisted at the dedication of the new wall of Jerusalem (Ne.i2.41). — 4, 5. Ancestors of Christ (Mt.1.13 ; Lu.3.30). [a.w.s.] Eli'ali (iEsd.9.34) = BiNNUi, 3. Eliam'. — 1. Father of Bathsheba, the wife of David (2Sam.ll.3). In iChr.3.5 the names of father and daughter appear as Am- miel and Bathshua. Probably the same as-^ 16 242 ElilAONlAS 2. Son of Ahithophel the Gilonite ; one of David's heroes (2Sam.23.34). Eliaonias (iEsd.8.31) = Elihoenai. Eli'as, the ionn of the name Elijah in A.V. of N.T. and in Ecclus.48.iff., iMac.2.58. In Ro.11.2 the reference is not to the prophet, but to the portion of Scripture referring to him, the words being " in Elias," not as in A.V. " of Elias." Eliasaph'. — 1. Son of Deuel, and the Dauite chief at the census in the wilderness of Sinai (Num. 1.14,2.14, 7. 42, 47,10.20). — 2. Son of Lael ; a Levite, and " chief of the house of the father of the Gershonites " at the same time (Num. 3. 24). Kliashib'. — 1. A priest in the time of David, the eleventh of the " governors " of the sanctuary (iChr.24.i2). — 2. A son of Elioenai ; one of the latest-named descendants of the royal family of Judah (3.24). — 3. High- priest at J erusalem at the time of the rebuilding of the walls (Ne.3.i, etc.). His genealogy is given in 12.ioff. He was "allied" (Heb. near) to Tobiah the Ammonite, and is doubt- less the same as the Eliashib of Ezr.10.6. — 4. A singer who had married a foreign wife (Ezr. 10.24), as had also — 5. A "son" of Zattu (IO.27), and — 8. A " son " of Bani (IO.36). Kli'asis (iEsd.9.34), perhaps identical with Eliasuu! (Ezr. 10.36). Kliathah', son of Heman ; a musician in the temple in the time of king David, who with his sons and brethren had the 2otli division of the temple service (iChr.25.4,27). Klidad', son of Chislon, and prince of Benjamin, chosen to assist in the division of the land of Canaan (Num.34.2i). Eliel'. — 1. A chief of the half-tribe of Manasseh on the E. of Jordan (iChr.5.24). — 2. Son of Toah ; a forefather of Heman the singer (6.34); possibly the same as Eliab in ver. 27 and as Elihu (iSam.l.i). — 3. One of the Bene-Shimhi ; a Benjamite chief (iChr.8. 20). — 4. Also a Benjamite, but of the sons of Shashak (8.22).— 5, 6. "The Mahavite " and another ; heroes of David's guard in the e.xteuded list of 11.46,47. — 7. One of the Gadite heroes who came across Jordan to David when he was hiding from Saul in the wilderness of Judah (12. 11). — 8. A Koha- thite Levite who assisted in bringing the ark from the house of Obed-edom to Jeru- salem (15.9,11 ). — 9. A Levite in the time of Hezekiah ; one of those in charge of the temple offerings (2Chr.3i.13). Eliena'i. Of the Bene-Shimhi ; a de- scendant of Benjamin (iChr.8.20). Elie'zer (God is help). — 1. Abraham's chief servant, called by him " Elliezer of naniascus" (Gen. 15. 2, A. V. ; see K.V'.). The phrase in vcr. 3 sIkjuUI be "son of my house," which merely imjjorts that he was one of Abraham's household. For ver. 2, where K.V. shirks the difficulty, see Damascus. It is i^robably Eliezer who is described in (ien.24.2. — 2. Second son of Moses and Zip- porah, so named by his father, "because, said he, the (iod of my father was my help, that delivered me from the sword of I'haraoh " (Ex. 18. 4 ; iChr.23.15,17). He remained with his mother and brother (iersliom, in the care of Jethro his grandfather, when Moses returned ELIJAH to Egypt (Ex. 4.18), she having been sent back to her father by Moses (18. 2), though she had gone part of the way with him. — 3. One of the sons of Becher, son of Benjamin (iChr.7.8). — 4. A priest in the reign of David (15. 24). — 5. Son of Zichri, ruler of the Reubeaites in the reign of David (27. 16). — 6. Son of Dodavah, of Mareshah in Judah (2Chr.2O.37), a prophet, who denounced Je- hoshaphat's alliance with Ahaziah. — 7. .\ chief Israelite — a "man of understanding" — whom Ezra sent with others from .A.hava to Casiphia, to induce some Levites and Nethiium to accom- pany him to Jerusalem (Ezr. 8. 16). — 8, 9, 10. A priest, a Levite, and an Israelite of the sons of Harim, who had married foreign wives (10. 18,23,31). — 11. Son of Jorim, in the genealogy of Christ (Lu.3.29). Elihoena'l, son of Zerahiah, of the sons of Pahath-moab, who with 200 men returned from the Captivity with Ezra (Ezr. 8. 4). Eliho'peph, son of Shisha, and one of Solomon's scribes (iK.4.3). Elihu'. — 1. One of the interlocutors of Job ; described as the " son of Barachel the Buzite, of the kindred of Ram" (Job 32.2,6). [Buzite.] — 2. An ancestor of Samuel called Eliab in iChr.6.27 and Eliel in 6.34. — 3. " One of the brethren of David" mentioned as the ruler of Judah (27.18) ; called Eliab in iSam.16.6.— 4. One of the captains of the thousands of Manasseh who joined David at Ziklag (iChr. 12.20). — 5. A Korahite Levite in the time of David ; one of the doorkeepers of the house of Jehovah. He was a son of Shemaiah, and of the family of Obed-edom (26.7). [h.c.b.] Elijah. — 1. The Tishbits, " one of the sojourners of (iilead " (iK.17.i), makes an abrupt appearance in Israelitish history in the reign of Ahab. Nothing is told of his an- cestry or previous history, though he may have been one of the refugees from the perse- cutions of Jezebel (18. 4). He was "a man subject to like passions as we are " (Jas.5.17), the chief feature of his ])ersonal appearance being his hair, which flowed, like a Nazirite's, down his back and betokened, as Samson's did, great personal strength. He was capable of long fasts (iK.19.8), of living on the most scanty food (17.6, 16), of sleeping on the hard ground (19.5), was fond of the moun- tains (18.19,19.8; 2K.2.16), and could run a distance of 16 miles in front of the royal chariot (i K. 18. 42-46). There is a pathetic sense of loneliness in his earlier life (18.22,19.10,14), though later In; has the devoted companion- shi]) of i;iisha (19.21; 2 K. 3. 11.2.2,4,6), and is a familiar figure in the schools of the pro- phets at Bethel and Jericho (2.3,5,15). He wore the ordinary articles of dress — viz. girded under-robe, and overall or mantle (2K.I.8, 2.14; iK. 19. 13, 19), which has supplied one of our most familiar figures of speech. But the characteristic which most impressed his countrymen what that he was " a man of (iod " (i K. 17. 18,24 ; 2K. 1.9-13) whom the Spirit of God would protect from harm (iK. 18.12 ; 2K.2.16), and who was able to prevail in jtrayer with "the Lord" (I K. 17. 22. 18. 37). in Whose jiresence he claimed to stand (17. 1. 18. 1 5). Indeed, devotion to the Lord was the master-passion of his life (18.36,18.10, ELIJAH 14), as is betokened by his name {^= Jehovah is my God), which was at once a creed and a battle cry, and recognized as such (17. 12,20,18.10). For the religious condition of Israel was one which called for vigorous protest. Ahab had been driven, in order to settle himself on his precarious throne, to make a political marriage with Jezebel, daughter of Ethbaal king of the Zidonians (16. 31), who being himself a usurper had less compunction about deserting the traditional alliance be- tween Tyre and Jerusalem ; and the repeti- tion of the phrase about Ahab, "which did sell himself to do that which was evil" (21.20,25), suggests that commercial interests were solidi- fied by the match between Samaria and Zidon. To Ethbaal, whose dominions could not produce food supplies for the inhabitants, ELIJAH 243 (Ecclus.48.i). He presented himself before Ahab ( I K. 17.1 )andannounced that Ahab's pros- titution of religion to politics would be severely punished ; the Lord, the God of Israel, would vindicate Himself against the rival intruded upon His people for their worship ; the com- mercial gains expected to accrue to Phoenicia would be precluded by a prolonged drought ; and Jezebel's own relations would suffer by famine in punishment for the sufferings she had brought and inflicted upon Israel. Naturally he had to fly (17. 3), and every means possible was taken by Ahab to secure the capture of " the troubler of Israel " (18. 10, 17). At first he hid by the brook Cherith, directed thither by God and having the assur- ance that He Who made provision for the ravens (Job 88.41 ; Ps.147.9 ; Lu.i2.24) would CARMF.L, PLACE OK ELIJAH'S SACRIFICE. (From an original sketch by Col. Conder.) it brought the opportunity of drawing upon the rich cornlands of Esdraelon (iK.5.9,11 ; Ezk. 27.17; Ezr.3.7; Ac.12.20). To Ahab it meant the gradual subversion of the old system of land tenure and administration (iK. 20. 15, 21. 3, 8,22.26), which was connected with the belief that Jehovah, the God of Israel, had given His people their land ; and though Ahab's children all had names compounded with Jehovah (Joash, iK. 22.26; Ahaziah, 22.40; Jehoram, 2K.3.1; Athaliah, 8.26), Ahab al- lowed Jezebel great liberty in the worship of her Phoenician deities and aided her in promot- ing it (iK.16.31-33,18.19 ; 2K.3.2,10.2i). A spirit of tyranny ( i K.21.7) and persecution (18. 4,19.10,14) was abroad, and as a result "the children of Israel had forsaken the covenant of Jehovah " (19. 10) and were " halting between two opinions" (18. 21). Drastic measures were necessary. " Then stood up Elias as a fire and his word burned as a lamp " provide for His servant through them (iK. 17.4). When the brook dried up, he was sent to a place in which he was least likely to be suspected of hiding, as it was in Jezebel's own country. [Zarephath.] Elijah's residence there is referred to by our Lord as a proof of God's loving watchfulness over those out- side His covenant, and of His purpose to make such persons co-operate in the further- ance of His designs (Lu.4.26). Two miracles were performed here : the continual supply of food for the day (iK.17.i6, cf. Ex.l6.i8), and the restoration of the widow's son to life, an instance of chastisement awakening peni- tence (iK.17.i8) and of Elijah's sympathy and power in prayer (Jas.5.16,17). In the third year after this incident (1K.I8.1), when the drought had now lasted 3 years and 6 months (Lu.4.25 ; Jas.5.i7) and cattle were perishing for want of pasture and bread and water had become great luxuries, Elijah met ^44 ELIJAH Obadiah, who had been deputed by Ahab to search in one direction through the land for water, while he went in the other, and told him to summon his master. The king came, and arrangements were at once made for a general meeting of the Baal prophets with Elijah at Mount Carmel. Possibly Elijah had divine authority for suggesting the ordeal ; possibly Ahab felt he would like the question settled ; at any rate, the scheme seems to have been long planned. Carmel had been a " high place " with an altar of Jehovah such as Jezebel had caused to be thrown down (iK. 18. 30, 19. 10, 14). This altar Elijah repairs with an action symbolical of his purpose to demonstrate the unity of the covenant people : he "took twelve stones, according to the number of the tribes of the sons of Jacob, unto whom the word of Jehovah came, saying, Israel shall be thy name " (18-31), and from the perennial spring under the mountain was able, in spite of the drought, to get twelve barrels of water with which the altar and sacrifice were thoroughly drenched and surrounded. Then, with a third demonstration of the imity of the two realms, he prayed to Jehovah " at the time of the offering of the evening oblation," i.e. in the temple at Jerusalem (18. 36), and the fire of the Lord fell, consuming sacrifice, wood, stones, and all the water. The people accepted the result of the ordeal, and Elijah commanded a general mas- sacre of the priests of Baal at Kishon (18. 40). The honour of Jehovah thus vindicated, signs of approaching rain are vouchsafed to Elijah's messenger, and the prophet, having an- nounced it to Ahab, runs before the king's chariot the 16 miles to J ezreel. Reaction was inevitable after this physical and spiritual strain, and when word came to him of Jeze- bel's determination to get rid of him, he fled to Beer-sheba with his servant ; and leaving him there, went on alone a day's journey into the wilderness, and resting under a desert broom requests to be allowed to die (I9.4). He was first answered by having his body refreshed with meals provided miraculously (19. 5-8); then, having made his way to Horeb and lodged there in the pilgrim's cave, his stormy mind was calmed by the spectacle of nature's power and beauty, and he was brought to a sense of his responsibility for life, by being made to do that which he had so often claimed to do, viz. " stand before the Lord " (19.i i ) and account for his presence there (19. 13). He states his case, and then is bidden to return, with the assurance that Ahab's dynasty shall soon come to an end, and that his work will be taken up and continued by one whose birth pledged him to maintain the divine system of land tenure, and who had been named, perhaps through the consciousness of idolatrous oppression, " God is salvation " — l'-lislia. Elijah therefore returned N. and found Elisha at .\bel-meholah. He had only to cast his mantle on Elisha's shoulder, and the young man followed him, never to leave him again. From Abel-meholah Elijahwent tojezreel with a fresh denunciation of Ahab for a fresh sin. The king had wished to acquire some property from Naboth, but was refused, and, apparently while Elijah had been in the S., Jezebel deter- mined to maintain her position in the kingdom ELIJA]^ by compassing a judicial murder. On a false charge of blasphemy Naboth and his sons were put to death and their property forfeited to the crown (iK.21.i6). Ahab went down to visit the newly acquired estate, accompanied by Jehu and Bidkar (2K.9.25), but was met there by Elijah, whose terrible denunciation sank into the king's heart : his repentance was so sincere that he put on sackcloth and fasted and went bare-foot, keeping every anniversary of Naboth's death with signs of mourning (I K. 21. 27, cf. LXX.). Three other incidents only are recorded in the life of Elijah, (i) His letter to "the son-in-law of Ahab, who sat on the throne as king for some years during the life of his father Jehoshaphat (2Chr.2i.12). (2) His warning to Ahab's son of his certain death of the disease about which he consulted Baal-zebub, god of Ekron (2K.I.4), and the consequent destruction of two successive captains of 50, with their men, who had been sent to apprehend him ; at the arrival of the third company he was directed to go to speak directly to Ahaziah without fear, and therefore went down from Carmel to Samaria (vv. 9,15). It was this incident which inspired the emula- tion of the "sons of thunder," and elicited a rebuke from our Lord (Lu. 9. 51-56). (3) His translation. Starting from Gilgal, where was a school of the prophets (2K.4.38), he came down to Bethel and thence to Jericho, at each place begging Elisha to come no farther, his impending removal from earth being a matter of general knowledge (2K.2.3,5), but Elisha refused ; and when asked by Elijah what he should do for him before he was taken away, simply requested the elder son's portion of his spirit, and to be able to reproduce in his day what Elijah had been to his generation. Elijah's answer was that it would all depend on the training Elisha had given to his spiritual vision, and as that condition had been complied with, Elisha saw the chariot and horses of fire which were the manifestation of Jehovah's presence {cf. Job38.i ; Ezk.l.4) before Elijah " went up," not in the chariot, but by a whirlwind, into heaven (2K.2.11 ; cf. Judg.20.40). The word "went up" carries the thought forward to the Ascension of our Lord, where the word " taken up " is used by one of the two men (.\c.l.io,ii) who dismissed the apostles, and who probably were Moses and Elijah, as they on the mount of Transfiguration had spoken of the exodus which w.is to be accomplished at Jerusalem (Lu.9.31). The announcement of our Lord's future return is an office assigned to Elijah in theO.T. (Mai. 4.5), and by the Jewish tradition, which enacts a pause in the celebration of the Passover for the appearance of Elijah {cf. Mt.27.47 ; Mk.15.35) to announce the coming of Messiah. The fulfilment of the type of Elijah by the foreruimer John Baptist was only partial, as was indicated by our Lord Himself after the Transfiguration in the words " Ivlias truly shall come and restore all things " (Mt.17.li). No prophet is mentioned so often in N.T. as he (Jn.l.25 ; cf. Mt.17.3 ; Mk.9.4 ; Lu.9.30). He has been canonized both in the Gk. and Lat. Churches, his festival being July 20, and he is revered in the Lat. Church as founder of the " Order of Barefooted ElilKA Carmelites." Milligan, "Elijah" in Men of the B. — 2. A priest of the sons of Harim, who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.21). [c.r.d.b.1 Elika', a Harodite, one of the Thirty of David's guard (2Sam.23.25). Elim' (Ex. 15. 27 ; Num.33. 9), the second station where the IsraeUtes encamped after crossing the Red Sea. It is distinguished as having had "twelve wells [springs] of water, and threescore and ten palm-trees." Supposing Israel to have camped at 'Ayiin Miisa after crossing the Red Sea (Robinson, Bib. Res. i. p. 67), and taking 10 miles as the average daily march (which fits the distances between all the known sites on their road), Marah would be 'Ain Hawdrah, and Elim at Wddy Ghiiriindel where there is still a brook with stunted palms. [Exodus, The.] [c.r.c] Elitne'lech, a man of the tribe of Judah, and of the family of the Hezronites, who dwelt in Bethlehem-ephratah in the days of the J udges. In consequence of a great dearth in the land he went with his wife Naomi, and his two sons, Mahlon and Chilion, to dwell in Moab, where he and his sons died without posterity (Ru.l.2,3, etc.). Elioena'l. — 1. Eldest son of Neariah, the son of Shemaiah (iChr.3.23,24). — 2. Head of a family of the Simeonites (4.36). — 3. Head of one of the families of the sons of Becher son of Ben- jamin (7.8).— 4. Seventh son of Meshelemiah, son of Kore of the sons of Asaph, a Korahite Levite, and one of the doorkeepers of the "house of Jehovah" (26.3). — 5. Apriest of the sons of Pashur who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.10.22). Possibly the same as — 6. One of the priests who accompanied Nehemiah with trumpets at the dedication of the wall of Jeru- salem (Ne. 12.41). — 7. An Israelite, of the sons of Zattu, who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.10.27). Elio'nas — 1. (iEsd.9.22) = Elioenai, 5. — 2. (iEsd.9.32) = Eliezer, 10. Eliphal', son of Ur (1Chr.ll.35) = Eliphelet, 3. Eliphal'at (iEsd.9.33) = Eliphelet, 6. Eliphalet — 1. [Eliphelet, 2.] — 2. (i Esd.8.39) = Eliphelet, 5. Eliphaz'. — 1. The eldest son of Esau and Adah, and father of Teman (Gen. 86.4, 15 ; iChr. 1.35,36). — 2. The chief of the " three friends " of Job. He is called "the Temanite" ; hence probably he was an inhabitant of Teman. On him falls the main burden of the argument, that God's retribution in this world is perfect and certain, and that consequently suffering must be a proof of previous sin (Job 4,5,15,22). The great truth brought out by him is the unap- proachable majesty and purity of God (4. 12-21, 15.12-16). [Teman ; Job.] Elipheleh', a Merarite Levite ; one of the gate-keepers appointed by David to play on the harp " on the Sheminith " when the ark was brought to Jerusalem (iChr.l5.i8,2i). Eliphelet. — 1. One of the sons of David, born after his establishment in Jerusalem (i Chr.3.6), but omitted in the longer list of 2Sam. 5.15,16, and in iChr.14.5 given as Elpalet. —2. Another son of David, the last of the Jeru- salemfamily(iChr.3.8;c/. 2Sam.5.i6,iChr.l4.7, where the vowel is lengthened and the name given as Eliphalet). — 3- Soa of Abasbai, son ELISHA 245 of the Maachathite. One of the Thirty of David's guard (2Sam. 23.34). — 4. Son of Eshek, a descendant of king Saul through Jonathan (iChr.8.39). — 5. A leader of the Bene-Adoni- kam, who returned from Babylon with Ezra (Ezr.8.13). — 8. One of the Bene-Hashum who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.33). Elisabeth, wife of Zach arias and mother of the Baptist. The name is the same as Elisheba (Ex. 6.23 ; cf. Jehosheba), and, as borne by the wife of Aaron, would be tradi- tional in priestly families. Lu.l.73 may allude to its meaning, " God is an oath," i.e. " One to swear by " (Gesenius). [e.r.b.] Elise'us, the form of the name Elisha in A.V. of Ecclus.48.i2 and Lu.4.27. Elisha, the son of Shaphat of Abel-meholah, designated to Elijah at Horeb as his successor. The meeting between them was that of a hero- worshipper with his hero. The news of Elijah's ordeal and victory on Mount Carmel must have run through the northern kingdom and stimu- lated the endurance of those 7,000, such as Shaphat and his son, who " had not bowed the knee to Baal" (19.i8). At any rate, Elijah had only to cast his mantle on Elisha's shoulder and the younger man was ready to follow him. He just made a farewell to the people of his village, using for the feast the oxen with which he had been found ploughing, and then left his home, to cast in his lot with his hero. No duty that he could perform for Elijah was undone ; years after he was known to the court as the man who had thrown away chances of advancement elsewhere to be the menial at- tendant on a dervish (" Elisha, which poured water on the hands of Elijah," 2K.3.11), and a fierce hatred of the house of Omri blazed in him (3.14,6.32). So, when the time for Elijah's translation came, though his master begged him to remain behind, he would not : he had counted the cost, he knew he had to take his master's place, and he would remain to the last with him, only asking that he might, in his day, be something like what Elijah had been, showing his spiritual lineage by his inheritance (2.10). His cry as Elijah went up in the whirlwind shows what the prophet had been to him — a constant sacrament of the divine presence and protection : " My father, my father, the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof" (2K.2.12 ; cf. Deut.l7.i6, Ps.l47. 10,11). He could not but show the ordinary signs of mourning ; then " he took up Elijah's mantle that fell from him," assured himself that he had powers similar to his master's (2K. 2.14) and received the recognition of them from others (2.15), and then made his way back to the place where his master had twice called down fire from heaven, to build himself up there in communion with God amid consecrated memories (2.25). There, if the modern legend of the cave still shown at Haifa as " Elisha's school" be true (see Surv. W. Pal. i. p. 285), he taught others to walk in his master's footsteps ; there he made his abode (4.25 ; cf. 1.9). It is very difficult to form any exact chronology of the events in Elisha's life, because the chapters which are concerned with it are confused ia arrangement by the operation of that rule of the Heb. historians to roimd off one incident before proceeding 246 ELISHA with another, which is so vividly ilhistrated in Lu.t.8o,2.6. In 2K.13 the incidents in vv. 14- 21 must ct)nic between vv. 12 and 13. and 8. 1-7 should probably come in between 4.37,38. Yet from the mention of Benhadad (6.24) and Hazael (8.28,9.14) we gather that all the public ministry of Elisha recorded for us falls within the 12 years of Jehoram, "who wrought evil, but not like his father or mother" (3. 1,2). Though Jezebel's influence went against him (9.22), Jehoram called Elisha '"father" (6. 21 ; cf. 5.13), and was tolerated until in his despair at the extremity of famine in Samaria through the war with Syria he planned Elisha's assassination (6.31) and until his sister's influence in Judah was seen to be baneful (2Chr.22.4). Then the doom of the house of Omri fell. Three incidents after Elijah's as- cension manifested Elisha's powers before he went into retreat on Mount Carmel. (i) A sensi- tive man might not have yielded the point about sending to look for Elijah's remains, but he gave up his own will (2K.2.17). (2) He not only tarried at Jericho, but brought to its inhabitants blessings; by casting salt into the spring, he showed how sin must be arrested at its source (2.22). (3) He showed that he could be as severe as his master, and that God would support him in his severity when " a set of boys " from the ill-famed city of Bethel made God's exaltation of the long- haired prophet a cause of mockery to him with his close-cropped locks (2.24). His fame spread to the southern kingdom. No sooner is he brought to the notice of Jehosha- phat than that monarch owns "the word of the Lord is with him " (8.12) ; and his disciple- ship has its due reward when the three kings go down to consult Elijah's servant. He shows what he had learnt from his master in using e.xternal influence to calm his perturbed spirit (3.15 : cf. iK.19.ii) and in making arrangements for the divine intervention to synchronize with the offering of the covenant worship in the covenant centre at Jerusalem (2K.3.20). After this, apparently he made his home in Samaria trying to influence Jehoram for good (5.3 ; cf. 8.4.6.21,30). Yet this recognition by royalty did not harden him. Poverty meets him, and is relieved with tact and sufficiency (4.7) ; at the next turn he enjoys the generous hospitality of the wealthy farmer (4.8). His very bearing causes him to be known as — like Elijah — a " man of (iod " (4.9), the phrase being used of him 20 times ; and he not only ])romises his hostess a son, but restores the child to life when dead. It is in this story that we first meet Gehazi, whose qualification for being with Elisha is shown by his insight (4.14). but who seems to have l)een spoilt by such early success. Treated with confidence, he shows himself able to obey a strict command (4.29,31a), yet with apparent expectation of jiowers not yet com- nutted tr) him (4.31/)). He might have learned to trust Elisha when h<; rais(!(l the child to life and when lat(;r at (iilgal he healed the ])ottagc (4.38-4 I ). but his (piestion about the food shows that he would not credit his master's powers (4.43) and that he was indulging the spirit whicii destroys religion (l'h.2. 14). I-'or 7 years, while there was famine in the laud, Elisha bore ElilSHA with him and tried to help him, and he was proud of his association with the prophet (2K.8.4); but his character developed in insensibility to divine things, and his conduct to Naaman (5. 20) shows him as avaricious and deceitful. The leprosy which covered him without was the manifestation of his spiritual corruption within (5.27). •'^11 the remaining stories of Elisha illus- trate his insight. Naaman gets sternness or sympathy as each is needed (5.11,19); Ge- hazi ct)uld not deceive him (" went not mine heart with thee?" 5.26); Jehoram is warned of Benhadad's secret counsels (6.12). Taught perhaps by his failure with Gehazi, he prays for the gift of spiritual illumination for his new servant, and it is granted (6.17). His tactful treatment of the Syrian captives secures peace for Israel (6.22,23), and he foretells plenty as he had previously foretold famine (6.31). Then comes the duty of shutting the door on the king (6.32), and the end of his public ministry. He went himself to Damascus and told Hazael he was to be king (8.13), and sent one of the sons of the prophets to anoint Jehu (9.i). Then he is not mentioned for more than 40 years, during which he has to watch the terrible disapjpoint- ment in Jehu, who kept up calf-worship (10. 31), and the fearful havoc made by Athaliah in the southern kingdom (11. i). He saw the fulfilment of his own words to Hazael (8.12), who during the reign of Jehu overran all the territory E. of Jordan (10. 33), pursued his conquests in the reign of Jehu's son till he made the Israelites "like dust by threshing" (13. 7), and then proceeded S. to capture Gath and attack Jerusalem, but retired on receiv- ing tribute (12.17,18). Meanwhile the .Assyrian power was rising, and in it " the Lord gave Israel a saviour " (13.5), because while the .\ssyrians attacked Hazael's dynasty from the N., from the S. of Syria the house of Jehu was able to recover its dominions (13. 25). It is when this gleam of hope is rising on the northern kingdom that we hear for the last time of Elisha. .\s he lies on his deathbed, king Joash visits him. and owns that he had been to Israel in his day what Elijah had formerly been (" chariot and horsemen," 13. 14 ; cf. 2.12). Elisha tries to teach the king the lesson of depending on God while independent of man, but Joash, when bidden to shoot, has not the imagination to see his foes at his feet and to shoot at them till the voice that bade him smite called him to stav. .Self-consciousness, a weak dependence on others, an eye askance to see how far he may go, a feebleness within the mind, are the king's, and no power of living by the strength of individual heroism and individual devotion. His life was tested, and the drama of it fore-written from that scene of rehearsal. So Ivlisha passed away. But even after his death spiritual vigour was in his poor remains, and a dead man dropped in hasty burial into his tomb received life back from his contact with I-;iish;i's bones — as to-day some victim of impure s(!lf-indulgence (the special sin of Moab) may be converted by reading stray pagesof asaint's life (2K.I3.21). Thereisonly one reference in N.T. to lilisha (Lu.4.27). and that iu)t to his typical anticipation of the i loving work of the Son of Man " Who went ELISHAH ELOI,ELOI,LAMASABACHTHANI 247 about doing good " (Ac.lO.38) which later ages have loved to trace. Alexander in Oxford Lent Sermons, 1869 ; Maurice, Prophets and Kings ; Newman, Sermons on Subjects of the Day : " Elisha, a Type of Christ " ; Is. Williams, O.T. Characters. [ c.r.d.b.] Elishah' ("son of Javan" ; Gen.lO.4; Ezk. 27.7), mentioned as an Ionian country, with Tarshish (Tarsils), Kittim [see Cyprus], and DoDANiM (perhaps Rhodes). About 600 B.C. the "isles [or, shores] of Elishah" provided blue and purple for Tyre. Josephus under- stands that the Eliseans were Aeolians {i Ant. vi. i), on the Ionian shore E. of the Aegean Sea. The Talmud of Jerusalem (Megilla, i. 11) and the Midrash and Targums read Elis or Eolis. The Amarna letters include 10 from Alasia — probably Elishah — which, in 15th cent, e.g., had a Semitic population ruled by a king, who sent copper to Egypt in ships, and possessed gold, chariots, and art objects. This king states (Brit. Mus. 5) that he was not familiar with the kings of the Hittites or of Shinar; and he was also an enemy of the Lukki (Berlin 11) who were either Lycians or Ligyes, but most probably the former, which would place Elishah on W. shores of Asia Minor. [c.R.c] Blisha'ma. — 1. Son of Ammihud, the lead- er of Ephraim in the wilderness of Sinai (Num. 1.10,2.18,7.48,53,10.22), and grandfather to Joshua (iChr.7.26). — 2. A son of king David, born after his establishment in J erusalem(2Sam. 5.16 ; iChr.3.8,14.7). — 3. Another son of David (iChr.3.6), called in the other lists Elishua. — 4. Son of Jekamiah ; a descendant of Judah (2.41), possibly the same as — 5. Father of Nethaniah and grandfather of the traitor Ishmael (2K.25.25 ; Je.41.i). — 6. Scribe to king Jehoiakim (Je.36.i2ff.). — 7. A priest sent bv Jehoshaphat to teach the law to the people of Judah (2Chr.l7'.8). Elisha'phat, son of Zichri ; one of the conspirators with Jehoiada (.2Chr.23.i). Elishe'ba, wife of Aaron (Ex. 6. 23), daughter of Amminadab, and sister of Nahshon. Klishu'a (2Sam.5.i5 ; iChr.14.5) = Eli- shama, 3. Eli'simus (iEsd.9.28) = Eliashib, 3. Bli'u, a forefather of Judith (Jth.8.1). Briud, son of Achim in the genealogy of Christ (Mt.1.15). Elizaphan'. — 1. A Kohathite Levite chief, son of Uzziel, at the census in the wilderness of Sinai (Num. 3. 30) ; his family is mentioned later in iChr.15.8 ; 2Chr.29.13. — 2. Son of Parnach ; prince of Zebulun at the division of the land (Num. 34.25). Elizup', son of Shedeur ; leader of Reuben at the census in the wilderness (Num. 1.5,2.10, 7.30,3540.18). Elkanah'. — 1. One of the three sons (Ex.6. 24 ; or, according to iChr.6.22,23, a grandson) of Korah. — 2. Another Kohathite Levite, the son of J eroham, and father of Samuel. All that is known of him is contained in iChr.6.27,33, 34 and iSam.l.i-23,2.20. — 3. The father of Zuph or Zophai (iChr.6.26,35). — 4. A Levite (9. 16). — 5. A Korhite who joined David at Ziklag (12.1,6). Possibly the same as — 8. A doorkeeper for the ark (15. 23). — 7. A courtier in the reign of Ahaz "that was next to the king"; slain by Zichri the Ephraimite, when Pekah invaded Judah (2Chr.28.6,7). [h.c.b.] Elkosh', the birthplace of the prophet Nahum, " the Elkoshite " (Na.l.i). Two wide- ly differing Jewish traditions assign as widely different locaUties to this place. In the time of Jerome it was identified with a small village of Galilee. But mediaeval tradition attached the fame of the prophet's burial-place to Alkush, a village on E. bank of the Tigris about 2 miles N. of Mosul. The prophecv men- tions Bashan.Carmel, Lebanon (t. 4), and Thebes in Egypt (3.8; A-V. No), but is mainly con- cerned with Assyria. [Capernaum.] [c.r.c] Ellasar', the city of Arioch (Gen.l4.i), seems to be the old Babylonian town called Larsa in Semitic Babylonian and Ararma in Sumerian. Larsa was situated in Lower Babylonia or Chaldea, about midway between Ur (Muqeir) and Erech [Warka], on the left bank of the Euphrates. It is now Senqdrah. Among its rulers may be mentioned Rim-Anu, Sin-idinna, Eri-Aku (Arioch), and Rim-Sin, who was defeated by Hammurabi (Amraphel) and Samsu-iluna, his" son. [t.g.p.] Elm (H0.4.13; R.V. terebinth). [Oak.] Elmo'dam, son of Er in the genealogy of Joseph (Lu.3.28). Elna'am, the father of Jeribai and Josha- viah, 2 of David'sguard, accordingtorChr.il. 46. Elnathan'. — 1. The maternal grandfather of Jehoiachin, distinguished as " Elnathan of Jerusalem " (2K.24.8), possibly identical with Elnathan, son of Achbor (Je. 26. 22, 36. 12, 25). — 2. Thenameof three "learned [or, chief] men" (Ezr.8.i6) ; in iEsd.8.44 they are represented by two names only, Alnathan and Eunatan. Eloah, Elohim. [El ; Jehovah.] Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani, 'HXet (eXwi) riXei Xe/na aafBaxSai'ei. (i) Linguistic. These words are given (Mt.27.46 ; Mk.i5.34) as the actual sentence spoken by Christ on the cross. They are a quotation from Ps.22, which commences in Heb. ^ell ^eli Idmd 'dzabhtdni. There are a number of variant readings ; 'HXe: (Mt.) may be a correction to the Heb. from the 'HXwt of St. Mark (which is nearer to the Aram. aZo/fi), or may possibly be a provincial pronuncia- tion of the Heb. The Gospel of St. Peter has the curious variant, " My power." lama is Heb. ; lema, read by some edd., Aram. Sabachthani is the Aram, word shebaqtani, found in the Peshitta. It is difficult to account for this com- bination of dialects. Probably it is due to the evangelists or to transcribers. But we may have the sentence, just as it came from one Who, accustomed to speak in Aram., was quoting from the sacred tongue. It might even be that Christ used the words " Eli, Eloi " (much as St. Paul says "Abba, Father"), and Ijoth words have been handed down separately. (2) Doctrinal. The fact that the Son of God should speak of Himself as forsaken by God, Whom He here refrains from calling " Father," has given rise to some difficulty. Taken liter- ally, it only proves the extent of the kenosis, and the reality of our Lord's human nature, in that He was able to share even the experience of isolation from God. But the words are not to be narrowly pressed. Forsaken by all, in the agony of death, He uses a quotation to 248 ELON express His utter loneliness, and makes His own the words of a Psalmist who was passing through an experience in some points similar. We are, however, justified in seeing in the words (rt) the sense of separation from the Father entailed by the sins of the world, which Christ was bearing, (6) willingness to sound human misery to its very depth, even to the loss of the sense of the divine presence. [b.f.s.] Elon'. — 1. A Hittite, whose daughter was one of Esau's wives ((ien.26.34,36.2). [Bash- EMATH.] — 2. Second of the three sons of Ze- bulun (Gen. 46. 14 ; Num. 26. 26). and founder of the familv of the Elonites. — 3. A Zebulun- ite, who judged Israel for ten years, and was buried in Aijalon in Zebulun (Judg.l2.ii,i2). Elon', one of the towns in the border of the tribe of Dan (Jos. 19. 43). Perhaps Beit Ello, a village 8 miles N.W. of Bethel. [c.r.c] Elon'-beth'-hanan' is named with two Danite towns as forming one of Solomon's districts (iK.4.9). Now the village Beil 'Andn, 8 miles N.W. of Jerusalem, close to E. border of Dan. [c.r.c] Elonites. [Elon, 2.] Eloth. [Elath.] Elpaal', a Benjamite, son of Hushim and brother of Abitub (iChr.8.11). Elpa'let. [Eliphelet, i.] El-paran' (Gen. 14. 5). [Paran.] Eltekeh' (Jos. 19.44,21. 23), a town of Dan given to the Levites. Perhaps Beit Liqia, 2 miles S. of the lower Beth-horon. [c.r.c] Eltekon' (Jos. 15. 59), a townof Judah in the Hebron mountains, possibly the older form of Tekoa. The LXX. (Be^-ol'/M. Vat. MS.) dis- tinguishes it from Theko (Be/cw), mentioned in the added verse, immediately after, with Bethlehem. This verse appears, however, to be a very late gloss, and gives to Judah towns which lay in Benjamin, such as Kulon (Qolonia — a Latin name),Tatam ('Ain et Tut), Thobes (Soba), Karem ('Ain Karim), Galem (Beit Jala), Thether (probably Bether, Biltir), and Ma- nocho (Mdlhah), besides Aitan (Ain 'A(dn) and Phagor (Faghtir), just inside the border of Judah. These eleven added cities all lie close together W. and S.W. of Jerusalem, [c.r.c] Eltolad', one of the cities in the S. of Judah (Jos. 15. 30) allotted to Simeon (Jos. 19. 4) ; and in possession of that tribe until the time of David (iChr.4.29). EIul' (Ne.6.15 ; iMac.14.27). [Months.] Eluzai', one of the warriors of Benjamin, who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.5). Elymais ('KXi/xais), Gk. form of Elam Cildm), Assyr. ilamu, tlamtu, "the highland," translation of Akkadian name Nim-ma-ki. Later, the province of Elymais on the Persian Gulf was separated from Susiana (in the nar- rower sense) bythe IJlai (Eulaeus): in awider sense Susiana included lUymais (the Elam of E7.r.4.o). The citv Elymais (i Mac. 6.1) never existed : the incident recorded in this verse is doubtless that mentioned in 2Mac.9.i,2, and Persepolis bears nearly the same name as the province of Persis in which it stood, which accounts for the blunder. Polybius, however, places the attempted temple-i)lunder- iuK in the province oi Jvlymais. [vv.ST.C.T.] Elymas, the magian (A.V. sorcerer), or "wise man" (c/. Mt.2.i), further described as EMBALMING " a false prophet, a Jew," who withstood St. Paul (Ac. 13. 8), and, as a punishment, was stricken with temporary Blindness. Bar- jesus being merely a patronymic, he had as- sumed the title Elymas also, which St. Luke seems to translate as " the magian," but the de- rivation of Elymas remains uncertain, [e.r.b.] Elyme'ans (K.V. Elymaeans). [Elamites.] Elyon. [El.] Elzabad . — 1. One of the Gadite heroes who crossed Jordan to join David at Ziklag (1Chr.i2.12). — 2. A Korhite Levite who was a doorkeeper of the sanctuary (iChr.26.7). Elzaphan' (Ex. 6. 22) = Elizaphan, i. Embalming'- Only mentioned twice (Gen. 50. 2-3 and 26) in Holy Writ. Apparently embalming was practised by the ancient Egyptians in many different ways. Probably, underlying the practice, there was a belief that the soul, in spite of its transmigration, had some connexion with the body so long as the matter existed ; for not only were the bodies of great people thus preserved, but they were sealed up in vastly heavy sarcophagi and hid- den in tombs (e.g. the Pyramids) so cunningly as to be only discovered by cutting away the solid walls of the passage. According to Hero- dotus, there were three methods of embalming. In the first the head was cleansed of brain, etc., through the nostrils, the skull afterwards being rinsed with drugs. The abdomen and thorax were opened by means of a cutting in the side, and the viscera removed ; the cavities being filled with myrrh, acacia, and other spices (cf. J n. 19.39), and the opening sewn up. The body was then placed in natron or sodium carbonate )IAM>Ai;iN(. A MLMMV. |\Vilk for 70 days. At the end of this time it was washed to avoid crystallization on the surface, and bandaged with fine linen cloth, which had been previously soaked in gum. It was then placed in a wooden case, the outside of which was carved to rcseml)le the features of the deceased, and cither laid in a sarcophagus or stood upright against the side of the sepulchre chamber. This method cost about a talent of silver, i.e. roughly, £200 to £300. In the second method there were no incisions made in the body, but the cavities were filled with cedar- wood oil, and the body laid in natron as before. At the end of 70 days the oil was allowed to escape by the natural vent, and brought with it at least the greater part of the viscera, which it destroyed. This process cost ixom £80 to £100. In the third process, which was very cheap, till- body was merely emptied with a powerful clyster or enema, and soaked in natron. Although embalming does not appear EMBROIDERER to have been practised by the Jews, they evidently buried those whom they desired to honour ^v^apped with ointment and spices (19. 40). Mummies occur at Palymra [Tad- mor]. It has been suggested that in Job 21.33 we should read "bees" (naJil) for A.V. " valleys," in the description of a rich man's funeral. Thus " the clods of the bees are sweet on him " would indicate a sort of em- balming by honey, or wax, or honeycomb. Herodotus (i. 198) says that the Babylonians embalmed in honey, and the Talmud (Tal. Bab. Baba Bathra 3 b) says that Herod em- balmed Mariamne in honey. [fJ-] Embpoidepep. [Handicrafts, (9).] Emepald, a precious stone, first in the second row on the breastplate of the high- priest (Ex. 28. 18, 39. 11), imported to T>Te from S\Tia (Ezk.27.i6), used as a seal or signet (Ecclus.32.6), as an ornament of clothing and bedding (Ezk.28.13 ; Jth.lO.21), and spoken of as one of the foundations of the new Jeru- salem (Rev.2i.19 ; Tob.l3.i6). The rainbow round the throne is compared to emerald in Rev. 4. 3. This gem was known to the Romans in the days of Pliny, and is probably intended here [Carbuncle], though we must re- member that in the rainbow the red and violet tints are also conspicuous. The stone called urriqu (= green) by Babylonians was perhaps the emerald. As emeralds are obtained in Upper Egypt and the natural crystal is an attractive object, it may have been used for an ornament at an early date. [t.g.b.] Emepods (see Deut. 28.27 and iSam. 5.6ff.), possibly haemorrhoids (or piles), but more probably bubonic plague. The occur- rence of piles is very common in all Eastern countries. [Plague.] [f-JO Bmims', a tribe of gigantic stature which originally inhabited the region E. of the Dead Sea. They were like the Anakim ; but the Moabites termed them Emim — that is, "terrible men" (Deut. 2. 10, 11) — most pro- bably on account of their fierce aspect. Emmanuel (Mt.l.23). [Immanuel.] Emma'us, or Nicop'olis (iMac.3.40), a town at the foot of the mountains of Judah, 22 Roman miles from Jerusalem, and 10 from Lydda. It was fortified by Bacchides, the general of Demetrius, when at war with Jona- than (iMac.9.50). In the plain beside this city Judas Maccabaeus signally defeated the Syrians (iMac.3.57,4.3). A small village called 'A mwds still occupies the site, with remains of an early church {Surv. W. Pal. iii. p. 63). Emma'us, the village to which the two disciples were on their way when our Lord appeared to them on the day of His resur- rection (Lu.24.13) : 60 stadia, or about 7J miles from Jerusalem. Josephus (7 Wars vi. 6) mentions " a village called Emmaus " at the same distance. The Sinaitic MS. reads 160 stadia (which seems too far to be probable), and in the 4th cent. a.d. Emmaus Nicopolis was understood. The name is the Heb. Hammath ("hot" springs). A possible site is the ruin Khamasah, 8 miles S.W. of Jerusa- lem. In 12th cent, the site was shown at Qubeibeh, 9 miles N.W. of Jerusalem — a village with a mediaeval church. [c.r.c] Em'mep (iEsd,9.2i) = Immer, ENCAMPMENT 249 Em'mop (Ac.7.16), " the father of Sy- chem," A.V. ; correctly, "HAMORinSHECHEM," R.V. Apparently there is here a confusion between the two transactions of Abraham (Gen.23) and Jacob (33.19) ; though the diffi- culty disappears if, with some commentators (see Speaker's Comin. ad loc), we regard " Abra- ham " as an interpolation in the Gk. text. Enam' (Jos. 15. 34), a city of Judah in the Shephelah, near Jarmuth. It is probably noticed also in Genesis (88.14) as on the road to TiMNATH (Tibneh): see R.V. "in the gate [or, opening] of Enaim." There is a ruin called Kefr 'Ana, 6 miles N.W. of Tibneh, in the place where the valley of Sorek enters the Philistine Plain. It seems to be the Beth Anataof Thothmes III. (No. iii),near En-gan- nim of Judah (113). If the flocks of Judah were pastured in this valley, the site would fit that of the place where he met Tamar, and also of Enam, noticed with En-gannim and other towns near the valley of Sorek. [c.r.c.] Enan', father or ancestor of Ahira (Num. 1.15). Ena'sibus (iEsd.9.34) = Eliashib, 6. Encampment (Heb. mahdnd, in all places except 2K.6.8, where tahdnoth is used). The word primarily denoted the resting-place of an army or company of travellers at night (Gen. 32. 21 ; Ex. 16. 13), and was hence applied to the army or caravan when on its march (Gen.32.7,8; Ex. 14.19; Jos.lO.5,11.4). The description of the camp of the Israelites, on their march from Egypt (Num. 2,3), supplies the greatest amount of information on the subject. The sanitary regulations of the camp of the Israelites were for the twofold purpose of preserving the health of the vast multitude and the purity of the camp as the dwelling-place of God (Num. 5.3 ; Deut. 23. 14). The execution of criminals took place without the camp (Lev.24.i4 ; Num. 15. 35, 36 ; Jos.7. 24), as did the burning of the young bullock for the sin-offering (Lev.4.12), both of which circumstances are referred to in Heb. 13. 12. High ground appears to have been generally selected for the position of a camp, whether on a hill, a mountain side, or in an inaccessible pass (Judg.7.i8). Another important con- sideration in fixing upon a position for a camp was the propinquity of water ; hence in most instances camps were pitched near a spring or well (Judg.7.1 ; iMac.9.33). The camp was surrounded by the ma'gdld (trench ; iSam.l7.2o), or ma'gdl (iSam.26.5,7), which some explain as an earthwork thrown up round the encampment, others as the barrier formed by the baggage-waggons. There was the less need of a formal entrenchment, as few instances occur of engagements in the camps themselves, and these were night attacks only. To guard against these, sentinels were posted (Judg.7.19 ; iMac.12.27) round the camp. The valley which separated the hostile camps was generally selected as the fighting ground (iSam.4.2, 14.15 ; 2Sam.l8.6), and hence the valleys of Palestine have played so conspicu- ous a part in its history (Jos. 8. 13 ; Judg.6.33 ; 2Sam.5.22,8.i3, etc.). When the fighting men went forth to the place of marshalling (iSam. 17.20), a detachment was left to protect the camp and baggage (iSam.17.22,30.24). 250 ENCHANTMENTS Enchantments. [Divination ; Magic] En-dop', a place in the territory of Issachar, yet possessed by Manasseh (Jos. 17. ii). Eusebius (Onomasticon) describes it as a large village 4 miles S. of Tabor. Near CAVF. AT KN-IJUR. W.U.A. (From an original sketch by Col. Conder.) it Sisera was defeated (Ps.83.io), and here Saul consulted the witch (iSam.28.7). Now Andur, a small village S. of Tabor and 6 miles E. of Nazareth. [c.r.c] En-eg-la'im, a place named only by Ezekiel (47. 10), apparently opposite Engedi. Probably Eglaim in Moab'(Is.l5.8). [c.r.c] Enemes'sap is the name of Shalmaneser in the book of Tobit (I.2, etc.). Ene'nius, a name which takes the place in Esd.5.8 of Nahamani (Nc.7.7). En-g-addi' (Ecclus.24.i4). [En-gedi.] En-g-annim' (spring of gardens). — 1. (Jos. 15. 34.) A town of Judah in the Shephelah region, near Zanoah. Now the ruin Umm Jina (Clermont-Gaimeau), 3 miles N.W. of Zdnii'a. It is noticed in i6th cent, b.c, in the list of ThothmesIII. (No. 113), as An Kenamii near En am (hi). — 2. A city of Issachar given totheLevites(Jos.l9.2i,21.29). Now the town Jenin on S. border of the plain of Esdraelon. Josephus calls it Ginea on the border of Samaria and Galilee (3 Wars iii. 4). [c.r.c] En-g-edi' (spring of the kid), a town in the desert of Judah (Jos. 15. 62) amid the "rocks of the wild goats" (iSam.23.29,24.i,2) ; now 'Ain Jidi, a spring on the W. oi the Dead Sea, about the middle of its length. It had vineyards and palms (Can.l.T4 ; I':cclus.24.i4), and was close to the lake (Ezk.47.io). The ibex, or wild goat, is still found here in large herds. The older name was Hazezon-tamar, or " clefts of the palm" (Gen. 14-7; 2Chr.20.2), a name still extant in that of HasAsch, a valley 7 miles N. of the spring. Here also was the "ascent of ha(if" or rock-cut road from the shores to i\n: plateau (2Chr.2O.16). [Ziz.] The balsam of En-gedi was famous (Josc^phus. 0 Ant. i. 2 ; Tal. Bab. Sabbath 26a) ; and Pliny sjieaks of its jKilms (Hist. Nat. v. 17). The perennial spring (with a temperature 83° Fahr.) issues from under a huge boulder, 610 ft. above the ENOCH, THE BOOK OF Dead Sea, and 1,340 ft. below the desert plateau. The rock-cut road leads down past it. The stream flows into the lake below, down a steep slope, and was once used for irrigation. It is fringed with canes, acacia, tamarisk, and 'osher trees (Calotropis procera) or " apples of Sodom." N. of the spring is a platform of large undressed stones, with traces of old garden terraces ; just below is a ruined mill. Vines were cultivated here even in 12th cent. a.d. (See Surv. U'. Pa/, iii. pp. 384-387.) [c.r.c] Engrine. [Arms.] Eng-pavep. [Handicrafts, (2).] Eng-paving-. [Writing.] En-haddah' (Jos. 19. 21), the "boun- dary spring," a town of Issachar. It is pro- bably Kefr Adhdn, a village with a well to the W., on the edge of the plain of Esdraelon, 3 miles N.W. of Jenin. In the Mishna (Gittin vii. 7) it is called Caphar-'Outheni, on the border of Samaria. [c.r.c] En-hak-ko'pe (Judg.i5.19 ; spring of the crier). [Ramath-lehi.] En-hazop' (Jos.i9.37 ; spring of enclosure), a fenced city of Naphtali. Now the ruin Hazireh, with a spring called 'Ain HazzHr, 10 miles W. of Kedesh, with which it is noticed. [c.r.c] En-mishpat' (Gen. 14.7). [Kadesh.] Enoch' (= behemoth, i.e. "great cow." Cf. Turkish eneh = "cow"). — 1. The eldest son of Cain, who called the city which he built after his own name (Gen. 4. 17,18). — 2. Son of Jared and father of Methuselah (5.2iff. ; Eu.3.38), seventh in descent from Adam in the line of Seth (Gen. 5.2iff. ; Lu.3.28 ; Ju.14). In Gen. 5.22 it is said that Enoch " walked with God," an expression only used elsewhere of Noah (6.9; cf. 17. i). After living 365 years " he was not ; for God took him," an assertion which is thus ex- panded in Heb.11.5 : " By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death ; and he was not found, because God translated him." Both the Latin and Gk. fathers cite Enoch and P^llijah as witnessing to the possi- bility of a resurrection of the body, and of a true human existence in glory ; and the voice of early ecclesiastical tradition is almost un- animous in regarding them as " the two wit- nesses " (Rev.ll.3lT.) who should fall before " the beast." For legends connected with Enoch, see Jew. EncycL, and Rylc, Early Narratives of Gen. — 3. In 2Esd.6.4g,3i Enoch stands in the Latin and .-X.V. for Behemoth in the Aethiopic and in R.\'. [h.c.b.] Enoch, The Book of. This book — quoted by Jude (vv. 14, 13), cited as Scripture in the Ep. of Barnabas (iv. 3), and referred to by Clemens Alexandrinus, Origen, and other Fathers — was lost sight of for nearly a millen- nium. Extracts from it had been made by Georgius SynccUus in 8th cent. ; but after that there is no record of ac(iuaiiUance with it. In 1773 Bruce, the .Abyssinian traveller, brought to Iviir()i>e three copies of an I-lthiopic translation. Nearly 30 years later .\rchbishop Lawrence, in 1H21. publislied an l'"nglish translation of this, and 17 years later an edition of the text. About the same time Hoffmann issued the first German translation. In 1831 Dilhnann published his edition of the l-"thiopic text. Schodde's Eng. translation followed in 1882 ; that of Charles ENON in 1893. This last had the advantage of the use of a large number of MSS. of the Ethiopic Enoch brought to Britain in 1868, after the capture of Magdala. The book of Enoch may be divided into four portions : (i) The book of the Angels (ch. 1-36) is an account of the sin of the angels referred to in Gen. 6. 2, and their punishment. There is an episodical account of the sources of physical phenomena, followed by an account of the places of woe and of bliss. (2) The book of Similitudes (ch. 37-71). There are three similitudes : the first is of the dwell- ings of the righteous ; the second of the place of punishment ; the third is confused, and inter- polated from another apocalyptic book, the book of Noah. (3) The book of the Courses of the Luminaries of Heaven (ch. 72-91) contains an elaborate account of the calendar. In order to make the year a multiple of 7, and have e.xactly 52 weeks, the writer declares it to have only 364 days, despite the fact that the neighbouring peoples had a year more nearly agreeable to astronomic truth. After the as- tronomical section he gives an account of the history of the human race from the Creation to the age of the Maccabees. (4) The appendix (ch. 92-104) consists of exhortations, which Enoch addresses to his assembled descendants. After this some fragments have been added. These divisions do not represent the real structure of the book. The theories as to the history of its evolution are many. None re- gard it as a unity — not to speak of the Noa- chian fragments, in which, not Enoch, but Noah is the speaker — differences in the names given to the angels, different ideas as to the constitution of the heavens, mark off certain portions from the rest. Mr. Charles regards the book of the Angels as the earliest portion ; in this he is in agreement with the majority of students of apocalyptics. Thereafter, at vari- ous dates, the remaining portions are added. The book of Similitudes he thinks late. In op- position to the common opinion of critics, the present WTiter ventures to regard the book of Similitudes as the nucleus of the whole. In it were inserted the Noachian fragments, which were either extracted from an otherwise lost book of Noah or invented by an editor and inserted under Noah's name. To the author of the Similitudes may be attributed a portion (91-99) of the fourth book. The first book and the opening portion of the third appear to be the work of a later member of the same school. The probable date of the nucleus may be proved to be earlier than the book of the Angels by the comparative simplicity of its physical speculations. The note of time indi- cates that it was written during the reign of Antiochus the Great, approximately 210 b.c The later portion may be dated 160 b.c. ; the Noachian fragments at some intermediate date. The title " Son of Man," which our Lord uses of Himself, appears to be taken from this book, as in it the " Son of Man " is a title ascribed to the Messiah. What is called the Sclavonic book of Enoch is a later product, probably originating in Egypt, and may be dated approximately 60 a.d. [j.e.h.t.] Enon. [Aenon.] E'nos, properly Enosh (iChr.l.i), son of Seth (Gen.4.26,5.6ff. ; Lu.3.38). EPAPHRAS 251 En-pimmon', one of the places which the men of J udah reinhabited after their return from the Captivity (Ne.ll.29). Probably the same as " Ain and Rimmon " (Jos. 15. 32) and " Ain, Remmon" (19.7 : iChr.4.32). Called Rimmon in Zech.l4.io. Apparently Umni er Rumamin, a ruin 11 miles N. of Beer-sheba. [c.r.c] En-po'g"el {spring of the water channel), a spring immediately E. of Jerusalem (Jos. 15. 7, 18. 16), by the stone Zoheleth (iK.1.9)and outside the city (2Sam.i7.17). The only spring in this situation is now 'Ain Umm ed Deraj (mother of steps), otherwise Gihon, and perhaps Bethesda. Before its waters were carried by Hezekiah to Siloam by the rock aqueduct, it had no doubt a " channel " in the Kedron Valley, which he stopped up. [c.r.c] En-she'mesh, a spring which formed one of the landmarks on the N. boundary of Judah (Jos. 15. 7) and the S. boundary of Benjamin (I8.17). The position is that of 'Ain Hod, a mile E. of Bethany. [c.r.c] Ensiipn (ni's ; in A.V. generally " ensign," sometimes "standard"; deghel, "standard," except Can. 2.4, " banner " ; '6th, " ensign," lit. " sign "). The distinction between these three Heb. terms is marked by their respec- tive uses : nes is a signal ; deghel a military EGYPTIAN STANDARDS. (From Wilkinson.) standard for a large division of an army, and '6th for a small one. Neither, however, ex- presses the idea of a flag ; the standards in use among the Hebrews probably resembled those of the Egyptians and Assyrians — a figure or device of some kind elevated on a pole. En-tappu'ah (Jos. 17. 7). [Tappuah.] Epae'netus, one of the first converts made in the province of Asia (R0.I6.5 ; A.V. Achaia, but see R.V.). [e.r.b.] Epaphpas, a Colossian, not identical with Epaphroditus of Philippi who bore the same name in its full, unabbreviated form. He had on St. Paul's behalf (C0I.I.7, R.V.) evangelized Colossae. Anxiety for the faith of his con- verts [cf. Col.4.12,13) was probably the cause of his journey to Rome, to see St. Paul (cf. Ph. 2 3) ; and the result of his report was the writing of the epistle. Lightfoot, Colossians, pp, 31 ff. [E.R.B.] 252 EPAPHRODITXrS Epaphpodi'tus came to St. Paul at Rome as bearer of gifts from the Philippians (Ph.4. i8), and remaining there for personal service to the apostle and for the work of Christ, in- curred a dangerous illness (2.27), but recovered and was sent home. Lightfoot, Philippians, p. 60. [e.r.b.] Ephah'. — 1. The first, in order, of the sons of Midian (Gen. 25.4 ; iChr.l.33), afterwards mentioned in Is.60.6,7. No satisfactory identi- fication of this tribe has been discovered. — 2. Concubine of Caleb (iChr.2.46). — 3- Son of Jahdai in the line of Judah (2.47)- Ephah. [Weights and Measures.] Ephai', a Netophathite, whose sons were among the "captains of the forces" left in Judah after the deportation to Babylon {Je.40.8). E'phep. — 1. The second, in order, of the sons of Midian (Gen.25.4 ; iChr.l.33). His settlements have not been identified with any probability. — 2. A descendant of Judah (iChr. 4.17). — 3. One of the heads of Manasseh on the E. of Jordan (iChr.5.24). Ephes-dammim'. [Pas-dammim.] Ephesians, Epistle to the, written by St. Paul from Rome (c. 62 a.d.), and carried with Colossians and Philemon into Asia by Tychicus. It was almost certainly not addressed exclusively to Christians in Ephesus, but was an encyclical or "circular" letter, sent by rotation or in several copies to many, or all, of the " churches of Asia." So only can we account for [a) the omission, in the best MSS., of the words iv 'EiANA. Conspicuous at the head nf the harbour of Ephesus was the great temiile of Diana or .\rtemis, the tutelary divinity of tiie city. This building was raised on immense substructures, in consequence of the swampy nature of the ground. The earlier temple, which had been begun before the PLATE Xl!l VIEW OF EPHESUS. (Reproduced by permission of Mr. H. T. Ashby.) r- 252] EPHESUS THEATRE. (Reprr.duced by permission of Mr. H. T. Ashby.) EPHESUS EPHESTJS 2§3 Persian war, was burnt down in the night when Alexander the Great was born ; and another structure, raised by the enthusiastic co-operation of all the inhabitants of " Asia," took its place. The magnificence of this sanctuary was a proverb throughout the civilized world. In consequence of this de- votion the city of Ephesus was called the vediKopo^ (Ac. 19. 35), or "warden," of Diana. On account of the celebrity of Diana's worship a large manufactory grew up there of portable shrines, which strangers purchased, and dev'otees carried with them on journeys or set up in their houses. Of the manufacturers engaged in this business, perhaps Alexander the " coppersmith " (2Tim.4.i4) was one. PLAN OF THE TEMPLK OF DIANA AT EPHESUS. (From Guhl's }iph(siaca.) COINS OF EPHESl.'S, Showing: (a] temple of Artemis; (*) figure of Uiana. The case of Demetrius the " silversmith " is explicit. — III. Study and Practice of Magic. Not unconnected with the preceding subject was the remarkable prevalence of magical arts at Ephesus. In illustration of the magical books which were publicly burnt (Ac. 19. 19) under the influence of St. Paul's preaching, it is enough here to refer to the ■E0^io\\ caXled Merj Ibn 'Amr. [c.r.c] Es'dpas for Ezra the scribe in i and aEsd. Es'dpas, Fipst Book of, the first in order of the books of the Apocrypha in the English Bible. In LXX. this book is entitled Esdras A ; Esdras B including the canonical books of Ezra and Nehemiah. In the Vulg. (fol- lowed in Eng. P. B., art. vi.), Esdras I. and II. stand for the canonical books, Esdras A be- coming Esdras III., and Esdras IV. being the book known to us as " the second book of Es- dras." The classification in the English Bible, viz. Ezra, Nehemiah, r and aEsdras is adopted from the Genevan Bible (1560), the first so to enumerate them. The Isook contains a re- petition of the history of the rebuilding of the temple, and is made up almost entirely of ma- terials from the canonical books of aChronicles, Ezra, and Nehemiah. There is one original sec- tion (3.1-5.6). The transcript is more or less exact, except that the history is reversed — Artaxerxes, Darius, and Cyrus, instead of Cy- rus, Darius, and Artaxerxes ; and, though it adds nothing to our historical knowledge, the book is interesting as exemplifying the freedom with which Jewish writers dealt with their Scriptures. Josephus uses it largely in 11 Ant. i.-v., and follows its order rather than that of the canonical books ; and it is quoted considerably by the early Christian Fathers, e.g. Clem. Alex., Athan., Tertull., Cyprian. Few people recognize the frequently misquoted pro- verb, "Magna est veritas et prevalet " (4.41) as coming from this book, though it is quoted by many Fathers. The book appears to be an attempt to tell the story of the Return and restoration of the temple in an elegant style, agreeable to Gk. readers unacquainted with Heb. Whether it be (a) a compilation from the Gk. of the LXX. or (b) the editing of a Gk. translation of Chronicles, Ezra, and Nehemiah earlier than the LXX., or (c) a direct transla- tion of the Heb., made quite independently, is uncertain. Its object was to exhibit to Gk.- speaking Jews the favour once shown to their nation by heathen monarchs, under God's pro- vidence, to stimulate more earnest observance of the law, and possibly to win for them the favour of some foreign ruler, perhaps one of the Ptolemies. Its date may probably be 170-100 ESD3BAS, SECOND BOOK OP 257 B.C., some time before the Hasmonaean wars, it being unlikely that any translator would ven- ture to tamper with the order or materials of Ezra and Nehemiah after that date, at which they had become canonical. Lupton's in- genious theory that the book was edited when Onias — fleeing from the persecution of Anti- ochus Epiph. in Palestine — petitioned Ptolemy Philometor for leave to build a temple at Helio- polis is, though only conjectural, of great interest, and the character of the translation, together with certain phrases and peculiarities (e.g. 4.23), point to its being written for the important colony of J ews in Egypt, rather than for those of Palestine, though there is no more certain clue. The section 3-5.6, the story of the three pages, may be a tradition of Persian history, and is described by some commenta- tors as the nucleus around which the rest of the book was grouped. The author was well ac- quainted with the books of Esther and Daniel ; the agreement with the LXX. of those books being most striking, and there are also refer- ences to other O.T. books. Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904) ; Speaker's Comm. ; Ewald, Hist, of Israel, etc. [s.n.s.] Es'dpas, Second Book of. This, the title in the English Bible, is derived from the author's own words (1. i ). In the Vulg. it is called the Fourth Book. (See above.) It is suggested that the original title was either (i) " Ezra the Prophet " (Hilgenfeld, based on quotations of Clem. Alex, and Ambrose), or (2) the " Apo- calypse of Esdras " (Westcott, based on cata- logue of the 60 canonical and apocryphal books found in Asia). This latter is the most obvious and suitable. The original language of 2Esdras is Gk., but for a long time the book was only known through the Latin version. No Gk. MS. of the book exists, though two quotations from the Gk. are found in Clem. Alex, and Apost. Constit. The Latin version contains two important additions (1,2 ; 15, 16) not found in the other versions, and it is obvious that a large section is missing between vv. 35 and 36 of ch. 7. The missing verses (now restored in our R.V.) are found in the Syriac, Ethiopic, Arabic, and Armenian ver- sions (of these the Syriac is the best), and the missing Latin fragment was found in a MS. of the 9th cent., by Bensly in 1874. In 1865, moreover, Gildemeister proved that the miss- ing verses had actually been contained in the Latin Cod. S, but the page had been cut out in early times. Hence the conclusion was drawn that all the Latin MSS. which do not contain the section are derived from Cod. S. The reason for the excision of 7.35-105 is probably a dogmatic one. It contains a description of the intermediate state, and an emphatic denial of the ef&cacy of prayers for the dead, a matter of curious interest when it is remembered that the words of 2.24-35 are employed in the ancient Missa pro Defunctis, whence the origin of the use of the word Re- quiem, and that this passage, with 2.36,37 (formerly used by the English Church as the Introit for Whit-Tuesday), is the only one from this book made use of by the Church. Leaving for the moment ch. 1, 2, 15, 16, the real 2Esdras consists of an account of three revelations and four visions granted to Ezra 17 568 ESDKAS, SECOND BOOK OP during the Captivity, by which he is instructed in some of the great mysteries of the moral world, and God's dealings with His people. The first revelation (4—5.14) shows the unsearch- ableness of God's purpose and the signs of the last age. The second revelation (5.20-6.34) carries the teaching still further, and pro- phesies the time when " evil shall be put out and deceit shall be quenched." Third reve- lation (6.35-9.25): Ezra, renewing his ques- tions, asks why, if the other nations were out- casts compared wuth Israel, the chosen race should be dispossessed of their inheritance. In reply he is told that the narrow way must be passed first, but there shall be in the future a wider and more glorious scene. Then comes a striking passage, giving a picture of the Mes- sianic Age, the appearance of " My Son Jesus " (there are marks of interpolatif)n here). His death (with that of all living) after a reign of 400 years, and then the resurrection (7.26-35). The missing fragment describes the pit of tor- ment, and the paradise of delight over against it ; and Ezra is warned that intercession for the wicked is impossible — " many are created but few shall be saved." The first vision (9.26- 10.59) isof a woman (Sion) lamenting the death of her only son (Jerusalem), born to her after 30 years of sterility (the 3,000 years before Solo- mon built the city). She vanishes, and her place is taken by the city in building — the heavenly Jerusalem which is to replace the earthly. Another interpretation (see Drummond, Jewish Messiah) refers the 30 years to the period following the fall of Jerusalem, and from this it is argued that the book is thus dated 70 + 30 = 100 A.D. The second \'ision (ch. 11,12) describes an eagle (Rome) with twelve wings, and eight little wings, and three heads, which bear rule, until a lion (the Messiah) pronounces sentence upon it and it is con- sumed. Third vision (ch. 13) : The Messiah, " flying with the clouds of heaven," destroys the nations of the earth gathered against Him, and gathering the lost tribes of Israel, " a peaceable nmltitude," offers them Sion prepared and rebuilt. Fourth vision (ch. 14): Ezra is told that he is to be taken from men, and is bidden to make a record of what he has seen. In 40 days he writes 94 books (24 being the O.T., and published oi)eniy. the remaining 70 to be divulged only to the wise). This last section probably owes its origin to the tradition which regarded Ezra asthe representative of the men of the " Great Synagogue." The addi- tions to 2Esdras (ch. i, 2, 15, 16), confessedly of later and Christian origin (cf. for reminis- cences of N.T., 1.30,33 with Mt. 23. 37, 38, and 16.42f. with iCor.7.29f., etc.), contain a re- proof of Israel for their abandonment of God, and a denunciation of woe uixni the other na- tions of the world. The latter section begins almost in direct continuation of the former. — Character and Dale. A deep melanciioly per- vades the original book, tiie key to which is ob- vious, if we conclude (with most modern critics) that the book was written after the terrible events of 70 a.d., when the outlook for the Jews was rendered hojieless. If this is correct, the book should proi)ably be dated in the resign of Domitian, Hi-96 a.d. The question turns upon the interpretation of the eagle vision, and ESliTEMOA, ESfiTEMOfi the reigns of the several wings. The book bears a remarkably affinity to the " Apocalypse of Baruch," also a product of the age of the destruction of Jerusalem. The author, it is admitted, must have been a non-Christian Jew, living either in Rome, or more probably in Alexandria — which will account more readily for the quotation of his work by Clem. Alex. The author of the additions (1, 2, etc.) was undoubtedly a Christian, probably also of Alexandria. Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904) ; Speaker's Commentary (Lupton) ; Camb. Texts and Studies, vol. iii. 2 (1895), etc. See also Apnc. of Baruch, Charles (1896). [s.n.s.] Esdpelom. [Esdraelon.] Esebon (Jth.5.15) = Heshbon. Esebri'as (iHsd.8.54) = Shekebiah. Esek (contention), a well, dug by the herdsmen of Isaac in the valley of Gerar (Gen. 26. 20). Esh-ba'al, the fourth son of Saul, according to the genealogies of iChr.8.33 and 9.39. He is doubtless the same person as Ishbosheth. JSshban', a Horite ; one of the four sons of Dishon (Gen.36.26; iChr.l.41). Eshcol', one of three Amorite brothers who aided Abraham in his pursuit of the four kings who had carried off Lot (Gen. 14. 13, 24). Eshcor, Valley, or Bpook, of, ex- plored by the spies who were sent by Moses from the desert. From the terms of two of the notices (Num. 32.9 ; Deut.l.24) it might be gathered that Eschol was the farthest point to which the spies penetrated. In this case Rehob (Num. 13. 21) would be at Rehoboth, and the words " as men come to Hamath " must be regarded as a later gloss. The name Eshcol is connected with Hebron (Gen. 14. 13, 24), and Hebron was a great vine country (see Num. 13. 23). A spring called 'Ain Keshkaleh at Hebron has been supposed to be the " brook Eshcol," but the word does not represent the Hebrew. [c.r.c] Eshean', a city of Judah (Jos. 15. 52). E shek, a Benjamite descended from Saul and briither of .\zel (iChr.8.39). Esh kalonites. The. [.Ashkelon.] Eshtaol', probably " the hollow " ; a town of Judah in the Shephelah near Zorah (J OS. 15.33). on th<^ border of Dan, to which it was given up (I9.41). It was close to the Maiianeii-dan, and to Samson's home (Siirah): see Judg. 13. 25. 16.31,18. 2, 8, II. Eu- sebius (Onomasticon) places it 10 miles N. of Beit Jibrin, and near Jarmi'th. It is now the village Eshu'a, on a hill, l)y a recess on N. side of the valley of Sorek, il miles E. of .Siir'aA, 13 miles N.N'.E. of Beit Jibrin, and 5 miles N. of el Yarmuq. [c.R.c] Esh taulites. The, one of the families of Kirjatii-jrarim (iChr.2.53). [Eshtaol.] Eshtemoa, Eshtemoh', a town of Ju- dah, in the mountains (Jos.i5.50). With its suburbs lishtenioa was allotted to the priests (21.14 ; iChr.6.57). It was one of the places frecjuented by David and his followers during their wanderings (iSam. 30.28, cf. 31). The place was known in the time of Eusebius and Jerome. It was discovered by Robinson at es Semii'a, a village 9 miles S. of Hebron. Eshtemoa appears to have been founded by Ishbah, a descendant of Caleb (iChr.4.i7)- ESHTOKT Eshton', a descendant of Judah (iChr.4. 11,12). Es'Ii, son of Nagge, or Naggai, in the genea- logy of Joseph (Lu.3.25). Eso'ra, a place fortified by the Jews on the approach of the Assyrian army under Holofernes (Jth.4.4). Noticed with Salem (Sdlim) and Choba. Apparently 'Asireh, near Shechem on N. [c.r.c] Es'Pil. [AZAREEL, 4.] Es'pom (Mt.1.3 ; Lu.3.33) = Hezron, 2. Essenes, a Jewish party, or school of thought, described by Philo {Q. 0. P. L. 12) and Josephus (2 Wars viii. 2). The latter mentions also several individual Essenes. The name seems to be derived from Aram. 'dsV, " a phy- sician"; and was probably given to them from without, not assumed by themselves. They eschewed marriage, kept the Sabbath with great strictness, practised frequent ablutions, and had all things in common ; they avoided oaths, shunned all employments connected with war, and lived a simple life. A characteristic men- tioned by both Josephus and Philo is that they avoided the temple, and did not offer bloody sacrifices. This peculiarity would seem to cut them off from Judaism. Many of the char- acteristics assigned to the party by the two authors from whom we learn most about them are falsified by what is said of individual Essenes. Although they are said to shun the temple, Judas the Essene is teaching there when Antigonus is murdered. Although they abjured arms, yet John the Essene is one of the commanders of the Jews at the beginning of their war with the Romans. These differ- ences may be explained by supposing that there were various divisions of the party, of which very different statements might be made. It is difficult to harmonize the state- ment that they numbered only 4,000 with the fact that there were many of them in " every city," and that there were " many m>Tiads " of them, unless the statements refer to differ- ent sorts of Essenes. While in the main the doctrines peculiar to Essenism were of indi- genous Jewish origin, there are features that suggest Parsaism and possibly neo-Pytha- goreanism. One of the enigmatical features in the history of the party is the absence of any mention of them in N.T. They were numer- ous all over the country, but though our Lord meets Pharisees, Sadducees, Herodians, fol- lowers of John the Baptist, etc., He is not even once recorded to have met an Essene. If, as suggested above, the name was given them from without, they may be present in the gospels under another designation. There are certain persons who are associated with our Lord's birth and burial, " waiters for the re- demption of Israel," to which Anna the pro- phetess and Joseph of Arimathaea belonged — these may be the Essenes. If our Lord Him- self belonged in some sense to the party, it would explain how He never encountered them. Many of His teachings resemble those of the Essenes — those that differ may be ex- plained by differences in the subdivisions. This would also explain the disappearance of the Essenes in the Christian Church. Some of the heretical movements in the 2nd cent, are explicable on the supposition of Essene influ- ESTHER, BOOK OF 259 ence. Josephus (2 Wars viii. 7) mentions that they had many secret books ; these have been thought to have been the Jewish apocalypses. Confirmatory of this is the resemblance be- tween the bliss that Josephus tells us was the hope of the Essenes and the paradise described by Enoch. Original sources: Philo, Q. O. P. /,. ; Josephus, 2 Wars viii. 2. Epiphanius is valueless. Recent literature : Ginsburg, The Essenes, their Doctrines and their History ; Lightfoot, Comm. on Colossians ; Lucius, Der Essenismus ; Thomson, Books which influenced Our Lord and His Apostles. Besides arts, in various encyclopaedias and Bible dictionaries, histories of the J ews embracing the period may be consulted with advantage. [j.e.h.t.] Esther, from Persian sitareh {a star), otherwise called Hadassah, Heb. myrtle, daughter of Abihail, and brought up by her cousin Mordecai. She was chosen for her exceeding beauty by Ahasuerus (Xerxes), king of Persia, out of the maidens brought from many lands, to succeed the deposed queen Vashti. The plan for the extermination of the Jews, to which Haman, piqued by Mordecai's withholding of homage, had ob- tained the king's irrevocable consent, became known to Esther through her cousin. At his instigation she risked death by entering the king's presence uninvited, and through her tactful action obtained the downfall of Haman. The Jews, at Esther's further request, were permitted to defend themselves on the day appointed for their slaughter, which they did to good purpose. Outside the Bible we know of but one wife of Xerxes, Amestris. With her neither Vashti nor Esther can be satis- factorily identified. [Vashti.] Amestris, in fact, was married to Xerxes so long before the time with which the book of Esther deals, that two of her sons accompanied his expedi- tion against Greece. Probably Esther has been idealized, and was nothing more than a secondary wife or favourite member of the king's seraglio. [a.w.s.] Esthep, Book of, although among the later canonical books of the O.T., is of con- siderable interest and value, vividly picturing Persian court life, and furnishing an example of self-sacrificing intercession, patriotism, and courage. As against the view which would place its composition in the 2nd cent. B.C. on the ground of a supposed Maccabaean colour- ing, we may point to its accurate and lifelike portrayal of Persian manners. Although the reign of Ahasuerus is spoken of as already past, the narrative, as it stands, would have been impossible for one writing when the substitution of Gk. for Persian supremacy had blotted out the details of the earlier admin- istration. The authorship has been ascribed to Mordecai (St. Clem. Alex.), Ezra (St. Augus- tine), the "Men of the Great Synagogue " (so Jewish tradition), and others. These, however, are but conjectures. The book is plainly the work of one hand, excepting possibly 9.20-32. The style is easy and simple. The Heb. resem- bles that of Ezra, Nehemiah, and Chronicles. It is generally pure, but contains some later forms and a few Persian words. Josephus (Cont. Ap.i. 8) included the book in the Jewish Scriptures, and the Jewish Councils of Jerusa- 260 ESTHER, BOOK OF lem and Jarania (ist cent, a.d.) accepted it. Both Jews and Christians, however, for a while showed some hesitation on the subject. But from later Jews its intensely patriotic spirit evoked enthusiastic admiration. Esther forms the last of the five " Megilloth " [Old Testament], and is read by them on the Feast of Purim. [I'urim.] We must remember that most of the early Fathers, being ignorant of Hebrew, were dependent upon the Gk. Canon of Scripture, including therefore the apocrvphal additions to Esther (see below). These may well have presented a difficulty to some ; as did the absence of the divine Name in striking contrast with the explicit handling of tlie relation between God and His people to be found elsewhere on the part of Biblical writers who set forth His attitude towards men and theirs towards Him witliout reserve. Here, on the contrary, all such treatment of the matters handled is held rigidly in ETAM original. They were introduced at various points of the story, proceeding in a perfectly smooth and consecutive narrative. But, appearing as one book in the English Apo- crypha, they are thus severed from their proper contexts, while the section which in the English stands first (10.4-lt.i) ought properly to be placed last. Their confused and unintelligible appearance is due to the fact that St. Jerome, in producing the Latin Vulg., perceived that these sections had no counterpart in the original Hebrew, and so grouped them at the end of the canonical book. His marks, showing the respective points at which they should be inserted in the original text, disappeared after a while, with the above result. Apart from their non-existence in the Hebrew, they contain discrepancies as compared with the canonical book, [a.w.s.] Etani'. — 1. A city of Simeon (iChr.4.32), perhaps the ruin 'Aiiiln 8 miles N.E. of RiM- KOCK i: lAM. (From an original sketch by Col. C check. One reason suggested for this reticence is that as the Feast of Purim was probably the chief occasion on wnich the book was to be read, there may have been a desire to avoid the risk that the Name of God might be lightly used amid such surroundings. The book, nevertheless, is far from lacking the religious element ; Ps.121.4 (" He that keepeth," etc) might well be its motto, and the words of 4.14 show an unfailing trust in the over-ruling Hand. One main purpose of the book was to encourage the observance of Purim, and perhaps also to bring about its more intelligent and reverent celebration. We may also safely assume that a foremost object with the author was to enforce upon the Dispersion lessons as to the divine Pro- vidence. The (ik. version and those de- rived from it contain a number of additional sections. One reason for their introduction was doubtless to counteract what was con- sidered to be the unduly secular tone of the MON, with which it is noticed. — 2. A town of Judah (" father " = founder, iChr.4.3) fortified by Rehoboam, and mentioned with Bethle- hem and Tekoa. Josephus (8 Ant. vii. 3) says that at Ktami\ 30 furlongs from Jerusa- lem, Solomon made a well-watered garden. This is clearly the present 'Ain 'A(dn, near Ur^as (Lat. hortiis, " garden "), the so-called "sealed fountain" (Can.4.i2), S. of Bethle- hem, and about 6 miles from Jerusalem. It is close to Pilate's reservoirs and aqueducts. The Talmud (Tal. Bab. Yoma ^la) identifies /sn Elain with Neimitoah — a place of waters. The town litani was perhaps at UrtSs itself. I —3. The Rock Etam (Judg.15.8) was a crag {scl'a), apparently near I-ehi, and probably near Phiiistia. It had a " cleft " (s'cwfyh) into which Samson " went down," but to wliich the men of Judah " went up." The probable site is at litil 'A(dh, a \illage on a remarkable rocky knoll, in the mountains S. of the valley of Sorck, 5 miles S.E. of Zokah. Under the ETERNITY village there is a rock passage {called Btr el HasMah, or the well of refuge) which may be the "cleft" where Samson hid high above the ravine {Surv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 22, 137)- [c.r.c] Eternity. InO.T. this word and its cognates are represented by necah, lanecdh, I'adh, and l<-'6ldm. The first has the meaning of pre-emin- ence in honour, glory, or endurance. It denotes an uninterrupted continuance ; but hardly in the modern sense of an infinite duration of time. Either some consummation is to be reached (" tried unto theend," Job34.36), orthetimeis regarded vaguely as unlimited within the epoch in which the event occurs — e.g. the human life (" perpetual pain," Je.l5.i8). Its nearest ap- proach to "endlessness" is in negative clauses, "shall not . . . for ever " {passim). '61dm has a more defined sense of time. It is an age past, present, or to come (hd'oldm habbd ). From their very indefiniteness, the past and future epochs would tend to lose their limits, and thus justify the English translation " from ever " and " for ever." Doubtless the positive idea of endless duration was gradually developed from the fact that the Hebrews were unable to think of Jeho- vah as ceasing to exist. (Cf. Ps.9.7 and 102.27, and Chr. passim.) In N.T. at'wi' is heir to the various senses of 'dldm, and els to. aluiva takes the place of the prepositional form l^'oldm. While, perhaps, it approaches nearer to our "everlasting" (dtSios), we must be careful not to introduce this meaning entirely and solely into the constantly repeated phrase " eternal life." A careful study of all the places in which this term occurs will probably show that its antithesis is not so much to terminated life, as to physical and secular life on the earth (ev TU3 ai(3vi, roj epxofJ-euif} ^wt]v aithviov : Lu.l8. 30). It is a type of life which, according to St. J ohn, starts here. Cf. too the phrase aiuiviav \vTpujaiv inHeb.9.i2. For a somewhat different view, see Future Life. [n.F.s.] Etham. [Exodus, The ; Red Sea, Pas- sage OF.] Ethan'. — 1. " The Ezrahite," one of the four sons of Mahel, whose wisdom was excelled by Solomon (1K.4.31 ; iChr.2.6 ; cf. Ps.88 and 89, titles). — 2. Son of Kishi, or Kushaiah ; a Merarite Levite, head of that family in the time of David (iChr.6.44), and spoken of as a " singer." With Heman and Asaph, the heads of the other two families of Levites, Ethan was appointed to sound with cymbals (15. 17,19). It is probable that Ethan is the same as Jedu- thun ; but there is no decisive evidence. — 3. A Gershonite Levite, one of the ancestors of Asaph the singer (iChr.6.42). Ethanim. [Months.] Ethba'al, king of Sidon and father of Jeze- bel ( r K. 16. 3 1 ). J osephus represents him as king of the Tyrians as well as of the Sidonians. We may thus identify him with Eithobalus, noticed by Menander, a priest of Astarte, who, after having assassinated Pheles, usurped the throne of Tyre for 32 years. [Tyre.] E'thep, a town of Judah given to Simeon (Jos. 15. 42, 19. 7). Eusebius places it at Jattir {'Attir), but the site is doubtful. [c.r.c] t Ethio'pia. The country, described by Greeks and Romans as " Aethiopia " and by Hebrews as " Cush," lay to the S. of Egypt, ETHNI 261 and embraced, in its most extended sense, the modern Nubia, Sennaar. Kordofan, and nor- thern Abyssinia, and in its more definite sense the kingdom of Meroe. The only certain boundary is in the N., where Syene marked the division between Ethiopia and Egypt (Ezk.29. 10) : in other directions the boundaries can be only generally described as the Red Sea on the E., the Libyan desert on the W., and the Abys- sinian highlands on the S. " Ethiopia " thus roughly corresponds to the modern Siidan. The Hebrews do not appear to have had much practical acquaintance with Ethiopia itself, though the Ethiopians were well known to them through their intercourse with Egypt. They were, however, perfectly aware of its position (Ezk.29. 10) and its tropical character- istics, and they had commercial intercourse with it. The country is for the most part mountainous, the ranges gradually increasing in altitude towards the S., until they attain an elevation of about 8,000 ft. in Abyssinia. The inhabitants of Ethiopia were a Hamitic race (Gen. 10. 6). Of their various tribes the Sabeans were the most powerful. The history of Ethiopia is closely interwoven with that of Egypt. At the time of the conquest of Egypt, Cambyses advanced against Meroe and subdued it ; but the Persian rule did not take any root there, nor did the influence of the Ptolemies generally extend beyond northern Ethiopia. Shortly before our Saviour's birth a queen, Candace (Plin. vi. 35), held sway in Ethiopia, and even resisted the advance of the Roman arms. Another queen of the same name is noticed in Ac.8.27. Both queens probably ruled at Meroe (now Naga), which had succeeded the old kingdom of Napata (the modern Merawi), and where king Ergamenes was reigning 270 B.C. Meroe was supplanted by the Abys- sinian kingdom of Axum in the ist cent, of the Christian era. [Races.] [a.h.s.] Ethio'pian, properly "Cushite" (Je.l3. 23) ; used of Zerah (2Chr.l4.9[8]), and Ebed- melech (Je.38. 7,10,12, 39.i6). Ethiopian eunuch (Ac.8.27-39), trea- surer of Candace, queen of Meroe. As he was returning from Jerusalem in his chariot and reading the LXX. version of Isaiah, Philip the Evangelist overtook him and preached unto him Jesus. The profession of faith (ver. 37)is probably an interpolation dating back to the 2nd cent. Ethiopian tradition gives him the name of Indieh, and he is said to have propagated the Gospel in Arabia Felix and Ethiopia. [g.m.y.] Ethio'pian v/'oman. The wife of Moses is so described in Num. 12. i. It seems neces- sary to distinguish her from Zipporah, who was a Midianitess. [a.h.s.] Ethio'pians. Literally " Cush " or/' Ethio- pia " in two passages (Is.20.4 ; Je.46.9). Elsewhere " Cushites," or inhabitants of Ethiopia(2Chr.l2.3,14.i2[ii],i3[i2],16.8,21.i6; Dan. 11. 43 ; Am. 9.7 ; Zeph.2.i2). Eth'ma {iEsd.9.35; R.V. No'oma), appar- ently a corruption of Nebo, 3 (cf. Ezr.lO.43). Ethnan', a descendant of Judah ; son of Ashur by his wife Helah (iChr.4.7). Ethnapch. [Governor.] Ethni', a Gershonite Levite, ancestor of Asaph the singer (iChr.6.4i[26]). 262 ETTBXJLTJS Eubu'lus, a Christian at Rome (2Tim.4.2i ). Euchapist, the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ. For this no specific name used in N.T., and the earliest known example of evxapiuria in this definite sense is in Ignatius, Smyrn. vii. i. The name is derived from the evxapKTria, or solemn act of thanksgiving, which the earliest liturgical indications show to have accompanied the blessing of the Bread and the Wine to be the Body and Blood of Christ. The word may be so used in iCor.l4.i6. — I. The earliest extant account of this holy mystery is in ch. 10 and 11. St, Paul there speaks of a " Lord's supper," in connexion with which there were certain abuses to be corrected. " When you as- semble together," he says, " it is not to eat a Lord's supper " — that is to say, their conduct was not befitting such an occasion — " for each one in eating hurries to get his own supper, and one is hungry, while another is drunken." Here is evidently the Agape, a solemn repast, which ought to be most orderly, and not regarded as a satisfaction of appe- tite (11.21,34). But there is a special reason for solemnity : " For I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus, in the night when He was be- trayed, took a loaf, and after gi\ing thanks broke it, and said. This is my Body, which is for you : do this for My memorial. Like- wise also the cup after supper, saying, This cup is the new covenant in My Blood : do this, as often as you drink it, for My me- morial. For as often as you eat this loaf and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until He come. So that if any man eat the loaf or drink the cup of the Lord un- worthily, he will be guilty of the Body and of the Blood of the Lord." With this must be read the words of the preceding chapter : " The cup of the blessing, which we bless, is it not a partaking of Christ's Blood ? The loaf which we break, is it not a partaking of Christ's Body ? " There is no ground for supposing this feature of the Agape to have been instituted by St. Paul. He refers the institution to Jesus Christ, and the obser- vance to a current tradition. Of this insti- tution accounts are preserved in the Synoptic Gospels, which should be closely compared with St. Paul's account. They agree with him in placing it on the night of the betrayal, and they appear to connect it with the Paschal Snpi:)er. But this connexion is inconsistent with the note in Mt.26.5 that the Sanhedrin resnhed not to arrest Jesus on the feast-day, which agrees with the clear intlications of the Fourth Ciosi^cl that all was hurriedly done before the killing of the Passover. The sug- gestion that our Lord kej^t the Passover one day earlier than the Jewish authorities, based on an ingenious calculation of the calendar, seems to be inconsistent with His general attitude towards the Law. Moreover, the notion that the Passover was in any sense eaten on this occasion appears to be excluded by Lu.22. 15 (see K.V.) : " Eagerly I desired to eat this Passover with you before My passion ; for I say unto you, I shall not cat it until it be fulfillcri in the kingdom of (iod." It has been suggested, therefore, that after making all EUCHARIST preparations for the Passover, the Lord and His disciples assembled, not to eat the Paschal Supper, but to observe the qiddush of the Passo\'er. The qiddush is a domestic cere- mony performed on the eve of each sabbath or high festival, immediately before supper ; it includes the blessing of a cup of wine, followed by the breaking of a loaf for distri- bution to all present. Here is found the oc- casion for the institution of the Eucharist. Against this hvpothesis are the facts that Mk. 14.18-26 and Mt. 26.26-30 seem to place the institution during the meal and not at the beginning ; that both they and St. Paul in iCor.ll.24,25 make the breaking of the loaf precede the blessing of the cup. On the other hand, in Lu.22. 14- 19 (the confusing addition of ver. 20 being omitted, as in R.V. marg.) we find the order of the qiddush exactly followed. This striking divergence from Mark is very significant, and not less so is the order in iCor.l0.i6. (On Mt. 26.17, Mk.l4.i2, Lu.22. 7, see Box, op. cit. infra.) Equally important is it that in Didache, 9, the blessing of the cup precedes the breaking of the loaf. This indicates the survival of such a practice in some Syrian churches at the beginning of the 2nd cent. It may be the original order, altered elsewhere at a very early date to that which St. Paul describes. Such a change would illustrate the power of the Church to vary anvthing that is not essential to the institution. The current practice would account for the order in Mk.-Mt. also. It may be doubted whether any of the narratives were intended to be sufficiently precise in detail to afford materials for argument, but that of Luke seems to be the most consecu- ti\'e. — II. If the institution of the Eucharist took place at the qiddush. the .Agape would probably be ordered after the same fashion, the solemn blessing of the cup and breaking of the loaf being followed by the common repast. St. Chrysostom {Horn. .54) expressly declares this to have been the case ; but he may have been misled by the practice of his own day. St. Augustine (Ep. 118), on the contrary, seems to assume that in the first age the l^icharist followed the Supper. The indications afforded by N.T. are but slight. iCor. 11. 20-34 is indecisive. The words " after supper " in ver. 25 are puzzling. They imply a considerable interval, occupied by the supper, between the breaking of the loaf and the blessing of the cuji ; but this agrees ill with .Mark, .Maltht-.c; and uninterpolatcd I.uke. On the other hand, it agrees with the supposed derivation of the Christian rite from the Paschal Supjier, the cuji in this case being the /ourlh cup of the Paschal ritual. But the difficulty of this derivation has been sh(nvn. It is jiossible that the delivery of the cup, previously blessed, was postponed. Apart from this, the whole passage agrees best with tlie hypf)thesis that the blessing of the loaf and of the cup came first, antl that the fault of the Corinthians was to let indecent haste for the supper break in upon this solemnity. The only other references to the celebration of the luicharist in N.T. — and those not unquestionable — are in Ac.2.42,4(),20.7,i i, and possibly 27.35. I» Ac.2.46 it would be EUCHARIST extravagant to build on the order of the words. In 20.11 the order is perhaps more significant. The disciples assembled " for the breaking of a loaf," and St. Paul began the proceedings with a long discourse ; after the mishap of F.utychus, " when he was gone up, and had broken the loaf, and had eaten, and had talked with them a long while, even till dawn, so he departed." The word yevad/xevos, used thus absolutely, can only mean " taking food " ; and the use of the aorist participles, together with the precision of the whole narrative which is essentially that of an eyewitness, leaves no room for doubt that the order of proceeding is distinctly marked. Here, then, the repast follows the " breaking of the loaf." In Ac. 27. 33 the circumstances are too excep- tional to supply any argument. Hence, the one clear indication in N.T. points to the Eucharist preceding the Agape. In Didache, 9, lo, we find the same order, nor is there any indication elsewhere of its inversion. [Passover.] — III. We find in N.T. only slight indications of the ritual of the Eucharist : viz. the blessing of the cup, the breaking of the bread, the eating and drinking ; pos- sibly also the act of thanksgiving and the responsive Amen, which accompanied the blessing (iCot.H.jG). Mk.i4.24, followed by Mt., also notes the blessing of the loaf. The same elements are mentioned in Didache, 9, 10, 14, and in Ignatius, Eph. 20 ; Phil. 4 ; Smyrn. vii. 8, the latter also insisting on the presence of the bishop or his delegate. No- thing more precise is found recorded until the time of Justin Martyr. Of the doctrine of the Eucharist there are fuller indications. In iCor.l0.i6 St. Paul writes : " The cup which we bless, is it not a communion of the Blood of Christ ? The loaf which we break, is it not a communion of the Body of Christ ? " The word Koivuivia (communion) needs attention. It contains the idea of common particit>ation, as is shown by what follows immediately. But the use of " communion of the altar " in ver. 18, supported by similar uses in 2Cor.l.7 and iPe.5.1, brings in the further idea of individual participation in a common good. Thus the broken loaf and the blessed cup are the means by which the Body and the Blood of Christ are imparted to individual believers and shared in common by all believers. The participators eat Christ's Body and drink His Blood. Therefore St. Paul says, " Whoso- ever eats the loaf or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily will be guilty of an offence against the Body and Bloodof the Lord " (iCor. 11, 7). This eating and drinking are regarded in the two aspects of sacrificial communion and of spiritual sustenance, (i) The idea of sacrificial communion is most in evidence. It is conspicuous in St. Paul's comparison of the Eucharist with the sacrifices of O.T. and of the Gentile religions. The " table of the Lord " is set over against the " table of demons," as exactly parallel. The com- munion of the Body and Blood of Christ is set over against the communion of the altar in O.T. With the latter parallel should be compared Heb.13.io : "We have an altar, whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle." The reference is to those EXTCHARIST 263 sin-offerings of which, in O.T., offerers were not allowed to partake. [Sacrifice.] The sacrifice of Christ, His immolation upon the cross, corresponds to these sacrifices of the Law, as well as to others ; but there is a difference implied, in that we can partake of the Victim. The more obvious correspond- ence with the Passover is pressed by St. Paul in iCor.5.8, where the words " let us keep festival . . . with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth," though much wider in their application, seem to contain a direct allusion to the Eucharist. The predominantly sacrificial character of the Eucharist is further illustrated by the records of the institution. The wording of Lu.22.i5, the sense of which seems to underlie iCor.5.7, while excluding the direct conne ion of the institution with the Passover, indicates a close ideal conne ion. But the actual words of institution are more important, and must be compared as they stand in the records. iCor.ll.24,25 : "This is My Body, which is [being broken] for you. . . . This cup is the new covenant in My Blood : this do, as oft as ye drink, in remem- brance of Me." Mk.l4. 22-24: "Takeye, this is My Body. . . . This is My Blood of the [new] covenant which is being poured out for many." Mt.26.26- 8 : "Take, eat, this is My Body. . . . This is My Blood of the [new] covenant, which is being poured out for many, unto remission of sins." Lu. 22. 19,20 : "This is My Body [wh'ch is being given for you ; this do in remembrance of Me. . . . This cup is the new covenant in My Blood, that which is being poured out for you]." — N.B. The words in brackets are doubtful readings. The words " This is My Body " are evidently recorded as used by the Lord Himself. The addition in 1C0r.ll.24 may equally well be a kind of liturgical exposition, or a record of the Lord's own words. The doubtful ad- dition to L' ke is probablv a textual transfer from iCor. with the substitution of 5 ^0 lev^w (given) for K\d)iJ.evov (broken). In regard to the cup we have two forms, verbally different, but the same in substance, speaking of the Blood of the Covenant ; the phrase recalls Ex.24. 8, which is significantly quoted in Heb.9.20, and the action is at once stamped as sacrificial. The words added in Ma Ar and Mat- then', " which is being poured out for many," look the same way whether they be taken as the Lord's actual words or as a liturgical gloss, they show, by the force of the present participle, that the action is no anticipation of future blood-shedding or memorial of past blood-shedding, but is to be understood mysticallv as a present shedding of sacrificial blood. The words " unto remission of sins," added in Mat>heK\ connect the action with the sin-offerings of O.T. The additional words contained in St. Paul's record, " Do this ui remembrance of Me," have their sense deter- mined by the context : they are a direction to do what the Lord Himself did, and this being a sacrificial action, the repeated act is sacrificial. There is no need to insist on the fact that the word iroiene (do) and words akin to di'duc-rjo-is {remembrance), have a recognized use in this sense : the sense is always determined by the context. The 264 EUERGETES actual words thus added may be a gloss ; but there is no reasonable ground for doubting that such a direction was really given by Jesus Christ. Apart from the doubtful ad- dition following the Pauline text, St. Luke does not give the descriptive words about the cup, recording only the direction " Take this, and divide it among yourselves." The sacrificial meaning of the Eucharist, thus clearly resulting from the records of the in- stitution, is further emphasized by St. Paul's words, " As often as ye eat this loaf and drink the cup ye proclaim the Lord's death mitil He come." The celebration of this holy mystery is the means, alike for the Christian Church and for the individual believer, of achieving so intimate an association with the death of Christ that a real representation of the one sacrifice may be continually made. The main purpose of sacrifice, communion with God and the removal of the guilt of sin which hinders that communion, is fulfilled for us in this " Sacrament of our Redemption." See further Sacrifice (B); JesusChrist, X.(i). (2) The idea of spiritual sustenance is usually connected in N.T. with teaching, or the com- munication of the Word of God. In this sense it is frequent ; but in two places it appears in connexion with the Eucharist. The words of iCor.lO.4 about the spiritual meat and drink given to Israel in the wilder- ness stand in evident relation to the subject of the communion of the Body and Blood of Christ which the writer is approaching. The discourse in Jn. 6. 27-50 has no direct relation to the Eucharist, but the connexion of thought is unquestionable, and the allusion to the manna and the dependence of the whole on the miracle of the feeding of the 5,000 show that spiritual sustenance is intended. These two passages, therefore, support that con- ception of the Eucharist which is most common in the devotions of the present day : sustenance is here afforded for the spiritual life of the individual believer. We may pur- sue St. Paul's comparison with the sacrifices of O.T. and of Gentile religions. In their case, the feast on the flesh of the victims, though primarily intended as a means of communion with God, was also a taking of ordinary nutriment ; so the Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist, though given primarily for sacrificial communion with God, are given also for the strengthening and re- freshing of the souls of the faithful. — Keating, Agape and Eucharist ; Box in J I. Theol. Stud- in. p. 357; Jewish Antecedents of Eucharist; Lambert, Passover and Lord's Supper, in ib. iv. p. 184 ; Gardner, Origin of Lord's Supper ; Cheetham, The Mysteries, Pagan and Christian ; Frankland, The Early Eu- charist ; Hatch, Organization of the Early Christian Churches ; R6ville, Origines de V episcopal ; Wordsworth, Ministry of Grace ; Gore, Church and Ministry ; Schiirer (Eng. tr.). Hist, of Jewish People in Time of J . C. ; Duchesne, Origines du culte chretien ; Willis, Worship of Old Covenant, esp. in Rel. to the New ; Lepin, L'idee du sacrifice dans la religion chretienne ; Gore, Body of Christ. [T.A.L.] Buep'K^tes (benefactor), In the prologue ETJODIAS of Ecclus., Jesus the son of Sirach mentions this as the surname of the king on the throne of Egypt when he himself came thither. This wasprobalily Ptolemy 111.(247-222 b.c), as the book was perhaps composed c. 180 B.C. Ptolemy VII. (145-117 b.c), however, is sometimes given this title, though he is better known as Physcon. Antiochus VII. of Syria (137-128 B.C.) also bore this appellation, and it was occasionally used of officials in Gk. states at an earlier date. Probably our Lord refers to the Ptolemys and Antiochus when He uses the word (Lu. 22.25). [w.st.c.t.] Eumenes II. (iMac.8.8), king of Per- gamos (197-159 B.C.), was son and successor of Attains I. He sent a fleet to convey the Roman troops from Thrace to Troas during their war with Antiochus the Great, and his forces shared in the conclusive victory of Mag- nesia (190 B.C.). [Antiochus III.] The flight of Hannibal from Antiochus to the court of Prusias, king of Bithynia, led Eumenes into a war with the latter. Eumenes visited Rome (189 B.C.), and the Senate rewarded his services with the provinces of Mysia, Lydia, Phrygia, Lycaonia, part of Ionia, and the Thracian Chersonesus. [w.st.c.t.] Eunatan' (iEsd.8.44). [Elnathan, 2.] Eunice, mother of Timothy (2Tim.l.5) ; a Christian and a Jewess (Ac.l6.i). [e.r.b.] Eunuch. The Heb. word clearly implies the incapacity which mutilation involves, and perhaps includes all the classes mentioned in Mt.l9.i2, not signifying an office merely. The law (Deut.23.i ; cf. Lev.22.24) is repugnant to thus treating any Israelite ; and Samuel, when describing the arbitrary power of the future king (iSam.8.15, marg. ), mentions " his eunuchs," but does not say that he would make " their sons " such. This, if we compare 2K.2O.18, Is.39.7, possibly implies that these persons would be foreigners. It was a bar- barous custom of the East thus to treat captives (Herod, iii. 49, vi. 32), not only of tender age, but, it would seem, when past puberty. The word is used, however, in a wider sense of cer- tain officials; e.g. the "officer" Potiphar (Gen. 37.36,39.1, marg. eunuch) was an Egyptian, was married, and was the " captain of the guard " ; and in the Assyrian monuments a eunuch c)ften appears, sometimes armed, and in a warlike capacity, or as a scribe, noting the number of heads and amoiuit of spoil, as receiving the prisoners, and even as officiating in religious ceremonies. The origination of the practice is ascribed to Seiuiraiuis, and is no doubt as early, or nearly so. as Eastern despotism itself. In Israel, and latterly in Judah, eunuchs were promiuent (2K.8.6, 9.32. 23. II. 25.10 ; Is.56.3,4 ; Je.29.2, 34.19. 38.7,41.16,52.25). They mostly ap]>ear either as " set over the men of war," or associated with the surveillance of the harems of Oriental inonarchs. We find the .Assyrian Rabsaris. or "chief eunuch " (2K.I8.17), employed together with other high officials as ambassador. It is probable that Daniel and his companions were thus treated, in fulfilment of 2K.2O.17.18 ; Is.39.7 ; cf. Dan. 1.3, 7. The court of Herod had its eimuchs, as had also that of queen Candaro (.\c.8.27). [Ethiopian Eunuch.] Euodiasi (R.V. correctly Euodia), a EUPHRATES Christian woman of Philippi between whona and Syntyche differences had arisen (Ph. 4.2). [E.R.B.] Euphra'tes is a Gk. corruption of the Persian Ufratu, itself derived from the Baby- lonian Purattu, which is formed by means of the Semitic feminine suffix from the Su- merian pitra (water). In the pre-Semitic Sumerian of Babylonia the river was ordinarily known as the Pura-nun, or " Great Water." It is most frequently denoted in the Bible by the term " the river." The Euphrates is the largest, the longest, and by far the most im- portant of the rivers of W. Asia. It has two chief sources in the Armenian mountains, one at Domli, 25 miles N.E. of Erzeroum, and little more than a degree from the Black Sea ; the other on the N. slope of the range called Ala- Ddgli, near the village of Diyadin, and not far from mount Ararat. Both branches flow at first towards the W. or S.W., passing through the wildest mountain districts of Armenia ; they meet at Kebban-Maden, nearly in long. 39° E. from Greenwich, having run respec- tively 400 and 270 miles. Here the combined stream is 120 yds. wide, rapid, and very deep ; it now flows nearly southward, but in a tor- tuous course, forcing a way through the ranges of Taurus and Anti-taurus ; seeming as if it would empty itself into the Mediterranean, but prevented from so doing by the longitudinal ranges of Amanus and Lebanon, which here run parallel to the Syrian coast, and at no great distance from it ; and in about lat. 36° it turns S.E., and proceeds in this direction for above 1,000 miles to its embouchure in the Per- sian Gulf. The entire course is calculated at 1,780 miles, and of this distance 1,200 miles is navigable for boats. Its width is greatest 700 or 800 miles from its mouth — i.e. from its junc- tion with the Khabiir to the village of Werai. It there averages 400 yards. The annual in- undation of the Euphrates is caused by the melting of the snows in the Armenian high- lands, and occurs in the month of May. The great hydraulic works ascribed to Nebuchad- nezzar were chiefly intended to control the in- undation. The Euphrates has at all times been of some importance as a line of traffic be- tween the E. and the W. It is first mentioned in Scripture as one of the four rivers of Eden (Gen. 2. 14). Its celebrity is there sufficiently indicated by the absence of any explanatory phrase, such as accompanies the names of the other streams. We next hear of it in the cove- nant made with Abraham (Gen. 15. 18), where the whole country from " the great river, the river Euphrates," to the river of Egypt is promised to the chosen race. During the reigns of David and Solomon the dominion of Israel actually attained to the full extent of the original promise. This widespread terri- tory was lost upon the disruption of the king- dom under Rehoboam ; and no more is heard in Scripture of the Euphrates until the expe- dition of Necho against the Babylonians in the reign of Josiah. The river still brings down as much water as of old, but the various water- courses along which it was in former times con- veyed are dry ; the main channel has shrunk ; and the water stagnates in unwholesome marsljes. Originally the Euphrates fell into EVI 265 the sea without joining the Tigris. The accu- mulation of silt, however, has caused what was once the head of the Persian Gulf to become land. Loftus estimates that the growth of the delta at the mouths of the Euphrates and Tigris since the Christian era has been at the rate of a mile in about 70 years. [a.h.s.] Euporemus, " son of John, the son of Accos," one of the envoys sent to Rome by Judas Maccabaeus, c. 161 B.C. (iMac.8.17 ; 2Mac.4.ii), and probably identical with the historian Eupolemus, who was almost certainly of Jewish descent. Eupoc'lydon (the reading Euraqiiilo, adopted in R.V., is to be preferred), the name (Ac.27.14) of the wind which (olf the S. coast of Crete) seized the ship in which St. Paul ultimately was wrecked on the coast of Malta. [Melita.] St. Luke describes it as " typhonic " (th(P(^vlk6s), indicating that its nature was that of a sudden, violent squall. [Winds.] [a.c.d.] Eutychus, restored to life by St. Paul at Troas (Ac. 20. 9, 10) ; but the apparent contra- diction between vv. 9 and 10 leaves it uncer- tain whether it was a miracle of healing or of raising from the dead. [e.r.b.] Evang'elist. The word "evangelist" {ivayye\L(TTrii) occurs three times in N.T. : in Ac.21.8, without explanation, to describe Philip, who was one of the " seven men of good report " of 6.5 ; in Eph.4.ii (" He gave some, to be apostles ; and some, prophets ; and some, evangelists ; and some, pastors and teachers "), where it probably refers, like " pastors and teachers," rather to one exercising a function than to one holding an office ; and in 2Tim.4.5, where St. Paul bids St. Timothy " do the work of an evangelist." In each of these passages the word appears to be used as de- scriptive of work done. The nature of the work may be inferred from the derivation of the word. Evangelist is connected with the verb to "evangelize" (evay-yeKiiofKu), constantly used in N.T. of the first preaching of the Gospel [cf. Ac.5.42, 8. 4, 12,25,35,40,10.36,11.20, 13.32,14.7,15,21,15.35,16.10,17.18). Reference to these passages suggests that the noun " evangelist " means one who preaches the Gospel where it was hitherto unknown. The word does not occur in N.T. in the sense of a writer of one of the four gospels. Plumptre and Gibson in Smith, D.B. (2nd ed.), i. 1012 ; Armitage Robinson in Encycl. Bibl. ii. 1430 ; Massie in Hastings, D.B. ii. 795-797. [d.s.] Eve (Heb. havvd ; i.e. living) is said to have been formed by God from the rib of Adam while he slept. Some have assigned a figura- tive meaning to this, and regarded it as intended to point out the infinitely higher and closer relation that exists between man and wife than between any other of God's creatures. The wife's nature, originally derived from the man, corresponds to (Heb. is set over-against) his nature, and by marriage they become "one flesh." Eve is represented as having incited her husband to violate the laws of his being [Fall], and the pangs of childbirth were there- fore imposed on her in addition to the labour, sorrow, and death which became the common lot of all. Eve's death is not recorded, [j.j.l.] E'vi, one of the 5 kings or princes of Midian, slain by the Israehtes (Num.31, 8 ; Jos.l$,3i). 266 EVIDENCE Evidence (Je. 32. 10-14). [Writing;! Witness.] Evil'-mepo'dach (2 K. 25. 27), the Bab. Awel-Maruduk, was son and successor of Nebuchadnezzar. In his two years' reign (561-559 B.C.), in the opinion of Berosus, he governed " lawlessly and extravagantly." His consideration for Jehoiachin, however, is note- worthy. The Babylonian historian states that he was slain by his sister's husband, Neriglissooros, for whom see Xergal-sh.\r- EZER. [t.g.p.] Excommunication. I. Among the Jews. The principle of excommunication is found in O.T. in the penalty of being cut off from the people denounced against any who should be uncircumcised (Gen. 17. 14) ; eat unleavened bread when forbidden (Ex.12. 15,19) ; imitate or put to a strange use the holy anointing oil (30.33), or incense (30. 38) ; do any work on the sabbath (in this case associated with death, 31. 14) ; eat of the peace-offerings when unclean (Lev. 7. 20), or of the fat of an offering (7.25), or of blood (7. 27,17. 10,14) ; fail to bring an offering to the tabernacle (17.4,9) ; commit various moral abominations (18. 29); eat a peace-offering on the third day (19.8); give any of his seed to Moloch (20.3,5) ; com- mit incest (20.17) ; have sexual intercourse with a woman at forbidden times (20. 18) ; approach the holy things when unclean (22.3); fail to be afflicted on the Day of Atonement (23.29) ; forbear to keep the Passover (Num.9. 13) ; act presumptuously (15. 30) ; or fail to perform ceremonial purifications when un- clean (19.13,20) ; and is found also in the ex- clusion of the leprous from the camp (Lev. 13. 46; Num. 12. 14). and in the threat of sepa- ration from the congregation of the captivity of those who did not come to Jerusalem in obedience to the proclamation of Ezra (Ezr.lO. 8). From this principle the Rabbis de- veloped an elaborate system of excommunica- tion, much of which may have existed in the time of our Lord. Exclusion from the syna- gogue as an exercise of Jewish discipline is mentioned in Jn. 9.22, 12-42,16.2 (c/. 9.34,35, which may refer to excommunication or to exclusion from the meeting where the man then was). The Jewish excommunication ap- pears to be referred to in Lu.6.22, " Blessed are ye, when men shall hate you, and when they shall separate you from their company, and reproach you, and cast out y(jur name as evil, for the Son of Man's sake " ; and it is possible, though perhaps hardly likely, that three distinct stages in it arc alluded to in the words, " separate " (dv ilij irovripdf). — H. In the Teachin'^ nj Christ. The principle is sanctioned by our Lord in Mt.l8.17. " ^ he re- fuse to hear the Church also, let him be unto thee as the Cientile and the publican " ; and is involved in the gift of the power of binding and loosing to St. I'eter in Mt.l6.18.19. aiid to the apostles in general (18. 18). — HI. In the Apostolic Period. St. Haul frequently alludes to his right to exercise discipline over Chris- tians : e.R. 2Cor.l.23.13.io. Instances of his cutting off offenders from the Church, and describing himself as delivering them to Satan, EXODUS are in iCor.5.1-5. iTim. 1.19,20, the action of the Corinthian church being associated with his own action in iCor.5. 1-5. St. Paul orders the infliction of some kind of excommunica- tion of those who cause di\isions and occasions of stumbling (R0.I6.17) ; obey not his teach- ing (2Th.3.i4) ; or teach a different doctrine (iTim.6.3) ; and of a heretic (Tit. 3. 10). The degree of separation ordered in these cases would probably include exclusion from the Holy Communion, as would St. John's in- struction not to receive into a house those who brought not the teaching of Christ (2jn.io). St. John mentions that the power of excom- munication had been wrongly exercised by Diotrephes (3jn.io). St. Paul's denuncia- tions, "Let him be anathema" (1C0r.l6.22; Gal. 1.8, 9), probably do not directly refer to excommunication, but there can be little doubt that excommunication would be in- volved in the attitude taken by him. There appears to be an instance of restoration after excommunication in 2Cor.2.6-io. It has been suggested that St. Paul may have regarded some actual bodily infliction as following the disciplinary exclusion from Communion, and that this is the explanation of the phrase '■ Deliver unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh " (iCor.5.5), " Delivered unto Satan, that they may learn not to blaspheme " (iTim.l. 20) ; and that this is parallel to the physical consequences of unworthy Communion re- ferred to in 1Cor.ll.30, as explained by some interpreters. Meyrick in Smith, D.B. (2nd ed.), i. 1013-1016; Cheyne in Encycl. Bibl. ii. 1431, 1432 ; Brown in Hastings, D.B. ii. 800, 801 ; Edersheim, Life and Times of Jesus the .Messiah, ii. 183, 184 ; Greenstone in The Jewish Encycl. v. 285-287 ; Weizsacker, Apostolic Age, ii. 379, 380. [Satan ; Hymen- AEus ; Crimes in N.t., (13).] [d.s.] Executionep. Heb. tabbdh (Gen.37.36 marg. ; Dan. 2. 14). rendered Guard in 30 pas- sages {cook in iSam.9.23,24 : Arab, {abbakh). Probably Akkad. tab-hi, or "arranging a host " — a marshal. The Gk. ffveKovXaTtiip (Mk.6.27), cf. Lat. speculator, meant originally a military spy or scout, but under the emperors a body-guard. [c.r.c] Exile. [Captivities ; Dispersion.] Exodus, the second of the booksof the law, called by the Jews shcmoth ("names"), from the words in ver. i, and named by the Gk. trans- lators " Exodus." from its principal theme — the " Going-out " of the children of Israel from Egypt, .-kfter a brief recapitulatory section (1.1-6), it narrates the oppression of Israel: the birth and call of Moses; the conflict with Pha- raoh, plagues, and events which led up to the Exodus; the pursuit and deliverance at the Red Sea; the march to Sinai and trials in the wilder- ness ; the lawgiving, covenant, and long encamp- ment at Sinai, while the ark and tabernacle were being made ; the breach of the covenant in the making of the golden calf while .Moses was in the niuunt ; the restoration, the making, and, finally, the setting uji and consecration, of the tabernacle. The book is instinct with drama- tic i)ower, and throbs with a consciousness of the living presence ana ai:iir>n of God which witiu'sscs to its composition while yet the 1 memory and deep impressiou of the events it EXODUS records were fresh upon the mind. The book may naturally he divided into four parts: (i)The oppression and conflicts with Pharaoh (2-7- 11); (2) The Exodus and journey to Sinai (12- 18); (3) Thelaw giving and covenant (19-24); (4) The tabernacle (25-40), with (in 32-34) the episode of the golden calf, and the renewal of the tables. In 28,29 are directions about the priesthood, vvhich connect with Lev. 8, 9. The heart of the history is the solemn transaction al Sinai, by which the people formally accepted Jehovah as their God, pledging themselves to obey His laws, and Jehovah took Israel to be His people ; but the story of the deliverance which precedes, displaying as it does the attri- butes of Jehovah in their grandest exercise, is hardly inferior in interest and power. The narrative of the lawgiving is especially impor- tant, as embodying one of the great codes of law in Israel's history — the Decalogue, fol- lowed by the " statutes and judgments " of the Book of the Covenant (Ex. 20-23). The modern critical analysis of the book of Exodus follows, in a documentary respect, the main lines in- dicated in the article on Genesis. [See also Pentateuch.] The documents J and E, now all but indistinguishably fused together, are as- sumed to be combined with a third priestly document, to which belong peculiarly the laws relating to the passover (12. 1-20. 41-51), and the long series of directions and details of exe- cution relating to the tabernacle (25-31,34-40). Two things are, however, to be observed, dis- tinguishing (on the theory) the use of these documents in Exodus from their use in Genesis, (fl) In the case of both E and P, the use of the divine name " Elohim " (characteristic of these sources in Genesis) ceases with the revelation of the name " Jehovah " to Moses (with E in 3.1-6 ; with P in 6.2-8). Yet we find Elohis- tic passages (E) later, as in 13.17-19,18. (&) In Genesis the P element supplies the frame- work of the JE narrative ; in Exodus the ele- ments are co-ordinate, and P can no longer be spoken of as " framework." This is a remark- able feature, pointing to distinct circumstances of origin, and favouring the idea that Genesis was an earlier definitely-planned work. The P sections in Exodus, as elsewhere, are generally easily distinguished by their particularistic style and peculiar vocabulary (such a phrase, e.g., as " the self-same day," 12.17,41). Examples in the earlier part of the book are eh. 6, giving the call and genealogy of Moses, and certain of the narratives of the plagues, as 7.1-13,8.5-7,16-19,9.8-12, with a few other passages, as 13.1,20,14.1-4,15-23,26, etc. The rest of the narrative belongs to JE. The re- marks made on this modern critical theory in the articles above noted [Pentateuch; Genesis] apply with undiminished force to Exodus. Distinction between J and E in this book is ad- mittedly all but impossible when the criterion of the divine names fails ; and it is incredible that the P sections could ever have subsisted as an independent document in separation from the other elements in the history. The attempt to carry through such separation leads to destruction of the narrative. E.g., Pis made to pass abruptly from the increase and pros- perity of the Israelites in I.7 to their bitter bondage in ui;. 1 3, 1 4. Plainly the intervening EXODUS 267 verses (E) are needed to give the explanation- Again, the language of P in 2.23-25 has its ver- bal counterpart in 3.7 (J). Yet P is supposed to be later than J. In 6.2 (P) we have the revelation beginning with the words, " And God spake unto Moses," but nothing has yet been said in P of either Moses or Aaron. In the plagues, J records the threatening of frogs (8.1-4), but P narrates the execution of the threat (vv. 5-7). In P Aaron is appointed to be a prophet to Moses, to speak for him (7. 1,2), but in none of the P sections does Moses or Aaron ever utter a word. J alone narrates the destruction of the firstborn (12.29,30), which is announced in the Passover law of P (ver. 12). These examples suffice to show that, while different hands (at least styles) ma\' be recog- nized in different portions, the connexion of the elements throughout is so close that the attempt to part them, and make of each a separate do- cument, must hopelessly fail. A well-marked turning-point in Exodus, on which not a little depends, is God's revelation of Himself to Moses by His name " Jehovah " in 3. 13-16 (E) and again in 6.2-8 (P). This is one of the alleged " duplicates " in the narrative of Exo- dus. The incidents, however, are distinct — one at the burning bush in Midian, the other in Egypt — and the P narrative, as noted above, presupposes (in its abrupt mention of Moses and Aaron) what has gone before. A weightier question is as to the meaning of this revelation. Does it imply that " Jehovah " was an abso- lutely new name of God to Israel ? Or does it mean that God, Who had revealed Himself before to the fathers by His name " El Shad- dai," was now to reveal Himself by the grander attributes implied in the name " Jehovah " ("I am that I am ") ? In view of the context in the earlier passage (" Jehovah, the God of your fathers," 3.15,16), this would seem to be the more reasonable view. There is now a tendency on the part of critics themselves to recognize that Jehovah was an older name of God. It became, however, from this point, the peculiar name of God in His covenant relation to Israel. This brings us to the dis- puted question of the connexion of Moses with the composition of the work. If the fore- going reasonings, and those in the article Pentateuch, are sound, the presence of priestly laws of the Passover, and of extended descriptions of the tabernacle (attributed by the critics to post-Exilian times), need not mili- tate against our acceptance of an origin of the book in the Mosaic age. Grounds have been shown for asserting (i) that the Levitical legislation and the history connected with it (P) did not, and could not, have their origin in the age after the Exile ; (2) that P never could have existed as an independent document ; and (3) that the elements of P stand in inseparable relation with those of JE, and must be prac- tically contemporaneous with the latter. The attempt (in particular) to ascribe a post-Exilian date to the laws of the Passover in Exodus must be pronounced a failure. These contem- plate a domestic observance of the festival (12.13,40-51 ; cf. JE. 12.25-28) which would have been quite unsuitable after the law in Deut.l6.i-8 came into force. The question of age and authorship must be settled, therefore, 268 EXODUS on indcpcndt^iit j;rouiids. That Moses had a certain connexion with the composition of the Pentateuch is attested by the book itself. It is expressly declared that he wrote " all the words of the Lord " in " the book of the covenant " (Ex. 24. 4, 7). This covers 20-23. A second summary of laws is said to have been written by him (34.27). The regulations for the making of the tabernacle and the account of its con- struction are in the style of P, but (by whatever hand set down) Moses is declared to be their author (25.2,0,35. 1,4, etc.). In 17. 14, Moses is directed to write God's threat against Ama- lek " for a memorial in a book," or, according to the Heb. pointing, " in the book " (c/. Amer. R.V.). The natural meaning is that there was some existing " book " in which Moses made entries or records (c/. Jos. t. 7, 8, 24. 26). It is wholly unlikely that a threat against Amalek would be solemnly recorded in a single sentence, and no account of the hostile action of Amalek which evoked the threat be preserved. The Song of Moses at tlie Red Sea (lix.l5.i-2o) is evidently intended to be regarded as the composition of Moses. With this agree the notices in other passages of the familiarity of Moses with the art of writing and with books (Num. 33. 2 ; Dent. 31. 9, 24), and of his composi- tion of songs and blessings (l)eut. 31. 22, 30, 33.1 ). It is a misreading of these particular notices to regard them as excluding other writings; they rather create a presumption that such writing was customary. A final editing of the Mosaic and other material of this (Mosaic) period need not be assumed till after ^Ioscs' death — a sup- position which fully accounts for any disloca- tions, hiatuses, or explanatory notes or allu- sions to latei events which may be thought to be observed. There is, however, little in the book which really points to times later than Moses. Ex. 16. 35, on the cessation of the manna, may be such a passage, though it actually does not carry us farther than " the borders of the land of Canaan." No weight need be attached to the fact that Moses is spoken of in the third person ; and such an encomium on Moses as in 11. 3 (cf. Num. 12. 3), which maybe thought unsuitable from Moses' own pen, is readily explicable if indirect au- thorship and later editing are allowed {cf. Deut. 34.10-12). The historicity of the book of Exo- dus has been assailed bv Colenso and others on the grounds of its internal incredibilities and contradictions. Objection is taken to the rapid increase of the children of Israel in Egypt, the impossibility of the Ivxodus of so vast a multitude of people (about 2,000,000) out of Egypt on such short notice, the miracle of the Red Sea, the difficulty of the supi)ort of such numbers in the wilderness, the construction of so elaborate a tabernacle, etc. The wonder of the facts is not denied, and it is granted that, without mighty divine interpositions at the Ivxodus, ihc Red Sea, and in the wilderness, the narrative is not intelligible. But these very facts are among the best-attested in Israel's history, the most deeply engraven on Israel's consciousness, and lie at the very foundations of its national existence. The increase of Israel is remarkable, but not incredible in a i^eriod of 430 years (Ex. 12. 40, 41), if it be femembered ^hat the patriarchal families at EXODTTS, THE the time of the descent were really considerable households {cf. Gen. 14. 14, 26. 13, 14, 32. 4, 5, 10, etc.). On the other hand, the objectors ignore the immense body of evidence in favour of the historicity of the book derivable from its con- formity to Egyptian conditions, habits, and customs, and its exact knowledge of the Sina- itic peninsula. "The writer, whoever he was, shows a notable acquaintance with the cus- toms, climate, and productions of Egypt ; an acquaintance such as to imply long residence in the country, and the sort of familiarity which it takes years to acquire, with the natural pheno- mena, the method of cultivation, the religious ideas, and other habits and usages of the people " (G. Rawlinson). " The chapters of Exodus which belong either to the early so- journ of Moses or the wanderings of the Israel- ites, are pervaded by a peculiar tone, a local colouring, an atmosphere (so to speak) of the desert, which has made itself felt by all those who have explored the country, to whatever school of religious thought they may have be- longed " (Canon Cook). The departure of the Israelites from Egypt was an event of such his- torical importance that we might expect to find some allusion to it in profane history, or in con- temporary Egyptian records: but, beyond the late, confused statements of the priest Manetho on the expulsion of the lepers, nothing of this kind has as yet been discovered. The Exodus is commonly assmned (chiefly on the ground of the names of the store-cities, Ex.l.ii) to have taken place in the reign of one of the immediate successors of Ramses II. of the 19th dynasty (c. 1250 B.C.); but the discovery of a stela of Menephtah, the son of Ramses, in which "Israel" (for the first time mentioned) is apparently spoken of as already in or about Palestine, has inclined many to carry back its date to the i8th dynasty. The point awaits further determina- tion. [E.xoDus, The ; Red Sea, Passage OF.] See Pentateuch; art. "Exodus" in Hastings D.B. (vol. i. 1898) ; Exodus in Speaker's and in Pulpit Com. ; Hengstenberg, Egypt and the B<>it to lake Serbonis and the Egyptian Delta, and ever moving southward year by year, only checked in its southward course by the mountain ranges some fifty miles inland, the northern features of which, at the present day, arc filled up with sand. These sand-drifts are due to deposits from the river Nile on the shores of the bay of Pelu- sium, and they are ever moving backwards and forwards, according to the lie of the wind. These drifts have accumulated in waves and billows from 40 to 50 ft. in height, and at Gatieh, N.E. of Ismailia, there are thousands of palm-trees in the desert which, rooted in good soil, are sometimes engulfed in sand- drifts and again exposed to view. In this ever-moving desert there are wells, as that at Mahadah, 30 miles from Ismailia, where the Bedawin keep a clear space down to the water by ever moving the sand across from the windward to the leeward side of the well. These sand-drifts appear to increase year by year, and it is probable that 3,500 years ago much of the ground, now encroached upon about Ismailia, was then part of the land of Goshen. Yet in those days it is probable that these sand-drifts were in existence to the N. and N.E. of the Bitter Lakes, and would have presented an almost insurmountable obstacle to the journey of women and children, in haste, without due preparation, and without a sufficient number of beasts of burden and wagons to carry them. (3) The desert of the Tih ("Wanderings ") which stretches from the frontier of Egypt to 'Aqaba, and contains the wilderness of Faran. It is a plateau gradually shelving up from the southern shore of the Mediterranean, and extending some 150 miles to the S., where it reaches a height of 4,000 ft. above the level of the sea, and ends abruptly in a great wall of rock, Jebel et-Tih, jutting into the peninsula of Sinai, and presenting a scarp to the S. many hundreds of feet in height. At its northern end for about 50 miles it is covered by the shifting drift-sands above mentioned. It is formed of nearly horizontal layers of limestone, with here and there a fault^ when sandstone is visible ; and in the centre it is broken up by mountain- ranges. It is for the most part a desert, where soil and vegetation are very sparse. In parts the ground is hard and white, without traces of vegetation for stretches of 8 to 10 miles, with here and there a seil, or water-course, with scanty vegetation, and for two months in the year a little water. After heavy rains, which sometimes f)ccur in Jan. and Feb., the sells are full oi water for a few hours, and then the pasture springs up in and about the water-courses. During Nov., Dec, and March there are mists and heavy dews, which give sufficient moisture to the flocks .ekiel, tiie third, according to anotlicr reckoning the second, of the great pro- phets, and, like Jeremiah and Zcchariah, of priestly descent, dates his several prophecies almost witiiout exception from the j'ear of his (Icixirtation (5th-27th years = 593-571) ; see 1.2,29.1 7f. He prophesied amongst the exiles at Tel Ahib (3.15), by the river Chebar in Baby- lonia (1.1,3,3.15), ])ossesscd a house of his own (3.24.8.i),'an(rtill 589 had a wife (24.i,i5fT.). Though those of his nation only valued him for his artistic power and are often called " a house E2EKIEL of rebelliousness," they freely resort to him (33.3of., 37.18), especially the elders (8.i,14.i, 20.1). On account of 3. i4f.,26,4.4ff., 24.27,33. 22, Klostermann held him to be cataleptic ; yet this condition was imposed upon him (3. 24ff.,24.25ff.) on account of Israel's rebellious- ness (3.26). The "thirtieth year" of l.i can scarcely be understood of an era of Nabopo- lassar, and must be reckoned as that of the prophet's age. If so, he was carried away young, and before he had exercised his priestly office in Jerusalem (so Josephus). If he were old enough to have had instruction in the law and in priestly service, the particulars exhibited in 40-48 are sufficiently explained. Legend makes him the teacher of Pythagoras and the servant, or son, of Jeremiah to whose prophecies his are often closely related (cf. Ezk.34 with Je.23.iff. ; Ezk.23 with Je.3. 6ff. ; Ezk. 18.2 with Je.3i.29, and the similar connexion between Amos and Hosea, Isaiah and Micah, Haggai and Zechariah, EUjah and Elisha), and finally a martyr and gives him burial in the grave of Shem and Arphaxad. His book contains two principal parts, corre- sponding to his double mission to terrify the careless sinner and to comfort the despondent (cf. Micah). Possibly this is what Josephus means when he says that " he left in writing two books." The fall of Jerusalem (Ezk.33. 21) forms the turning-point. The first part embraces prophecies against Israel (1-24) and in chronological order (l.i,3.i6,8.i,20.i,24.i), and against seven heathen nations (25-32), Ammon, Moab, Edom, Philistia, Tjnre, Sidon, Egypt in geographical order, the supplement (29.i7ff.) being joined to Egypt. Upon his calling to the prophetic office (1-3) there fol- lows threatening of punishment for idolatry and unrighteousness, and for failures in cere- monial and religious duties, in three subordin- ate divisions (3ff.,8ff.,20ff.), culminating in ch. 24. Part 2, which has as its subject Israel's future, sets forth the principle, conditions, and historical course of Israel's restoration and sub- sequent developments {34ff.), and the outward characteristics of this future — temple, people, land (40ff.). The structure of the book is so clear and homogeneous, the thoughts of the earlier prophecies pervading the later, that it stands out as a unity and its authenticity is generally admitted. Its relegation to the Persian or Greek era by Zunz and Seinecke respectively has not met with any acceptance. Since Ezekiel could only reach a small part of his people, the scope of his genius was even more cramped than that of his predecessors. It is the custom nowadays to belittle the literary significance of the book and to char- acterize the author as a fantastic dreamer without real intuition. But no prophet has so feUcitous a command of allegory, symbol, comparison, parable, proverb, and lyric, and Schiller pays a warm and unprejudiced tribute to the poetic genius of Ezekiel. Herder called this prophet " the Aeschylus and Shakespeare of the Hebrews." Ezekiel's frequent symbolic actions were not wholly carried out, but were ideal. His visions, which it is abitrary to regard as mere literary embellishment, are as magnificent as his conception of God, and of this the opening vision gives us a good example. EZEKIEL 273 Above all, his subject-matter is many-sided and imposing. According to Wellhausen, he initiated the tendency towards the priestly codification of the laws, and by not a few he is held to be the creator or editor of the law of holiness (Lev. 17-26). We believe this to be quite impossible. He presupposes both, under- stood these laws in their deep symbolism, and brought their historical evolution, as far as possible, to its culmination and final result (40.ff.). The fountain of waters rising in the temple (Ezk.47.iff.) shows the concluding chap- ters (40fE.), on the one hand, to be no literal programme of reconstruction, while, on the other, the very detailed measurements forbid our treating it as mere allegory. An actual change in the state of affairs has been brought about by Jehovah. Similarly, the greater size and stricter measure of the temple, as com- pared with the one destroyed, is intended to symbolize God's holiness. Sound exegesis keeps the middle path between the extremes of a false spiritualism and of an unimaginative realism. As was natural to a priest, he makes use of the imagery of Law and Temple which lay to his hand, but as a prophet he bends it freely to his purpose (see the present writer's Are the Critics Right? pp. 114-141.) His priestly descent also shows itself in his idea of the Messiah, Who is for him not only king (34. iiff.,37.22,24f.) but high-priest, as in Jeremiah and Zechariah (see 21.25f., where both the high-priestly diadem and the kingly crown are for the Messiah; 45.22f., where "the prince" acts as the high-priestly intercessor for " all the people " ; and see further the present writer's Messianische Erwartung der vorexil- ischen Propheten, pp. 334 ff.). Ezekiel, though not first in this field, is important also for his extension of eschatological ideas (38.17,39.8; cf. Rev. 20. 8). But avoiding mere apocalyptic fantasy on the one hand, and the dry bones of ceremonialism on the other, he enriches his conceptions with the deepest thoughts of practical religion — e.g. the religious value he sets upon the individual, which, in accordance with his anxious mission to the exiles, he em- phasizes in the highest degree (Ezk.3.i6f.,18, 33) ; his universalism, which includes the nations not only in judgment (25-32), but also in salvation (5.3,16.46ff.,17.23,34.26) ; and his conception of God, which unites the greatest love with the greatest holiness and the loftiest sublimity. For the love, specially cf. ll.igf., 36.25ff.,39.29 ; for the majesty, consider the opening vision, the frequent opposition of "the Lord Jehovah" to "the Son of Man," and the fact that over fifty times it is given as the design of the whole divine plan and operation that the nations as well as Israel should recog- nize both in judgment and in promise that He is Jehovah. The text is frequently corrupt or obscure. Because some of his opinions were considered inconsistent with the Law, the Jews debated whether Ezekiel should be read in the public services of the synagogue ; it was, however, finally decided in favour of such reading. But on account of the abstruseness of his introduction and final vision, the private studyofthese(asofthe first chapters of Genesis) was prohibited to any one of less than 30 years of age. Express quotation before N.T. times 18 274 EZEL, THE STONE is found only in Ecclus.49.Sf., which refers to Ezk. 1,13. II, 38. 9, 16,22. The concluding vision has had a special iulinence upon the Apoca- lypse of St. John. Zunz, Gottesdienstliche Vortrdge ; Seinccke, Geschichte Israels ; Cona- mcntaries of Keil, Havernick, Hengstenberg, Von Orelli, Smend, Bcrtholet, Kractzschmar; Klostermann in Studien und Kritiken (1877) ; Redpath, Ezk. in W cstmin'iter Comtn. (1907). For a discussion of the style of Ezekiel, see Spencer in Lex Mosaica, s.v. [w.m.] E'zel, The stone (1Sam.2O.19). "The stone of departure," perhaps the Levitical boundary stone at Gibeah. The LXX. reads " this Ergab " (or " stone-heap "). [c.r.c] E'zem (iChr.4.29). [AzEM.] E zap. — 1. A Horite " duke," son of Seir, dwelling in mount Seir in the land of Edom (Gen. 36. 21, 27,30 ; iChr.l.42, of. 38). — 2. A son of Ephraim, slain by the men of Gath EZHA which returned from captivity with Zerubbabel (Ne.l2.i). — 2. A man of Judah in the obscure genealogy of iChr.4'.i7; R.V. Ezrah. — 3. The famous scribe and priest, descended from Hil- kiah who was high-priest in Josiah's reign and from whose younger son Azariah sprang Se- raiah, Ezra's father (Ezr.T.i, quite a different person from Seraiah the high-priest). All that is really known of Ezra is contained in the four last chapters of the book of Ezra and in Ne.8 and 12.26. He was a learned and pious priest- scribe, residing at Babylon in the time of Artaxerxes I.ongimanus. The origin of his connexion with the king does not appear — it may have been through the influence of Esther's family. In the seventh year of the king's reign Ezra obtained leave to go to Jerusalem, with a company of Israelites, including priests, Le\'ites, singers, porters, Nethinim, and laymen. Their journey in a cattle-raid (iChr.7.2i). [Elead.] — 3. A priest who assisted at the dedication of the walls of Jerusalem (Ne.i2.42). — 4. Father of Hushah of the sons of Hur (iChr.4.4). Ezepias (ilisd.S.i) = Azakiah, 7. Ezi as. [Azii.i.] Ezion -g^a ber, or Ezion'-g-e'bep (Num. 33.35; Dcut.2.8 ; iK. 9.26,22.48 ; 2Chr.8.i7, 20.36), the last station named for the encamp- ment of the Israelites before the wilderness of Zin. It was " beside " Elath, apparently on the shore. The name has been supposed to be preserved at 'A in Ghucfidn, 10 miles up the Arai)ah Valley, but tliis is duubtful. [c.r.c] Bz'nite, The. According to 2Sam.23.8, " Adinothe Eznite" was theTachmonite " that sat in the seat." In iChr.ll.ii we read instead "Jashobeam an Hachmoaite." The K.V. in the first passage reads " Joshebbasshebeth a Tahchemonite." [c.r.c] Ezpa' (a shortened form of Azariah). — 1. The head of one of the 22 courses of priests from Babylon to Jerusalem took just four months. They brought with them a large free-will offering of gold and silver, and silver vessels. Ezra's design was to effect a religious reformation among the Palestine Jews, and to restore the observation of the law of Moses, from which they had grievously declined, and to whicli he was sincerely dc\'oted. His first step was to enforce separation from their wives upon all who had made heathen marriages, as many priests and Levites (as well as other Is- raelites) had done. This was effected in little more than six months after his arrival at Jeru- saleni. With tiie detailed account of this im- jiortant transaction I'>.ra's autobiography ends abruptly. Perhaps his firman had expired ; at any rate, wc hear nothing more of him till, 13 years afterwards, in tlie 20th of Artaxerxes, we find him again at Jerusalem with Neheiuiah " the Tirsliatha." The functions he executed under Nehemiah were mainly of a priestly character. As he is not mentioned after iE^RA, BOOK OP Nehemiah's departure for Babylon in the sand of Artaxerxes, and as everything fell into con- fusion during Nehemiah's absence (Ne.l3), Ezra may have died or returned to Babylon before that year. Josephus evidently knew nothing about the time or the place of his death. There was a strong Jewish tradition that he was buried in Persia. Ezra was pre- eminently a man of prayer and a man of learn- ing. His knowledge of the law and the pro- phets is recognized by all Jewish writers, who credit him with many impossible feats. The principal works traditionally ascribed to him by the Jews are : (i) The institution of the Great Synagogue. (2) The settling the canon of Scripture, and restoring, correcting, and editing the whole sacred volume. (3) The in- troduction of the Aramaic character instead of the old Hebrew. (4) The authorship of the books of Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, and (some add) Esther ; and even Ezekiel, Daniel, and the twelve prophets. (5) The establishment of synagogues. Bz'pa, Book of. The book of Ezra is manifestly a continuation of the books of Chronicles, which it overlaps. Like them, it consists of contemporary historical journals, which were afterwards strung together, and either abridged or added to (as the case re- quired) by a later hand. That later hand, in the book of Ezra, was possibly Ezra's own, for the four last chapters are his. The first part of the book (ch. 1-6) gives us the decree of Cyrus, the return of a considerable number of the people, the re-laying of the foundation of the temple, the opposition which caused a nine- years' delay, the subsequent removal of the difficulties, the completion of the work under the encouragement of the prophets Haggai and Zechariah, and the inauguration of the temple services. The second part of the book (ch. 7-10) brings Ezra on the scene, 57 years later, armed with a firman from Artaxerxes, which author- ized him to administer justice and to further the religious interests of the people. He found many shameful abuses, but he faced them in a spirit of prayer (ch. 9) and courage (ch. 10). A peculiarity of the book is that part of it is in Aramaic, i.e. from 4.8 to 6.18, and also the decree of Artaxerxes (7.12-26). Cf. the case of Daniel. The Heb. language was evidently dying out, and a neo-Heb., such as we read of in N.T., was beginning to take its place. The chief portion of the last chapter of 2Chr. and Ezr.l may have been written by Daniel. Daniel records none of the great events of the first year of Cyrus (to which allusion is made in Dan. 1. 21). But Ezr.l, if placed between Dan. 9 and 10, exactly fills up the gap, and records the decree in which Daniel was so deeply interested. More- over, the manner of the record is exactly Daniel's. The giving the text of the decree, Ezr.l. 2-4 (cf. Dan.4.1-3), the mention of the name of " Mithredath the treasurer," ver. 8 (cf. Dan. 1.3, 11), the allusion to the sacred vessels placed by Nebuchadnezzar in the house of his god, ver. 7 (cf. Dan.1.2), thegivmg the Aramaic name of Zerubbabel, vv. 8,11 {cf. Dan.1.7), and the whole locus standi of the narrator, who evidently wrote at Babylon, not at Jerusalem, are all circumstances which possibly point to EZRA, BOOK OF 2?5 Daniel as the writer of Ezr.l. Ezr.2-3.i is found in duplicate in Ne.7, though the copies do not wholly agree. Except one explanatory addition (4.6-23), by a later hand in the reign of Artaxerxes Longimanus, 3.2-6 is the work of a writer contemporary with Zerubbabel and Jeshua, and an eye-witness of the rebuilding of the temple in the beginning of the reign of Darius Hystaspis. It has been suggested that Haggai was the writer. At any rate, it was much earlier than Ezra's time. The last four chapters are Ezra's own, and continue the his- tory after a gap of 58 years — from the 6th of Darius to the 7th of Artaxerxes, in the midst of which gap the book of Esther might have been inserted. The text of the book is not in a good condition. There are palpable corruptions both in names and numerals, and perhaps in some other points. There has hardly been any doubt about the canon- icity of the book, although it is not quoted in N.T. Of late years it has been thought that this book ought to be regarded as apocryphal, and that lEsdras ought to take its place. A comparison of the two books, however, suggests that difficulties would be increased rather than diminished by this course. Josephus appears to side with lEs- dras ; but he writes rather vaguely on the sub- ject. The dates of the kings of the period covered by the book of Ezra are as follows : Cyrus, 538 B.C. ; Cambyses, 529 ; two im- postors, Gomates and Smerdis, followed by Darius Hystaspis, 522 ; Xerxes, 485 ; Arta- xerxes, 465. The list given in the book of Ezra includes Cyrus, [Xer.xes, Artaxerxes,] Darius, Artaxerxes. The reference to Xerxes {i.e. Ahasuerus) is in one verse only (4.6), and may be dismissed as an illustrative note — perhaps by Ezra himself. The Artaxerxes in the passage which follows can hardly be the Artaxerxes (Longimanus) of Ezra's and Ne- hemiah's time ; otherwise the whole passage (4.7-23) must be dealt with as a later insertion — a view which is held by many. The only al- ternative is to regard the name as a substitute for Cambyses. This alone will make the whole passage harmonious. The changing of names was not uncommon. Zerubbabel was turned into Sheshbazzar (1.8), while his official title was Tirshatha. Josephus calls him Sana- bassar. The impostor Smerdis was called Spendadates by Ctesias and Oropastes by Jus- tin ; Xer.xes was also called Cyrus ; and so with others. Cambyses is called both Kambathet and also Mesutra (? Ramesiita ; so Maspero), by his Egyptian subjects (Petrie, Egypt, iii. 360 ; Pierret, Foca&. pp. 234, 642); and his Palestinian subjects may have had some reason, unknown to us, for introducing him under the name Artaxerxes. It may be added that Josephus says that the delay caused by the adversaries was one of 9 years. This exactly takes us from the beginning of the reign of Cambyses to the 2nd year of Darius Hystaspis. The difficulty may have some other solution. In i Esdras and Josephus it is affirmed that Zerubbabel headed a second expedition at the beginning of Darius's reign, and that the Ust of ch. 2 belongs to this and not to the first ; but the word used of it in Ne.7. 5 — translated " at the first " — i? opposed to this view. [r.b.g.] 2?6 EZilAHITE, THE Ez'pahlte, The, a title attached to two persons — Ethan (1K.4.31 ; Ps.89, title) and Heman (Ps.88, title). Ezpi', sou of Chelub, superintendent of king David's farm -labourers (iChr.27.26). Fable. [Allegory.] Fair Havens (KaXoi Ai/xives), a har- bour in the island of Cketic (Ac.27.8). Though not mentioned by classical writers, it is still known by its Gk. name. It appears to have been the harbour of Lasea, E. of Cape Matala, which is the most conspicuous head- land on the S. coast of Crete, and immediately W. of which the coast trends suddenly N. Fairs, a word occurring only in A.V.of Ezk. 27, and there no less than seven times (vv. 12, 14,16,19,22,27,33) : in ver. 33 it is rendered " wares," which R.V. rightly uses throughout. Faith. Cf. Salvation; Repentance ; Con- version. Faith is the second step along the way of salvation. Repentance is the casting off of the old servitude, faith the submission to the new. Hence faith is the moral opposite of sin, even more than is repentance. It is also closely connected with sacrifice as its inward and spiritual reality. The place of faith in the spiritual life has been confused by the theory of substitution and vicarious punishment. If it is taught that Christ's sacrifice was penal, and that He suffered the wrath of God in our stead, all that is left for faith is trustfully to to accept His sacrifice, and to consent to be involved in His merits. This is the view of Bp. Moule {cf. Christian Doctrine and Epistle to the Romans). One primary objection is that such a view of faith is inapplicable to O.T., and that the faith of the O.T. saints meant something higher, viz. their entire devo- tion to the cause and Church of God. It can hardly be supposed that faith should have lost, and not rather gained in intensity in con- sequence of the teachings of Christ. So far from this, faith in N.T. includes the utmost of sacrifice. It is vain to seek its meaning by grammar and dictionary, for the relation defines the word, and not the word the rela- tion. Faith is one thing in a friend, another as between husband and wife ; but the highest, most intimate, and most vital relation of all is between the soul and God. Faith is the demand of Christ, unique, exceptional, imperative. It is not satisfied by intellectual acceptance, or passive acquiescence in a work done for us, but is personal self-surrender. This high meaning will explain its Pauline preference to works. By these are meant works done in substitution for submission. Such works are of the nature of sin, because not done according to the will of God. (iod may of His mercy take the will for the deed, and overlook imperfect obedience ; but He cannf)t take the deed instead of and in the place of the will. We cannot please God except as we desire to please Him. This desire to please Him is called faith. |I'aiii,.1 The standard teaching on faith is contained in Bp. Jeremy Taylor's well-known sermon I' ides FALL, THE Formata. " Faith destroys our sin, unites us to God : by it we are partakers of Christ's death and imitators of His life." [m.s.] Fall, The. The narrative of the Fall has all the marks of the most hoar antiquity. Whether divinely revealed to Abraham before his flight from Mesopotamia, or preserved under divine supervision in the family of the patriarch, after it had become overlaid by false traditions among other dwellers in that region, it is clearly more archaic in style and method than any other portion of O.T. It has been inter- preted both literally and spiritually. That it is to some extent figurative in form is demon- strated by the allusion to the " tree of know- ledge of good and evil." Literally, of course, there is no such " tree" ; and Holy Scripture is not responsible for injudicious literalists, who have ventured to amend the Bible, and substi- tute an apple (!) for the "fruit" mentioned. But whether taught literally or figuratively, the spiritual lessons of the narrative are neces- sary foundation truths of our religion, and the starting-point for the whole scheme of redemp- tion. That man has fallen since his creation, by violating the laws prescribed for him by the Almighty, is a fact proved by the whole history of the world. The first act committed by man in violation of those laws constituted the Fall. What- ever was the exact character of man's first offence, it is clear that it involved an abuse of the free-will granted him by his Maker. He fell at the moment when he first resolved to have experience of evil as well as of good. This experiment was suggested by the Tempter, traces of whose malign influence are not wanting in tiie world before man was intro- duced into it. The temptation consisted in UABYLONIAN CYI.INnKK-SI- AI. : TRhl-: OI- KNoWI.HDC.E (?/. (Hrit. Mlls.) making our first parents believe that they winild elevate themselves vastly in the intel- lectual and moral scale by disobedience to God's CDHimands. "Ye shall be as God ( R.V.], knowing good and evil." The immediate re- sults of their sin were (i) the loss of the life of happiness they had hitherto led; (2) the con- version of joyous industry into toil, distress, and conflict with obstacles: and (3), to the woman, the agony of childbirth. The ulti- mate results were ( i ) jealousy, murder, remorse, despair, among their immediate descendants ; (2) the universal sjiread of violence and dis- order ill the earth; (3) the destruction of man- kind, witii the excejition of a single family ; {4) death. Some have thought that s|uritual death is meant. Certainly one result of the I-'all was the arrest of man's spiritual development until the coming of Christ (Gen. 6. 3). Some subsi- diary results may also be mentioned. The FALIiOW-DEER sentence pronounced on the serpent indicates the moral degradation which sin invariably brings with it. The sense of shame which led to the use of clothing seems to point to the vio- lation of the proper relations of the sexes as an early result of the first transgression. Yet the story of the Fall is not allowed to leave man hopeless. Throughout the ages, the Church has ever been taught to expect the coming of Christ the Restorer ; and the form of the pro- phecy (Gen. 3. 15) indicates that man shall not in the end be the loser by the results, however dire, of transgression, but that those to whom God " giveth the victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ," shall rise to a higher fellowship with God, and a higher communion with their fellows, through conquest of self and victory over temptation. [Satan.] [J-J-l.] Fallow-deep (Heb. yahmur). The Heb. word is mentioned only in Deut.14.5 and iK.4. 23. Although the fallow-deer (Cervus dama) occurs in certain parts of Asia Minor, as well as sparsely on Tabor and in the Lebanon, while the Mesopotamian fallow-deer (C. mesopota- micus) inhabits the mountains of Luristan.. in Persia, the translation of yahmur as " fallow- deer " is generally regarded as incorrect. The identification of the species of wild ruminants mentioned in the Bible is a matter of extreme difficulty, and yahmur has been generally con- sidered to indicate the bubal hartebeest (Bu- baits hoselaphus) of the semi-desert districts of Africa, which has been supposed to occur in Syria, but on wholly insufficient evidence ; therefore it is much more probable that some species of deer is meant. [Roe.] [r.l.] Family and Inhepitance. The Heb. words for family, etc., have varying meanings, and it is often impossible to be sure which meaning was intended in a particular context. Hence the words in A and B are treated in their more usual senses. A. The largest nor- mal subdivision of the tribe was the clan, mishpdkhd (A.V. often family, Num.1. 2, etc.), J0S.7.14 ; Deut.29.i8[i7], etc. (On the use of shehhet in Judg.20.i2, iSam.9.2T, see Internal. Crit. Comm., ad locos.) Besides the real or ficti- tious community of blood, several resulting principles require attention, (i) The clansmen felt responsibility for avenging the blood of one of their number (2Sam.l4.7). It does not ap- pear whether any member could be the go'cl hadddm [Homicide], when there were nearer relations, or whether they merely watched over the fulfilment of his duty by the go' el. Perhaps, too, the principle of collective responsibility for sins extended to all clansmen (Lev. 20. 5) [Law IN O.T., B (iv)], but possibly the Heb. word is here used in a narrower sense. (2) There were clan sacrifices (iSam.20.6,29), at which all the (? male) members were present. (3) The rights of inheritance to, and pre-emption and redemption of (Lev.25 ; Je.32), immovables devolved on the nearest clansmen in default of near relations {infra, E, IIL). (4) Probably the restitution of Num.5.7f. was made to the nearest clansman, if the injured person and his immediate family were dead, but the meaning of go'cl here (R.V. kinsman) seems doubtful. (5)The right (and, probably, duty) of redeeming persons who had lost their freedom through insolvency devolved similarly (Lev.25.49). (6) FAMILY 277 From Ru.3f. it would appear that the duty of contracting a Levi rate marriage also devolved similarly. In other ways, too, the sense of connexion appears, e.g. 2Sam.l6.5 ; Judg.9.1-3 (even where through the mother); Gen. 24. 40. Occasionally a group of clans con- stituting a sub-tribe is spoken of, and then " father's house " (Num.3.35, etc.) or " tribe " (4.18) is used; but no special term exists. [Brother.] B. The next subdivision is the beth'dbh, " father's house," within which every individual desired his name as the ancestor of a family to be preserved (iSam.24.2i ; cf. 2Sam. 14.7 ; Num. 27. 4 ; and contrast Dent. 25. 10, " His name shall be called in Israel the name of him that hath his shoe loosed," partly as a sanction working on men's feelings, partly as severing the family bond ; cf. Post, Grundriss, i. 163-165). That the phrase does not mean mere- ly house of the father appears from iSam.22. 11,22, where Ahimelech's " father's house " = the (85 ephod-wearing, i.e. adult) priests in Nob = Abiathar's " father's house " (Ahime- lech being Abiathar's father). See also Num. 1.4, etc., esp. 18.1 (of Aaron's family, i.e. de- scendants). The collective idea is seen clearly in iSam.17.25, " Will give him his daughter and make his father's house free in Israel " ; 22.16, " Thou shalt . . . die . . . thou and all thy father's house " (cf. 2Sam.3.29,14.9 ; 1K.2.31). So probably in Judg.Q.i we should understand Abimelech as appealing to the clan of his mother's " father's house " (Moore, Judges, 243), and this use is frequent elsewhere. In Chronicles the " father's houses " of the priests are two technical divisions, stereotyped once for all — Eleazar's house and Ithamar's (iChr. 24.6) — which in turn were subdivided (2Chr.35). The Chronicler also uses the term of technical divisions of the Levites (iChr.23.ii,26.i3), and perhaps of the people (2Chr.25.5,35.i2) as well as in other senses. The meaning of the ex- pression is often doubtful. It sometimes means household, sometimes descendants, sometimes family (including ascendants and collaterals), sometimes, perhaps, almost "clan" (Ex. 6. 14). [Tribe.] Probably in some cases it is a technical division of the clan, in others it denotes a family connexion not necessarily stereotyped, but arising from generation to generation. Presumably, any member of this would perform the last offices in default of nearer relations (Am. 6. 10 ; uncle ? or kinsman ?), except in the case of priests. Probably the head of the senior " father's house " {i.e. the senior representative of the ancestor of the tribe through males having the blessing [Birthright]) was the Prince of the tribe. In Num.17 " father's house " is used for tribe, probably because both the Heb. words for " tribe " mean "rod." C. Next comes the smaller group of close relations, for whom a priest might defile himself (Lev. 21. 1-3 ; Ezk. 44.25), based not on blood-relation- ship merely, but partly also on subjection (past or present) to a common ancestor. Thus the sister is included, if unmarried, otherwise she will be " under her husband," not " in her father's house" {cf. Num.5. 29, Heb.). Yet the principle of blood-relationship excludes the wife from the list. Relations separated by more than one generation (grandchildren, grand- 278 FAMILY parents, etc.) are tnuitted. This group, there- fore, coincides with no other connexion, but expresses partly the sense of blood-relation- ship, partly the idea of family subjection, partly perhaps the conception oif the necessi- ties of the case. 1). The Huitsehold. I. The head of the house as father and husband. In early times the father enjoyed unlimited powers over the members of his household, in- cluding the power of life and death (Gen. 22, 31. 32, 38. 24, 42. ,37 ; cf. Roman patria potestas, and Post, (iyundriss. i. 170-173, ii. 135). Later these dwindled, and the various powers must be treated separately- (i) The father's juris- diction for offences involving death appears to have passed to the courts of ciders, who cer- tainlv acted on a joint statement of father and mother (Kx. 21. 15,17 : l.ev.20.q ; Deut.21.i8- 21), but his powers of chastisement remained. (2) The pmver to sacrifice children appears to ha\e remained substantially intact {i.e. the courts did not interfere much to prevent it), and to have been exercised (Jc. 7. 31, 19. 5 : Ezk. 16.20,20.26 ; 2K.I6.3, etc.), although all such sacrifice is expresslv or implicitlv condemned in the Pentateuch (Gen. 22 ; Lev.lS. 21,20.1-5 ; Deut. 12.31,18.10). Lev.27.28f. recognizes a power to " devote " human beings " from all that is his," but the circumstances in which it could be exercised are not stated. The ana- logy of other passages suggests that it would apply to idolatrous slaves {cf. Iix.22.2o[i()l ; Deut. 13. 15, etc.). (3) He could marry his sons and daughters (Gen. 38. 6 ; Judg.l2.o ; Ezr.9.2, etc.). In the case of sons this power may have terminated at some specific age {infra. IV.), as we meet vs'ith instances of marri- ages contracted during the father's lifetime by the son {e./;. Esau, Gen. 26. 34). In the case of virgin daughters his power appears to have terminated only with his death. He had no jurisdiction over widowed daughters, except, perhaps, a childless widow or divorcee " re- turned unto her father's house as in her youth " {cf. Lev. 22. 13), to whom no levirate claims attached (contrast Tamar, who in her father's house remained imder Judah's po- testas). (4 ) He could sell or pledge his children (2K.4.1 ; Is.50.1, etc.). (5) The prostitution of daughters (a method of gain frequently practised in early societies — Post, Grundriss. i. i7Qf.) was forbidden {Lev.i9.29). (6) He could disallow the oaths and vows of his \irgin daughter or wife " in the day that he heareth " (Mum. 30). [Oatus.] (7) He could vary the respective rights of his children among themselves [Birthku.iit], distribute his mov- able property among them (subject to some limitation, see infra, E), and adopt their chil- dren as his own (Gen. 48.5). (8) He could divorce a wife at pleasure, or expel from his household a concubine or child (Gen. 21). (0) The idea that he ruled over his wife lies at the root of the Helircw conception of the family (Gen. 3. 16). (10) See infra IV. on the deference due to him from his children. (11) Slaves also fall within the household [Slavk], the unit of society being, as at Rome, the familia, not the family. IT. His wives. [On difference from concubines, see III. (fc) infra.] {a) Acquisition, (i) The most usu.d form i>f IJiarriage was purchase (cf. Post, Grundrtss, i. FAMILY 286ff.) by payment of a bride-price (Heb. mo- har) to the father ; and accordingly the law of seduction and rape provides for compensation to the father, whose property right in his daughter has been infringed. [CRiMns.] Other gifts by the bridegroom or father were (? sometimes) given ((ien. 24,34. 12 {''viohar and gift," but "gift" omitted by LXX., ? gloss], 29.24, etc.), but our information is here inade- quate. (2) Wheresoever marriage by purchase exists, the custom of commuting the whole or part of the bride-price for service arises in the case of poor suitors. This is found in Gen. 29; cf. Post, Familienrecht. 217-218, Grundriss, i. 31S ff. (3) Marriage by capture is another universal form which finds illustration in the story of the Benjamites (Judg.21 ; cf. Gen. 34. 29, Num. 31. 1 8, etc.). Such women were protected by Deut. 21. 10-15, and were probably (at any rate in some cases) wives, not concubines, infra {b). {4) Caleb promised his daughter to him who should accomplish a particular warlike feat (Jos.15.i6; Judg.l.i2 ; cf. 1Sam.i7.25). Mar- riages of this kind are sometimes treated as forms of (i) or (2), but they must always have been abnormal. (5) Orphan heiresses (Num.36. 6 ; perhaps all orphaned free virgins) and widows (1Sam.25.39ff. ; other than those affected by the Levirate law and possibly royal widows) bestowed their own hands, presum- ably without bride-price ; but in the case of heiresses of immovables, they were compelled to marry within their tribe (Num.36). In Tobit the right of the next-of-kin to marry a daughter who is an only child, even in her father's lifetime, is seen firmly established {e.g. Tob.6. iif.), but this is a later extension of Num.36. (6) There has been much dis- cussion about matriarchy, but among the Hebrews this can only be assumed in historical times by ignoring (amongst others) all the facts set out in A, B, and I), I. and II., (a) (i)- (5) supra, and D, II. {b). III., V., and E I. (a) infra, and all the Biblical genealogies. Samson, however, appears to have contracted n patriarchal notions [infra III. (/)) (iv) and E I. («)]. (7) On racial bars, see infra III. (c); for priests, »«/mIII. (\\e\ vnAdie 2i testamentary disposition (2Sam.i7.23) ; Hezekiah was recommended to do so (2K.2O.1 ; Is.38.i) ; Job shared his property equally between all his sons and daughters (Job 42.15), Judith among all the next-of-kin of her husband and herself (Jth.l6.24). From 8.7 it appears that a widow could inherit under her husband's disposition, and from Pr.l7. 2,30.23 that slaves sometimes inherited, probably under a testamentary disposition. The practice of making such dispositions is enjoined (Ecclus. 33.23). II. Concubines and widows, see supra D. III. (b) (V). III. Immovables. The order of succession laid down by the Law here is (i) sons, (2) daughters (subject to the rule that they must marry within their own tribe, (3) brothers, (4) father's brothers, (5) nearest kinsmen (through males; Num.27. 1-11,36; cf. Ru.4; Je.32). But in the days of Ruth widows liad acquired some rights of succession to their husband's property. Naomi had some right (Ru.4. 3, etc.), though her two sons had survived their father, i.e. the widow took some interest (we do not know what) in her deceased husband's land even when he had direct heirs. Ruth also had some right in virtue of her widowhood (4.5). In i K. 17.17 we find a widow owning a house, and cf. the instance of Judith (8.7), to whom her husband's lands were left as well as his mov- ables. Job (not a Hebrew) appears to have shared his lands among all his children (Job 42.15). IV. The succession to the throne ap- parently depended on the will of the king, who could cause any one of his sons by a queen to inherit (iK.l.iiff. ; 2Chr.ll.21f.). Seem- ingly, however, there was a strong sentiment in favour of primogeniture (iK.2.22 ; 2Chr.21.3). Th. Engert, Khe- und Familienrecht der Hebrder (valuable if used cautiously). Cf. generally Post. Grundriss, i. 165-195, and the sections relating to the separate subjects. [Judge; Levirate Law; Names.] [h.m.w.] FAMINE In N.T. the idea of the fainil)' relationships is embodied in the Lord's Prayer, the parent to govern, sustain, and protect the child from evil, the child to venerate and obe}' the parent, love being the motive power. Our Lord fre- quently refers to the family in illustration of His teaching {e.g. Lu.ll.ii-i3,15.iiff.)- He Himself was subject to His parents (2.51 ; cf. Jn.2-i2), but He showed by example (Lu.2.49 ; Mt. 12.46-50 ; Mk.3.31), and taught (Mt.lO. 37 ; Mk.lO.28-30), that the claims of the larger family, the Kingdom, must be given precedence over the smaller one. He con- demned the custom of pronouncing a thing CoRBAN as a means of evading a duty to parents (7. 10-13). St. Paul admonishes the members of the Christian family, wives and husbands, children and parents, servants and masters, to discharge faithfullv their relative duties(Eph.5.22-6.9; C0I.3.18-4.1). Thefamily of a bishop or deacon was to be an example of discipline and conduct (iTim.3.2-i2 ; Tit. 1.6). [M.A.RRIAGE; Divorce; Adultery.] [h.h.] Famine. Though Palestine is frequently described as a very fertile land, yet famine through drought is a constant danger there, as throughout Syria and Arabia generally. Eg>T)t, also — to which resort was often had when Palestine was afflicted, and which was even more famous for its fertility — did not escape, when the waters of the Nile (almost its only source of supply) were defective or insuffici- ently conveyed to the soil. Palestine is chiefly dependent for escape from scarcity upon the heavy winter rains ; but the Jordan and other smaller streams were utilized so far as they went. Occasional causes of famine in Bible lands were violent hailstorms {e.g. Ex.9.23ff. ; Hag.2.17), the inroads of locusts and other pests {e.g. Ex.lO.15 ; Jl.1.4 ; Am.4.9), and the devastations of enemies {e.g. Judg.6.4f. ; 2K. 6.25ii.). Some of the principal references to famine in the Bible are (i) in the times of Abraham and Isaac (Gen.l2.io,26.iff.) ; (2) the great famine that spread through Syria and Egypt in the days of Jacob (Gen.4i.53ff.) [Joseph] ; (3) in the times of Elijah and Elisha (iK. 17. 1, 18. 5 ; 2K.8.iff. ; referred to by our Lord in Lu.4.25f.) ; (4) our Lord pre- dicts " famines in divers places " in His es- chatological discourses, as one of the signs of the coming end (Mt.24.7 ; Mk.13.8 ; Lu.21. 11) ; and these are thought to have been at least in part fulfilled in the horrors of the siege of Jerusalem described by Josephus (5, 6 B.J., etc.); (5) the prophet Agabus (Ac.ll.28) likewise predicted " great famine over all the world, which came to pass in the days of Claudius" (emperor, 41-54 a.d.). [c.l.f.] Fan (Heb. mizrS, Is.3O.24; Je.15.7: Gk. TTTvov, Mt.3.12), a winnowing instrument, dis- tinguished in the first passage from the rahath, or wooden shovel used to toss the grain, which is thus winnowed by the wind. The Heb. 77tizre means something to " scatter " the grain, and the Gk. word something to " agitate." The grain was tossed, in baskets like the vannus or winnowing basket, which was an important Dionysiac emblem. Even locusts, used for food, seem to have been so tossed and winnowed (Ps.109.23), as they still are by the natives of Bechuanaland. [c.r.c] FASTS AND FASTING 281 Farthing-. Two names of coins in N.T. are thus rendered in A.V. (i) KodpdvTrjs, quadrans (Mt.5.26 ; Mk. 12.42), a coin (of about 36 grs. of copper) ctirrent in Palestine in the time of our Lord. It was equivalent to 2 lepta (A.V. mites). The name quadrans was originally given to the quarter of the Roman as, or piece of 3 unciae, therefore also called teruncius. (2) daadpiou (Mt.lO. 29 ; Lu.12.6), properly a small as, assarium, but in the time of our Lord used as the Gk. equivalent of the Lat. as (about 144 grs. of copper). The rendering of the Vulg. in Lu.12.6 makes it probable that a single coin is intended by 2 assaria. [Money.] Fasts and Fasting. Religious fasting (entire or partial abstinence from food and drink), a natural expression of self-humiliation, is of immemorial antiquity {e.g. in Babylonia, Smith, D.B., s.v. Fasting, p. 1051 ; cf. Jon. 3.5) ; frequently associated with prayer and other religious exercises, (i) Periodic Fasts. One annual fast [Atonement, Day of] is pre- scribed by the Levitical law (Lev.23.27, etc. ; Ac. 27. 9) ; the exiled Jews added four others, in the 4th, 5th, and 7th months (Zech.7.1-7,8.19), commemorating (Jerome and Mishna) certain national calamities. Later still, the stricter Jews instituted a custom of voluntary fasting twice a week (Lu.l8.12), i.e. on the 2nd and 5th days {Taanith ii. 9), and the Pharisees were followed in this by St. John Baptist's disciples (Mt.9.14, parallels). After Titus captured Jerusalem, commemorative fasts increased in number — the present Jewish calendar em- braces 28. (2) Occasional Public Fasts {cf. Jon. 3. 5) were proclaimed at crises in Israel's history — e.g. by Samuel (iSam.7.6), Jehosha- phat (2Chr.20.3), in Jehoiakim's reign (Je.36. 9 ; cf. Ba.1.5), under Nehemiah, in 444 B.C. (Ne.9.i ; cf. Atonement, Day of), and twice by Judas Maccabaeus, in 166 e.g. (iMac.3.46, 47), and again in 163 b.c. (2Mac. 13. 11,12). Such general fasts are described in Jl. 1.14,2. 15-17, Is. 58, and Jth. 4.9-15, as marked by public prayer and by weeping in sackcloth and ashes, and announced (JI.2.15) by blowing of trumpets. (3) Individual Fasts recognized in- cidentally in Num.30. 1 3, occur frequently in O.T. as the expression of sorrow or bereave- ment (iSam.l.7,31.13 ; 2Sam.l.i2, cf. 12. 17 ; Ps.109.24 ; Jth. 8. 6), of sympathy with per- sonal or national calamities (Judg.2O.26 ; i Sam.20.34 ; Ps.35.13; Ne.1.4; Esth.4.i6), of penitence for one's own offences (1K.2I.27 ; Ecclus. 34.26) or those of the community (Deut.9.i8; Ps.69.io ; Ezr.10.6 ; Dan.9.3), or, finally (like the Christian fast before Com- munion), as a preparation for approach to God and reception of His revelations (Ex.34. 28 ; Deut.9.9 ; Dan.lO.2ff. ; 2Esd.5.i3ff.,5.3i, 35). (4) The Spirit of Fasting in O.T. and N. T. The prophetical denunciations of formal and hvpocritical fasting (Is. 58. 3-7 ; Je. 14.12 ; JI.2.13 ; Zech.7.5ff.,8.i6ff.) are echoed bv Christ, Who yet fasts Himself (Mt.4.2 ; Lu.4. 2), and gives recognition to the practice and rules for its observance (Mt. 6. 16-18), while deprecating the methods of contemporary Judaism (9. 14-17, parallels). His followers fasted with prayer before ordaining SS. Paul and Barnabas (Ac.13.2,3 ; cf. I4.23), and St. Paul, while protesting, like his Master, against 282 FAT formal asceticism (Ro.l4.2ff. ; Col.2. 16,2 iff., etc.), recognizes the principle implicitly in iCor.T.'i, and explicitly, by example, in Ac. 14.23 ;'c/. 2Cor.6.5,ll-27)- Passages where the word is now judged alien to the original te.xt (Mt. 17.21 ; Ac.lO.30; iCor.7.5) still tes- tify to very early practice ; and we know from early writers that the primitive Chris- tians transposed the Jewish Monday and Thursday fasts to Wednesday and Friday, in commemoration of their Lord's betrayal and crucifixion. Edersheim, The Temple: its Ministry and Services \ Jerome, in Zech. viii \ Mishna, Taanith and Yoma. [i..r.] Fat. [Wine-press.] Fat. [Sacrifice, 3, iv. ei] Father. [Family.] Fathom (Gk. 6p~/VL6.: Ac.27.28 only), almost exactly the equivalent of our Eng. fathom = 2 ft. Fauchion. [Arms.] Feasts. [Festivals.] Felix, brother of Pallas, one of the great freedmen who administered the empire under Claudius. He was imperial procurator of Judaea, 52 to 59 or 60 a.d. A conflict of state- ments in Tacitus and Josephus seems to point to his having previously held some subordinate position in Samaria, which would account for the " many years " judgeship and more exact knowledge attributed to him (Ac.24. 10,22). He obtained his procuratorship on the recom- mendation of the high-priest Jonathan, whom he afterwards caused to be murdered. His administration is described by Tacitus (Hist. v. 9 ; Ann. xii. 54) in the blackest colours. The narrativeof Acts, though far less condemnatory, is not inconsistent with Tacitus, for the com- pliments of Tertullus (Ac.24.2) are empty words. He was recalled, and accused before Nero by a Jewish embassy, but escaped punishment by the influence of Pallas. On his administration as a turning-point in the history of Judaea, seo Schiirer, Hist. Jew. People, div. i. vol. ii. p. 174. [e.r.b.] Fenced cities. [Cities.] Ferret (Heb. \'tndqd), the A.V. transla- tion of the name of one of the unclean creeping animals mentioned in Lev. 11. 30. The old Gk. rendering of 'dndqd is " shrew-mouse," while the Rabbinical writers translate it as " hedge- hog." There is, however, little doubt that the Heb. term (which literally signifies "that which sighs or groans" ) indicates some kindof reptile ; and Tristram considers that it probably refers to the lizard known as the fan-footed gecko (Ptyodactylus lobatus), a species commonly seen on the walls and ceilings of houses in Syria and Egypt. Like its relatives, it utters a peculiar clicking cry. [r.l.] Festivals. The religious days for rest, joy, and observance fixed in the Bible fall under three heads: (i) by the division of time ; (2) in commemoration of historical events; (3) in remembrance of man's duty toward his Maker. The first class includes : (a) the sab- bath as a day of rest in every week (Kx.20.io ; Deut.5.i2ff.); {h) the first day of every new moon(Num.28.i4;2K.4.23;Ezr.3.5;Ho.2.ii); (c) the Feast of Trumpets, or New Year's Day, which falls on Tishri i. The second class in- cludes the three pilgrimage festivals, namely : FETTERS (a) the Passover, on Nisan 15-22. to commem- orate the release from Egyptian bondage, (b) The Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost, counting 7 weeks {49 days) from the second day of Pass- over, and celebrating the fiftieth day, which falls on Sivan 6. This day was observed as " the Feast of Harvest, the first fruits of thy labour " (Ex. 23. 16). According to rabbinical tradition, Pentecost was celebrated also in commemora- tion of the giving of the law on Sinai, which occurred on the same day and is still observed as such in modern times, (c) The Feast of Tabernacles, or " Booths," on Tishri 15-22. The eighth day of Tabernacles was a separate holiday, a day of holy convocation. These festivals required pilgrimage to Jerusalem and special sacrifices during the temple period. Later they were observed by special prayers in the synagogue and all manual work prohibited, except the lighting of fire and cooking of meals (12. 1 6). The intervening days of Passover and Tabernacles are observed as semi-holi- days. The third class includes the Day of Atonement, which falls on Tishri 10, and which, though a day of fasting, is considered also a festival and equal in strict observance to the sabbath day. The Festival of the Basket is applied by Philo to the individual offering of the firstfruits before the Lord at the sanctuary, as described in Deut.26.2 (Philo, v. p. 51, ed. Tauch.). No special day is given for such offer- ing, but the time was to be between Pentecost and Tabernacles. After the Babylonian Exile the Feast of Purim (Esth.9.20 If. ) and the Feast of Dedication, or Hanukka (iMac.4.56), were instituted as memorial days of historical events, but they were not considered equivalent to the former festivals, as they do not include the suspension of labour. Josephus mentions also the Wood Festival in connexion with the wood contributed to the temple, and cele- brated on Ab 15 (2 Wars xvii. 6 ; cf. Ne.lO.35, 13.31 ; Mishna, Taanith iv. 5). Other feasts instituted to commemorate a religious victory or an escape from danger are recorded in Megillath (Scroll), Taanith, in rotation of the days of the months, most of them of a local origin that soon became obsolete. The obser- vance of the festivals was a most important factor in the economic life and culture of the Jews. It helped to maintain their national unity and religious ties. See special articles on Atonement, Day of ; Dedication, Feast of ; Jubilee, Year of ; New Moon; Passover; Pentecost ; Purim ; Sabbath ; Sabbatical Year ; Tabernacles, Feast of ; Trumpets, Feast of. [j.d.e.] Festus, Pop'cius, succeeded Felix as pro- curatiir of Judaea. Shortly after reaching his proxince he heard, in the presence of Herod .■\grippa II. and Hernico his sister, the cause of St. Paul, who had been left a prisoner by Felix (.\c. 24. 2 7-26. 3 2). Judaea was in a disturbed state throughout the rule of F"estus, as it had been in the days of his predecessor. He died in 62 a.d., within two years of his arrival. [a.c.d.] Fetters. Three words are used in Heb. : irh<'i\luili, which occurs almost exclusively in the dual, showing that they were made in pairs. The word implies that the fetters were made of bronze or copper (Judg.l6.21 ; aSam. PLATE XIV THE GODDESS ISTAR OF XIXEVEH. (From a cylinder-seal in the Brit. Mus.) See art. " Ashtoreth." p. 282] TIGLATH-PILESER 111., GIVING HIS TITLES. (In Nimrud Gallery, Brit. Mus.) BABYLONIAN LANDMARK. (Brit. Mus.) _ See art. " Field." CYLINDER-SEAL, BEARING THE NAME OF DARIUS. (From the Brit. Mus.) FEVER FIRMAMENT 283 3.34 ; 2K.25.7, etc.). It is used figuratively for " oppression " in Lam. 3. 7, the only occur- rence in the sing, ziqqim is used only in plur. (Is.45.14 ; Ps.149.8 : Na.3.io — always in con- nexion with captives). It is used in a figura- tive sense, as the context shows, in Job 36.8. kebhel is used as a parallel with ziqqim, and occurs only in Ps.l05.i8 (in sing.) and in Ps.149.8 (in plur.). In N.T. TreSr/ is used, only in the plur., in reference to the chains where- with the demoniac (Mk.5.4 ; Lu.8.29) was bound. [w.o.E.o.] Fever. The word only occurs once in A.V. of O.T. — viz. Deut.28.22 — and three times in N.T., in the cases of Simon's wife's mother '(Mt.8.14, etc.), the nobleman's son (Jn.4. 52), and the father of Publius (Ac.28.8). But fevers of one sort and another are so common in the East that it is impossible to identify exactly from what diseases these people were suffering, except in the last case given, where the disease is specified. [f-J-] Field. The Heb. sddhe is applied to any cultivated or productive ground, and in some instances in marked opposition to the neigh- bouring wilderness. On the other hand, the sddhi is frequently contrasted with what is en- closed, whether a vineyard, a garden, or a walled town. It applies to a pastoral region (Gen. 4. 8, 24.63,25.27; Deut.22.25). The " landmark " in a field was probably — as in Babylonia — a stone inscribed with an account of the boun- daries, and a statement of the grant bv which thefieldwasheld(Deut.l9.i4,27.i7: c/.Job 24. 2 ; Pr.22.28,23.10). Cornfields in Palestine are still unfenced, rendering them liable to damage from straying cattle (Ex. 22. 5) or fire (ver. 6 ; 2Sam.i4.30). It should be observed that the expressions " fruitful field " (Is. 10. 18, 29. 17, 32. 15,16) and " plentiful field " (Is.l6.io ; Je.48. 33), are not connected with sddhf, but with karmel, meaning a park or wood, as distinct from a wilderness. Another word, sh'^dhemoth, is translated " fields " (Deut. 32.32 ; 2K. 19.26, 23.4 ; Is.16.8 ; Je.31.40 ; Hab.3.i7). It ap- pears to refer to " enclosures " walled like vineyards (see Num. 22. 24). [c.r.c] Fig-, Figr-tpee (Heb. t"'end), occurs many times in O.T., and signifies the Ficus carica of Linnaeus, and also its fruit. The fig-tree is very common in Palestine (Deut. 8. 8). Mount Olivet was famous for its fig-trees in ancient times, and they are still found there. " To sit under one's own vine and one's own fig-tree " became a proverb among the Jews to denote peace and prosperity (iK.4.25 ; Mi. 4. 4 ; Zech.3. 10). For figs as distinct from the tree, the plur. t^'entm is used (see Je.8.13). We find also (a) bikktird (Ho. 9. 10), the first-ripe fruit of the fig- tree ; {b) pagh (Can. 2. 13), the unripe fig, which hangs through the winter ; (c) d'bheld. a cake of figs pressed together to keep them (2K.2O.7). In iSam.30.i2 cakes of figs are given to the captured Egyptian as a restorative ; and in 2K. 20.7, etc., figs are laid on Hezekiah's boil, and he recovers. Both these uses receive independent corroboration from Pliny, who says (xxiii. 7) : " Figgs be restorative, and the best thing they then can eat who are brought low by some long and languishing sicknesse, and now upon the mending hand and in recoverie. In like manner they are singular for the falling evil and the dropsie. Figgs applied as a cataplasm are excellent, either to discusse or els bring to maturitie any impostumes or swellings." [Sycamore.] In the passage " the time of figs was not yet" (Mk.ll.13, etc.), the barren fig-tree is used emblematically of the Jewish nation. The efforts to deal with this literally have led to many dissertations, which are well summarized and referenced bv Harris {Nat. Hist, of the Bible). ' [h.c.h.] Fing-ep-bpeadth. [Weights and Mea- sures.] Fip (Heb. b'-rosh, b'ydth). Despite the opinion of Celsius that b''rdsh exclusively means "cedar," "fir" in A.V. represents more than one sort of wood. Finns halepensis is the only true pine native in Palestine proper; P. pinaster (maritima) is probably introduced. P. pinea and F. pyrenaica are found high up on the Lebanon, and F. carica on E. of Jordan (Tristram). To these may be added other conifers, cedar, cypress, and junipers, as perhaps suggested by " fir." In Ezk.27.5 the "fir-trees of Senir " (Lebanon) are ex- pressly referred to amongst Tyrian mer- chandise, for shipbuilding. [h.c.h.] Fipe. In addition to domestic uses: (i) leprous garments burned (Lev.13.52,57), and idols (Deut. 7. 5, 25). (2) Supernatural fire : accompaniment of theophanies (Gen. 15. 17 ; Ex. 3. 2, 19.18 ; Deut. 4.36) ; destructive fire from God (Num. 11. 1-3). (3) Altar-fire : divine origin (Lev.9.24) ; perpetual on the altar of burnt-offerings (6.i3r6] ; iEsd.6.24); rekindled (2Chr.7.i-3) ; tradition about the hidden fire (2Mac.l. 19-22,31-33) ; strange fire, i.e. from a source other than the altar, or incense offered presumptuously (Lev.lO.i) ; child-sacrifice by fire forbidden (Lev.l8.21 ; Deut. 18. 10), but practised (2K. 16. 3, 17. 17). (4) Death by fire as penalty (Lev.20.14,21.9) ; cremation (Jos.7.25). Sabbath law : no fire to be kindled (Ex. 35. 3). [h.h.] Fipe-pan (niahtd). The word thus ren- dered in A.V. is used in reference to t hree differ- ent articles. In Ex. 25.38,37. 23, Num. 4.9, it means " a snuff-holder." It was of gold, and belonged to the tabernacle furniture. It was used for putting out the lights on the golden candlesticks. A more appropriate word for it would be "extinguisher." The root means '■' to snatch up," as it seemed to do with the flame. Secondly, it was "a fire-pan" in the proper sense, and belonged to the altar of burnt-offerings, being used for the purpose of carrying glowing cinders, and putting them iti the censers for burning incense. In Ex. 27. 3, 38-3 it is spoken of as Brass ; in iK.9.50, 2K. 25.15 (cf. Je. 52.19), as of gold. Lastly, it means " a censer," of bronze, according to Lev. 10.1,16.12 ; Num. 16. 6,17,18, 17.2-4. [w.o.e.o.] Fipkin. [Weights and Measures.] Fipmament. The Heb. term rdqia', so translated, is generally regarded as expressive of simple expansion, and is so rendered in A.V. marg. (Gen. 1.6). The root means to expand by beating, whether by the hand, the foot, or any instrument. It is especially used of beating out metals into thin plates (Ex.39. 3 ; Num.16. 39). The sense of so/?rfi7y, therefore, is combined with the ideas of expansion and tenuity in the term. The same idea of solidity runs througl; 284 FIRSTBORN all the references to the rciqm'. In Ex.24.io it is represented as a solid floor, and in Ezk.l. 22-26 the " firmament " is the floor on which the throne of the Most High is placed. Further, the office of the rdqia' in the economy of the world demanded strength and substance. It was to serve as a division between the waters above and the waters below (Gen.l.7). In keeping with this view the rdqia' was provided witli "windows" (Gen. 7. 11 ; Is. 24. 18 ; Mai. 3. 10) and " doors " (Ps.78.23), through which the rain and the snow might descend. A secondary purpose which the rdqta' served was to support the heavenly bodies, sun, moon, and stars (Gen. 1.14), in whichtheywere fixed, and fromwhich, consequently, they might be said to drop off (Is.14.12,34.4 ; Mt. 24.29). In all these particu- lars we recognize the same view as was enter- tained by the Greeks and, to a certain extent, by the Latins. If it be objected to the Mosaic account that the view embodied in the word rdqia' does not harmonize with strict scien- tific truth, the answer is that the writer describes things in popular language. Fipstbopn. (i) In commemoration of the deliverance from Egypt, all firstborn human males were consecrated to God. Their re- demption was commanded at 5 shekels for every child that lived one month (Ex.l3.2,iiff., 22.29[28],34.20 ; Num.18. I5f.). In lieu of the living firstborn God took the Levites for His service, 5 shekels being paid for the redemp- tion of every firstborn male in excess of the then number of Levites (3. i2f., 41-51,8.16-18). (2) The sacrifice of firstborn appears to have been common in heathen cults (1K.I6.34 ; 2K. 3.27, etc.). For Israel, see Family, D, I (2). (3) On Deut.25.6. see Leviratk Law. (4) Laban said that in his home it was usual to marry a firstborn tlaughter before her younger sister (Gen. 29. 26). [Biuthright; Family.] [h.m.w.] In N.T. (i) Christ is the irpwrdroKO^ (Mt.l.25 [omitted in R.V., X. B] ; Lu.2.7 ; see also vv. 22,23). [BiRTiiKir.iiT. ] Exodus Rabba, xix. near the end, God is rejireseuted as saying that as He had made J acob to be firstborn, so would He make the King Messiah the firstborn, witli reference to Bs.89.27[28]. Christ is the First- born of all creation (Col. 1. 15) ; of the dead (ver. 18 ; Rev.l.5) ; of many brctiiren (R0.8. 29). (2) The church of the Firstborn (Heb. 12.23), perhaps with reference to the saints of O. and N.T., the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, and martyrs. [h.h.| Flpst-fpuits. Two Heb. words, r^shith (R.V. first-fruits) and biqqilrim (R.V. first- fruits, first-ripe fruits), must be distinguished, (i) rishith denotes " first," connotes "best" (Num. 18.12 ; iSam.l5.2i). Ex. 22.2o[28] en- acts that " thy fulness and thy tear thou Shalt not delay " (R.V. " thou shalt not delay to offer of the abundance of thy fruits, and of thy liquors "). This is very wide, and we meet with rdshith of oil, wine, corn, wool, fruits of ground (Num.18. 12 ; Dent. 18. 4, 26. 2-10), honey, and leaven (not meal-olTerings) (Lev. 2. 11,12; cf. 2Chr.31.5) — all individual offerings. Each peasant presented a basket of " all the fruit of the ground " at the temple and offered a prayer (Deut.26.i-io). An ofTering (appar- ently national) of rfskUh of dough (? meal) is also commanded {Num. 15. 17-21). A sheaf FIRSTLINGS (? omer) of rcshith of corn was waved on " the morrow after the sabbath," probably Nisan 16 (national offering). Bread, parched corn, and fresh ears might not be eaten till then (Lev. 23. 9-14). rcshith fell to the priest (Num. 18.12 ; Deut.18.4). (2) In legislation biq- qurim is apparently limited to things sown, especially wheat (Ex. 23. 16, 19, 34. 22, 26 ; Lev. 2. 14,23.20). Individual offerings, consisting of meal-offerings of biqqiirim in the ear parched with fire and bruised, were brought to God's houseon theFeastof Weeks (Ex. 23. 16, 19,34.22, 26; Lev.2.i4-i6),7weeksafterthenationaloffer- ing of rishtth of corn. They fell to the priest, except a " memorial," which was burnt (Lev. 2; Num. 18. 13). Two loaves of biqqilrim were also waved then (Lev. 23. 16-20) as a national offering. In non-legal passages the word is used of grapes, figs, etc. (3) Nehemiah arranged that both biqqilrim and rishtth should be brought, and biqqilrim is plainly applied to the fruit of every tree as well as to the fruit of the ground (Ne.l0.35[36],37[38]). The offering of reshith of dough (? meal) was interpreted by him as individual (Ne.lO.37 [38]). Bibliotheca Sacra, Jan. 1908, pp. 122, 123 ; illustrations of the laws in Frazer, Golden Bough (2nd ed.), ii. 3231?., 459 fi. ; other views in Gray, Numbers, 225 ff. [h.m.w.] In N.T. the term is applied to persons, the first in order of time to accept the Gospel, who were thus the earnest of a harvest to follow— r.,?. those (of Israel, probably) who believed in Christ, and who were a kind of " firstfruit " of the entire nation (Ro.ll.i6ff., perhaps alluding to Num.l5.20,2i) : Epaenetus (R0.I6.5), the house of Stephanus(iCor.l6.i5), the brethren (Jas.l.18), the 144,000 redeemed (Rev. 14. 4). It also applied to Christ (iCor.15. 20,23), as the " firstfruits" of the Resurrection, and the Holy Spirit (Ro.8.23),to possess Whom is an earnest of the future inheritance, [n.n.] Fipstling's. In commemoration of the de- liverance from Egypt through the slaying of the firstborn, all firstlings were holy — i.e. were to be withdrawn from ordinary use for sacred purpf)scs, usually Sacrifice (Num. 3. 13). Un- blemished clean animals were to lie brought to the temple on the Passover and sacrificed. The flesh was eaten by the Israelite and his dependants, after giving the priest a t'nJwa (Heave-offering, contribution), consisting pro- bably of one or more of the animals (Ex. 13.2,11-16,34.19; Deut. 14.23. 15.19-22 ; Num. 5.9,10,18.15-18). The sacrifice could only be performed after the seventh day from birth (Ex.22.3o[29]. where translate " thou mayest give" for R.V., "thou shalt"). Blemished clean animals were to be eaten locally without sacrifice (Deut. 15. 21-23). The Israelite was to redeem the firstling of an ass with a kid or iamb, or alternatively to break its neck (l'-x.l3. 13.34.20). For rules as to the redemption of other unclean animals, see Lev. 27. 27; Num.18. 15,16 (with Gray ad loc). Nehemiah ap- parently arranged that all firstlings of clean animals should be brought to the priests (Ne.lO. 3''f37])- [FiKsruoHN ; Prikst.] Churchman, July 1906, 426-430, Sept. 1906, 554. 555; Van Hoonacker, Lieu du Culte, 10. Other views in Driver, Deut. 185-187; Van Hoonacker, Sacerdoce Uvitiqiie, 401-406. [h.m.w.] PISH, S-iSHING Fish, Fishing'* The ancient Hebrews recognized fishes as forming one of the great divisions of the animal kingdom, and, as such, gave them a place in the account of the creation (Gen. 1.21,28), as well as in other passages where a description of living creatures is intended (Gen.9.2 ; Ex.20.4 ; Deut.4.i8 ; iK.4.33) ; and, what is very noteworthy, dis- tinguished them from whales. The Mosaic law (Lev.ll.9,10) pronounced unclean such fish as are devoid of fins of the ordinary type and visible scales : these are still regarded as unwholesome in Egypt. Of the various kinds found in the sea of Galilee, the cat- fishes (Siluridae), typified by the great Silurus giants of the rivers of Europe, were classed among the unclean ; as were also skates, sharks, lampreys, and, subsequently, eels. The Hebrews were well aware of the fecundity of fishes. The abundance of fishes in the Nile and the lakes and canals rendered them one of the staple commodities of food (Num.11. 5) ; and the destruction of fish was thus a serious visitation to the Egyptians (Ex. 7. 21 ; Is. 19. 8). In Palestine the sea of Galilee abounds with fish, and the value attached to the fishery by the Jews is shown by the traditional belief that one of the 10 laws of Joshua enacted that it should be open to all comers. Jerusalem derived its supply chiefly from the Mediterranean (cf. Ezk.47.io). The existence of a regular fish-market is implied in the notice of the Fish Gate, which was probably contiguous (2Chr.33.14 ; Ne.3.3,12. 39 ; Zeph.l.io). Numerous allusions to fishing occur in the Bible. The usual method of catching fish was by the use of the net, either the casting net (Ezk.26.5,i4,47.io ; Hab.l.15), probably resembling the one used in Egypt, an illustration of which is shown in Wilkinson (iii. 55), or the draw or drag net (Is. 19. 8; Hab.1.15), which was larger and required the use of a boat. The latter type of net was probably most used on the sea of Galilee, where a large number of boats were kept. Angling was a favourite pursuit in Egypt. Another method was with the trident or spear, as practised in Egypt in taking the crocodile (Job 41.7). Any general account of the fishes of Palestine and the Nile is impossible within the limitations of our space. Nothing definite can be affirmed with regard to Tobit's fish, although Tristram suggests that it may have PLAJS 285 N l,A.\lJliN<_.-Nur. (Wilkinson.) been one of the cat -fishes (Siluridae), which'are common in the Tigris. A fish is used as the Christian symbol from the circumstance that the letters forming the Gr. name t'x'^tys make the initalsof 'iT/fToOs Xpiaros. BeoO iu6s, crcurijp (Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour). [r.l.] Fitches (i.e. vetches) represents in A.V. two Heb. words, kussemeth and qe^ah. As to the former, see Rie. qecah denotes, without doubt, Nigella sativa, an herbaceous annual plant belonging to the Ranunculaceae, which grows in the S. of Europe and in the N. of Africa. Fitch is given ficche and fetchis in Wyclif (Is.28.24-27). The plant here intended is known as fennel-flower, and the seeds are in use for flavouring cakes, curries, Bread, etc. It is native in these countries, but also cultivated. The dry capsule has to be broken to free the seeds. Pliny says (xix. 8) : " Now as for Gith or Nigella Romana, as it is an hearbe that groweth for the pastrie, to fit the baker's hand, so Anise and Dill are as appropriate to the kitchin forCookes." He ascribes (xx. 17) manycurative virtues to " the seed of Nigella." [h.c.h.] Flag represents in A.V. two Heb. words, (i) 'n/(«, a word, according to Jerome, of Egyp- tian origin, denoting " any green and coarse herbage, such as rushes and reeds, which grows in marshy places." The word occurs in Job 8. II, and again in Gen. 41. 2, 18, where it is said that the seven well-favoured kine came up out of the river and fed on 'ahil. Royle and Kitto are inclined to think that the 'a/iw denotes the Cyperus esculentiis. (2) siiph occurs fre- quently in O.T. in connexion with ydtn, " sea," to denote the " Red Sea" (properly " the sea of reeds " or " sea- weeds "). " Aquatic weeds," or " sea-weeds," represent (i) and (2), but the attempt to limit the significations is unsatis- factory. Flag-on, thus two distinct Heb. terms are rendered in A.V. (i) 'dshishd (2Sam.6.i9; iChr.16.3 ; Can. 2. 5 ; Ho.3.i). The real mean- ing of this word is a cake of pressed raisins. (2) nebhel (Is. 22. 24 ; Lam. 4. 2) is commonly used for a bottle or vessel ; originally probably a skin, but later a piece of pottery (Is. 30. 14). Flax (Heb. pisJvtd or pish'te ; Egypt. pesht). Apart from references to the manu- factured article, either the thread, the piece, or the garment, we find two possible references to the plant : Ex. 9. 31, certain, and Jos. 2. 6, disputed. In the former the flax of the Egyptians is recorded to have been damaged by the plague of hail. It seems probable that the cultivation of flax for the manufacture of linen was not confined to Egypt ; but was in early times very widespread in Asia. That it was grown in Palestine even before the conquest of that country by the Israelites appears from J OS. 2. 6. The various processes em- ployed in preparing the flax for manu- facture into cloth are indicated : (i) The drying process, after the steeping has taken place (Is. 42. 3, 43. 17). (2) The peeling of the stalks, and separa- tion of the fibres (Jos. 2. 6). (3) The hackling (Is. 19. 9). In Is. 19. 3-10 there may be an intended connexion be- tween the drying up of rivers and 256 FLEA brooks and the loss of means to prepare the flax in the dams. That flax was anciently one of the most important crops in Palestine ap- pears from Ho. 2. 5, 9 — a fact that, in the opinion of Mr. H. C. Hart, points to desiccation in this region. Dr. Tristram states that flax had again been cultivated in the Jordan Valley in the last century for the Sultan. Flea, an insect twice only mentioned in Scripture (iSam.24.i4,26.2o). Fleas are abun- dant in the E., and provide the subject of many proverbial expressions. Flesh. [Food ; Meat.] Flint. The Heb. halldmish is rendered /Zi'ni in Deut. 8.15,32.13, 'Ps.114.8, and Is.50.7. In Job 28-9 rock in the text, and flint in marg. In Ezk.3.9 " flint " occurs in the same sense, but there represents the Heb. ror; cf. Ex. 4.25, where Zipporah uses a flint-knife (A.V. sharp stone). Flint, or chert, which is almost the same thing, is common in the limestones of Palestine. The Heb. halldmish has been com- pared with the Elmisu (rarely Elmiisii) of the monuments and with the " stone of fire " of the Bab. sign-lists. Flood. [Noah.] Floup. [Bread.] Flow/^eps. [Palestine.] Flowers (Lev. 15.24, 33). [Blood, Issue of.] Flute, one of the musical instruments used at the worship of Nebuchadnezzar's golden image (Dan.3.5ff.). Cf. also 1K.I.40 marg. [Pipe.] Flux, Bloody (Ac.28.8). Probably dysen- tery, which is extremely common in the East and generally extremely infectious. Wycliff reads " Feueres and Dissentere or flix " ; K.V. gives " dysentery." [f-J-] Fly, Flies. Two words are thus translated in A.V., z'bhiibh and 'drobh. The former occurs only in Ec.lO.i and Is. 7. 18, and is identical with the Arab, dhibbdneh ( x^dhabab ; Arab. dh = Heb. 2). The Heb. word was used in a general sense. The 2nd term, 'drobh ("swarms of fltes," "divers sorts of flies, "A.V.), is em- ployed for the insect or insects sent to punish Pharaoh (Ex.8.21-31 ; Ps.78.45.105.3i)- As these 'arofc^ are stated tohaveftlledthehouses of the Egyptians, it seems probable that the com- mon house-fly, which is a terrible pest in Egypt, is specially intended, the identification with the cockroach being gratuitous. [Cf. I'lagues.] That the z'bhubh were also most pernicious is testified by the cult of the Phoenician Baalzebub (the lord of flies), who was probably invoked for protection against these insects, [r.l.] Food. The diet of Eastern nations has been in all ages light and simple. The chief points of contrast with Western habits are the small amount of animal food consumed, the variety of articles eaten with bread, and the substitution of milk in various forms for our liquors. The chief point of agreement is the large consumption of bread, the imjiortance of which in the eyes of the Heb. is testified by the use of the term lehem (originally food of any kind) specifically for bread, as well as by the expression " staff of bread " (Lev. 26. 26 ; Ps.l05.i6; Ezk.4.if),14.i3). Simpler prepara- tions of corn were, however, common ; some- times the fresh green cars were eaten in a natural state, the husks being rubbed off by Foob the hand (Lev.23.i4 : Deut.23.25 ; 2K.4.42 ; Mt.l2.i ; Lu.6.r) ; more frequently, however, the grains, after bping carefully picked, were roasted in a pan over a fire (Lev. 2. 14), and eaten as " parched corn," in which form they were an ordinary article of diet, particularly among labourers, or others who had not the means of dressing food (Lev. 23. 14 ; Ru.2.14 ; iSam.17. 17,25.18 ; 2Sam.i7.28) : this prac- tice is still very usual in the East. Sometimes the grain was bruised (A.V. beaten, Lev. 2. 14, 16), and then dried in the sun ; it was eaten either mixed with oil (2.15), or made into a soft cake (A.V. dough ; Num. 15. 20 ; Ne. 10.37 ; Ezk.44.30). Salt was often used with bread (Job 6.6). Sometimes the bread was dipped into the sour wine (A.V. vinegar) which the labourers drank (Ru.2.14) ; or, where meat was eaten, into the gravy, which was either served up separately for the pur- pose, as by Gideon (Judg.6.19), or placed in the middle of the meat-dish, as is done by the Arabs. Milk and its preparations hold a con- spicuous place in Eastern diet. Fruit was another source of subsistence : figs stand first in point of importance ; they were generally dried and pressed into cakes. Grapes were also eaten in a dried state as raisins. Of vegetables we have most frequent notice of lentils (Gen. 25. 34 ; 2Sam.l7.28,23.ii ; Ezk. 4.9), which are still largely used by the Bedouin; beans (2Sam.i7.28; Ezk. 4. 9), leeks, onions, and garlick, which were and still are of a superior quality in Egypt (Num. 11. 5). Of vegetables, radishes and leeks are most in use, and are eaten raw with bread. [Agri- cuLTiTRE.] The spices or condiments known to the Hebrews were numerous. Another important article of food is honey, whether the natural product of the bee (1Sam.i4.25 ; Mt.3.4), which is found in Syria, or the other natural and artificial productions included under that head; especially the dibs of the Syrians and Arabians, i.e. grape-juice boiled down, which is still extensively used in the East. Oil was also much used. Eggs are not often noticed, but were evidcntlv known as articles of food (Job6.6; Is.lO.14, 59.5 ; Lu.ll.12). The Orientals have been at all times sparing in the use of animal food : not only does the excessive heat of the climate render it both unwholesome to eat much meat, and ex- pensive from the necessity of immediately consuming a whole animal, but beyond this the ritual regulations of the Mosaic law in ancient, as of the Koran in modern times, have tended to the same result. All beasts and birds classed as unclean (Lev. 11. iff. ; Deut.l4. 4ff.) were jirohibited. With these exceptions, the Hebrews were permitted the free use of animal food ; but, generally speaking, only availed themselves of it in the exercise of hospi- talitv (Gen. 18. 7). or at festivals of a religious (l':x.'l2.H), jmblic (1K.I.9; 1Chr.i2.40), or private character (Gen. 27. 4 ; Lu.i5.23) : only in royal households was there a daily consump- tion of meat (iK.4.23; Ne.5.i8).' The ani- mals killed for meat were — calves (Gen. 18. 7 ; iSam.28.24 : .Am. 6. 4); lambs (2Sam.l2.4 ; Am. 6. 4) ; oxen, not above three vears of age (iK.1.9; Pr.i5.17; Is.22.13; Mt!22.4): kids (Gen. 27. 9: Judg.6.19; 1Sa1n.l6.20); gazelles, FOOTMAN foe, and fallow-deer (iK.4.23) ; birds of various kinds ; fish, except those without scales and fins (Lev. 11. 9 ; Deut.14.9). Lo- custs, of which certain species only were es- teemed clean (Lev. 11. 22), were occasionally eaten (Mt.3.4), but considered poor fare. Meat does not appear ever to have been eaten by itself ; various accompaniments are noticed in Scripture, as bread, milk, and sour milk (Gen. 18.8); bread and broth (Judg.6.19) ; with fish, either bread (Mt. 14. 19, 15. 36 ; Jn.21.9) or a honeycomb (Lu.24.42). Of beverages, milk, barley-water, and a mixture, resembling the modern sherbet formed of fig-cake and water [Husks], were probably used, but water was most generally drunk. The Hebrews were also acquainted with various intoxicating liquors. [Drink, Strong.] Footman, a word employed in A.V. in two senses, (i) Heb. ragh'-li, to distinguish the people or the fighting-men who went on foot from those on horseback or in chariots. (2) Heb. ruftm (footmen in iSam.22.i7 only), used of a body of swift runners [Posts] in attend- ance on the king, such as had been foretold by Samuel (iSam.8.11). This body appears to have been afterwards kept up, and to have been distinct from the body-guard — the six hundred and the thirty — who were originated by David. See iK. 14.27,28; 2Chr.l2.io,ii ; 2K. 11. 4, 6, II, 13, 19; A.V. guard: in two in- stances runners in the margin (iK.14.27; 2K.II.13). [Cherethites ; Guard.] Forehead. An especial force is given to the term " hard of forehead " as descriptive of audacity in general (Ezk.3.7,8,9). It was the custom among many Oriental nations both to colour the face and forehead, and to impress on the body marks indicative of devotion to some special deity or religious sect. The " jewels for the forehead," mentioned by Ezekiel (16. 12), and in margin of A.V. (Gen. 24. 22), refer to fringes of little metal discs. Fopeignep. The word most usually rendered "stranger" in the Bible is the Heb. ger, denoting the alien who accepts the hos- pitality of a Hebrew family. An equivalent in the LXX. is TrpoayfKvTos, though the ger was not a proselyte in the usually accepted sense of the word, i.e. a Gentile who from conviction embraced Judaism. [Stranger; Proselyte.] The present article will deal with the Heb. words hen-nekher or nokhrl and zdr, the real equivalents of our word " foreigner," though usually translated " stranger." The main dif- ference between the stranger [gcr) and the foreigner (nekher) is that the former had legal rights and a status in Israel, whereas the latter had not. In all ancient nations the attitude towards the foreigner was one of hostility ; and the Israelite was always encouraged to regard himself as separated from other nations. Nevertheless, he was necessarily brought into friendly relations with foreigners under the following circumstances : (i) Incorporation. The family of Abraham contained honoured members who were not akin to him (Gen. 15. 2); the Israelites at the Exodus were accom- panied by a " mixed multitude " (Ex. 12. 38) ; the race of Hobab were allowed to share in the future benefits of God's people (Num.lO.29 : Judg.l.i6) ; Rahab became a dweller in Israel fOREIGNEB, 287 (jos.6.25), and many non-Israelite clans, like the Calebites (15. 13) and the Jerahmeelites (iSam. 27.10) [Caleb], entered the common- wealth of Israel. (2) Hospitality was always highly prized as a virtue in the East, and the Israelite felt boxmd to extend this, not merely to his own people and to the ger (or foreigner) who joined his family, but also to the traveller who chanced to enter his city (Gen. 19. 2). Is- raelites accepted the hospitality of strangers (Ru.l.i ; iSam.27.i). (3) Matrimonial Alli- ance with foreigners was discouraged, and even in patriarchal times great importance was laid on purity of blood (Gen. 24. 3, 26. 34, 35). Never- theless marriage with foreigners was not un- usual, nor does it seem to have been severely reprobated, even if illegal, at any rate till after the Exile (Ezr.lO, passim; Ne.i3.23). [Mixed Marriages.] (4.) Warlike Alliances. The Israel- ites entered into frequent alliances offensive and defensive, and these seem to have been re- garded at the time with no disfavour, though condemned by the rigorists of a later period. Examples of such alliances are Abraham and the Hebronites (Gen. 14), David and Nahash of Ammon(2Sam.l0.2), and Asa and Benhadad (iK. 15.18,19, but see 2Chr.l6.1-6), etc. The foreign policy of Hezekiah, and his alliances with Egypt (Is.31) and Babylon (2K.2O ; Is. 39), were condemned by the prophets of the 7th cent. [Alliances.] (5) Trade and Commerce. The matrimonial alliance with Shechem (Gen.34.2i) was recommended as advantageous from a commercial standpoint, and David, Solomon, and Ahab all made alliances with the Phoenicians (iK. 5. 1,16.31). The close friendship between Judah and the distant city of Hamath may have had a com- mercial basis (2Sam.8.io ; 2K.I4.28). [Com- merce.] (6) Royal Policy. The kings of the house of David seem to have adhered to his policy of employing foreign mercenaries. In addition to the Cherethites and Pelethites, David had Hittites (2Sam.ll), natives of Gath (2Sam.i5.19), and even Ethiopians (2Sam.l8. 21), in his service. Shebna, the minister of Hezekiah, has been supposed to bear a foreign name (Is.22.i5,37.2). (7) Misfortune. Israel- ites had to take refuge among foreigners under various distressing circumstances. In days of famine (Gen. 12 ; Ru.l), as exiles (iSam.27), under stress of invasion (Je.40.ii, 43). The aUenation of Israel from foreigners was encouraged as their religious sense of separation developed : (a) In the Deuteronomic legislation, in which the command to massacre the Canaanites on the entrance into the land is emphasized, though the laws of war incul- cated for the time are distinguished for a certain humanity (Deut.20.io ff.), the belief that the Israelites ought to have annihilated all the idolatrous inhabitants of their country undoubtedly helped to increase their preju- dices against all foreigners, (b) In the Exilic and post-Exilic period the necessity of preserv- ing their nationality, religion, and language (Ne.13.24) naturally made the Jews more ex- clusive than ever, though they still kept up friendly relations with aliens (Ne.13.5,28). Under Gk. influences the priests especially showed a desire to conform to Hellenic cus- toms (2Mac.4.i4), and the intense horror of 288 I'OitESI? Hellenism was only engendered after the per- secution by Antiochus Epiphanes. [Hellen- ist.] The strict Palestinian Jews of our Lord's time refused to have any social inter- course with the lieathen (Ac. 10), and the de- struction of Jerusalem (70 a.d.) and the war in the days of Hadrian (i 17-138 a.d.) completed the severance between the Jew and the rest of mankind, which was aggravated by the mu- tual antagonism of Jews and Christians in later times. [f.j.f.-j.] Fopest. The A.V. so renders 3 Heb. words, (i) ya'i'ird, the " tangled" copse (Arab, wa'r) wliich covers the W. ridges in Palestine. It is used for "forest," or "wood," in 52 passages in O.T., including the woods of Hareth, Carmel, Ephraim, and Lebanon (iK. 7. 2, 10. 17, 21 ; 2 Chr.9.16,20); but in iSam.14.25,26 the right rendering is clearly "came to a honeycomb" (see ver. 27, and Can.S.i). (2) horesh; this word is doubtful. It appears to" refer to a shady wood (Ezk.31.3) like the Lebanon cedar forest ; but the horesh of Ziph (iSam. 23.15- 19) may be the present ruin Khoreisah near Ziph, and it is doubtful if forts would have been built in woods (2Chr.27.4). The word is only elsewhere found in Is. 17. 9 (R.V. woods). (i)pardes, a "Paradise" (A.V. Ne.2.8, forest), otherwise "orchard" (A.V. Ec.2.5; Can. 4. 13). The word only occurs in these passages. The Greeks took it from the Persians {pairidaeza ; Arab, ferdiis), who used it for a "park." It has, however, no Persian etymology, and may be a borrowed word in Persian also. [c.r.c] Fortifications. [Cities; Encampment; Jerusalem; War.] Foptunatus, one of three Corinthians at Ephesus, whenSt. Paul wrote iCor. (16. 17)- See Lightfoot, Clem, of Rome, ii. p. 187. [e.r.b.] Fountain. The A.V. so renders (in some passages) four Heb. words, three of which refer to natural waters, and the fourth to a well or cistern. In the sense of a supply by a water-pipe it never occurs, since even the Romans did not understand that water in a pipe rises almost to the level of its source. ( i ) 'avm (Heb. and Arab.), "a spring" [Well], is rendered " fountain " in Gen. 16. 7 ; Num.33. 9 ; Deut.33.28 (probably "eye"); iSam.29.i ; 2Chr.32.3 ; Ne.2.14,3.15 ; Pr.8.28. It should be noted that Rebekah met Abraham's servant at a " spring " with steps. Springs are some- times in caves, or have steps to the water, in the East. (2) ma'ydn, a group of springs, is rendered "fountain" in Gen. 7. 11, 8. 2 ; Lev. 11.36 ; Jos. 15. 9 (Neputoah, rendered " well " of the same springs in 18. 15) ; 1K.I8.5 (2K.3. 19,25. " wells") ; 2Chr.32..t ; Ps.74.i5. 114.8 (" well " in 84.6, " springs " in 87.7.104. 10) ; Pr.5. 16,8.24,25.26 ; Can.4.12,15 ; Is. 41. 18 ("wells" in I2.3) ; H0.I3.15 ; J1.3.i8. In Can. 4.12 it is equivalent to gal, " spring." (3) mdqor, a " source " (see Lev. 20. 18), occurs 14 times, and is rendered " fountain," except in Lev. 12.7 "issue"; Pr.lO.ii "well," I6.22 "well spring," 25.26 " spring " ; Je.5i.36 " springs." (4) bor, "pit" [Cistern], is rendered "foun- tain " in Je.6.7 (k'thibh. bor). [c.r.c.] Fowl. Several distinct Hob. and Gk. words are thus rendered in A.V., of which tlie most common is 'ci/'/i, usually a collective term for birds in general. In i K.4.23, among the daily provisions for Solomon's table, " fatted fowl " are included. In N.T. the word trans- lated " fowls " is most frequently the one which comprehends all kindsof birds (including ravens, Lu.i2.24). [Sparrow.] Fowlep. [Hunting; Net.] Fox (Heb. shu'al). In most of the passages in O.T. where shu'al occurs there is little doubt from the context that it indicates the jackal, although in other instances it may refer to the fox. The word shii'dl is, in fact, clearly identical with the Hindustani shial and the Persian shual, both of which refer exclusively to the jackal. Despite the fact that there is the Heb. 'iyyUn specially denoting jackals, it seems probable that the ancient Jews, like the modern Syrians, frequently used one term for both jackals and foxes, although well aware of the distinction between the two. Th&shii'alim of Judg.15.4 are certainly jackals, as foxes are not gregarious ; and probably the same holds good in Can. 2. 15. On the other hand, the aXGiiry)^ of N.T. (Mt.8.20) is rightly rendered " fox." In some instances " dragon " (tannin) apparently also denotes the jackal. [Dragon.] Jackals are taller and shorter-tailed animals than foxes, and dwell, often in holes, among ruins and deserted buildings, and hunt in packs at night. The Indian jackal (Canis aureus) is the species occurring in Palestine and Syria ; but in Egypt it is replaced by the larger and more wolf-likeEgyptian jackal (C. lupaster), and in Algeria and Morocco by the N. African jackal (C. anthus). The fox is represented by a variety of the European species known as the Egyptian fox (Vulpes alopex niloticus). [r.l.] Fpankincense (Heb. Vbhond, Gk. Xt/iavos), a vegetable resin, brittle, glittering, and of a bitter taste, used for the purpose of sacrificial fumigation (Ex.30.34-36). It is obtained by successive incisions in the bark of a tree called the arbor thuris, the first of which yields the purest and whitest kind ; while the produce of after-incisions is spotted with yellow, and even- tually loses its whiteness altogether. The He- brews imported their frankincense from Arabia (Is.60.6 ; Je.6.20), more particularly from Saba ; but at present the .\rabian Libanuna, or Olibanum, is a very inferior kind, and the finest frankincense imported into Turkey comes through Arabia from the Indian .A-rchipelago. There can be little doubt that the tree which produces the Indian frankincense is the Bos- wellia serrata of Roxburgh, or Boswellia Ihuri- fera of Colebrooke. It is still uncertain what tree produces the .Arabian Olibanum. The Boswellias are natives of India, Arabia, and the Somali country. Several of them produce Oliba- imm or frankincense, but especial lyB.//n(ri'/^ra, a tall tree native in W. India. They belong to the Mvrrh family (.Amarydaceae). [h.c.h.] Fpeedom (.Acts 22.28). [Citizenship.] Fpeewill. [Predestination.] Fpeewlll oirepingr. [Sacrifice, 3, ii. c] Fplng'es. [Dress ; Hem of Garment.] Fpog'. riic mention of this b.itrachian in O.T. is (oiitiniil to i;x.8.2-7, etc., in which the plagu(' of frogs is described, and to l's.78.45, 105.30. In N.T. the word occurs once only (Rev. 16. 13). The only species of trvie frog inhabiting l'"Kyi'l istii<-c(libl(! lvi->p,(Ratut csculcnta). widely ilistributed in Jiurope,.\sia,and N.Africa, [r.l.] FRONTLETS Fpontlets, or Phylacteries, strips of parchment, on which is written (in Heb. square characters) Ex.l3.i-io ; jb. 11-16 ; Deut. 6.4-9 ; 11-13-21, enclosed in square black FUTURE LIFE, THE 289 FRONTLET, OR PHYLACTERY. leather boxes of varying size, to which long leather thongs are attached. The custom had its origin in a literal interpretation of Ex.13. 9,16 ; Deut. 6.8,11. 18. The phylactery worn on the forehead has four divisions, with a strip of parchment in each ; and on each strip is written one of the above passages. The straps en- circle the head, are looped behind, and the ends brought forward over the shoulders. The one for the hand is bound under the upper part of the left arm, so as to be over the heart (Deut. 11.18), the strap carried seven times round the arm and three times round the middle finger. This has only one compartment, jmd one piece of parchment, on which the above passages are written in four columns. The phylacteries were in use in the 3rd cent, b.c, and are referred to by Josephus, 4 Ant. viii. 13. The Gk. term (pvXaKTTjpia occurs only in Mt.23.5 in Biblical times. The Heh. totdphoth {"haLiids" originally perhaps a mark in the flesh, a tattoo) is rendered aadXevTov (something immovable, enduring) in the LXX., and fphillin (prayer fillets) or totdphofh in the Targums ; i''phillin is the term used in Jewish literature. '^vXaKrripLov = amulet, Plut. de Is. ei Osir. 65, 68 ; Horapoll. I, 24. The use of this term in N.T. may indicate that the phylacteries were regarded as a protection against evil [Amulets] ; but the fact that the word is not found in Rabbin, literature, and that the Heb. terms do not convey this meaning, is against the infer- ence. The phylacteries, by reminding the wearer of the divine law, serve as a protection against sin (Friedlander, Jewish Religion, p. 337). The Samaritans did not use them, nor do the Karaites, who interpret the Mosaic injunctions in a fig. sense. The phylacteries were originally worn all day, but during the Dispersion at morning prayer only, and not at all on sabbath or festival. They are worn by all males after the 13th birthday. The only ref. in the N.T. is Mt.23.5, where our Lord de- nounces the Pharisaic ostentation of making " broad," or large, the phylactery as a sign 01 superior piety or stricter observance of the law. Maimoiiides, Yad, Tefillin, i.-iv. (Amster- dam ed. 1702), vol. i. pp. 84-92 ; Hamburger, Real-ency. Judentums, ii., art. "Tefillin" ; G. Klein, Totafoth nach Bibel und Tradition, in Jahrb. (iir Prot. Theol. (1881) ; M. L. Rodkin- son. Hist, of Amulets, Charms, and Talismans (1893) ; Dembitz, Jewish Services in Synag. and Home, pp. 313-317- [h.h.] Fuller. [Handicrafts, (10).] Fuller's field (2K.I8.17 ; Is.7.3.36.2), near the wall of Jerusalem on W. (see 2K.ISI. 26), and by a high road (ver. 17). [Conduit.] Funerals. [Burial.] Furlong-. [Weights and Measures.] Furnace. Various kinds of furnaces are noticed in the Bible, (i) tannur is so trans- lated in A.V. in Gen.l5.i7 ; Ne.3.11,12.38 ; Is.31.9. Generally the word applies to the baker's oven ; it was made of clay. Judging from those now used by the Fellahin of Pales- tine. [Bread.] (2) kibhshdn, a smelting or calcining furnace (Gen.19.28 ; Ex.9.8,io,19. 18), especially a lime-kiln (Is.33.i2 ; Am.2.i). (3) Mr, a refining fturnace (Pr.l7.3,27.2i ; Ezk.22.i8ff.). (4) 'attun, a large furnace built like a brick-kiln (Dan.3.22,23). The Persians used the furnace as a means of inflicting capital punishment (Dan. I.e.; Je.29.22; 2Mac.7.5 ; THE EGYPTIAN POTTER'S FURNACE. (Wilkinson.) Ho.7.7). (5) The potter's furnace (Ecclus.27. 5,38.30). (6) The blacksmith's furnace (38.8). Future life. The. (i) In O.T. From the earliest times we find amongst the people of Israel the belief in an existence after death. But this existence was regarded as so shadowy and wretched, in comparison with earthly life, that they never gave to it the name of " life," which meant to them " happiness." The home of the dead was sh^'ol, a land of dust (symbol of barren, dreary chaos) and darkness, in the centre of the earth (often called " the pit," or " the dust "). There the r''ph£im (weak ones, ghosts), as the dead were called, dragged out a weary existence unremembered of God (Ps.88. 5), and without remembrance of Him (6.5) ; without any care for their family left behind on earth, or for any of their past interests (Ec. 9.5,6). This is the fate of all men alike : there is no Judgment to discriminate between men after death. It may seem strange that no direct revelation was made by God to His prophets to put in place of this gloomy doctrine some 19 290 FUTURE LIFE, THE more comforting knowledge. But God had His purpose. The darkness as to the judg- ment beyond the grave, and the " glory that shall be revealed " for the good, was a very sore trial indeed to the sufferer; but in a Job and a Jeremiah it was the means of creating some of the most glorious fruits of faith that have ever enriched mankind. Once or twice Job {e.g. 14.13-15, 19.25-27: study these in a comm. — Delitzsch, or Davidson, or Gibson) stumbles on the threshold of the truth ; in two or three passages the Psalmists (esp. Ps.16.8-ii, 17. 15, 49.14, 15. 73.23-26 ; see Kirk- patrick, Psalms) actually declare (though perhaps without realizing the full meaning of their words) their conviction that the relation between the saint and God will go on " for ever." But these are not revelations : they are the fruit of lofty spiritual intuition. Many other truths, however,' which were revealed through the prophets, led the Jews at last to perceive that the doctrine of Sheol could not be altogether true. Thus, e.g., Ara.9.2 (c/. Job 26.6 ; Ps.139.8) declares God's presence and power in Sheol. The prophets taught also the restoration of Israel from captivity under the figure of a resurrection of dead Israelites (Ezk. 37), and so familiarized men with the idea of a personal resurrection. This truth is also hinted at in Is.26.19; and openly stated in l)an.l2.2, where two classes are said to rise again — the very good to glory and the very evil to shame and contempt. This marks the climax of O.T. ideas. [Soul.] (2) In N.T. Practically nothing is told us about the state of the departed between their death and the last judgment. They are " absent from the body " (2Cor.5. 8), and the good are "with Christ" [tb. ; also Ph. 1.23) "in paradise" (Lu.23.43), "at rest " (Rev. 6. II, 14.13) ; the wicked are " kept under punishment " (2Pe.2.9 ; c/.2.4,3.7 ; Ju.6). Uives in the parable is " in torments " (Lu.l6. 23), but the reference to the intermediate state IS uncertain. The word "sleep," therefore, as used of death, does not signify "unconscious- ness." I Pe. 3. 19,4.6 may possibly imply that there is progress after death, and i("or.3.i3-i5 may refer to a purification by suffering; but the meaning of both these passages is highly uncertain. There is no trace in the Bible of the idea that those who are condemned because of their earthly life will have a second probation after death : the only possible exception is (according to one line of interpretation) iPe.3. 19,20. In 2Tim.l.i8 we have almost certainly an instance of prayer for the departed. Rev. 6. II and Heb.l2.i probably suggest that the dead have some knowledge of what is happen- ing on earth. The events of the last day are (i) the resurrection ; (ii) the judgment ; (iii) the end of time and the revelation of the eternal life, with heaven for the saved and hell {ge- henna) for tlio damned. The resurrection of the last day is the rising again of the body (contrasted with the spiritual resurrection which takes place with a man's conversion from spiritual death to life; see J n. 5.25-20. R0.8.13. Kph.2.6, Col. 2. 12 refer to the pre- sent si)iritual, 1C0r.i5.23, PI1.3.11, iTh.4.i5. 16 to the future bodily, resurrection). This bodilv resurrection awaits all men — good and bad ('jn.5.29 ; Ac.24.i5 ; Rev.2O.13). In the GABDES resurrection of the just, the body will be changed from its earthly state of humiliation to a glorious body, like that of the risen Lord (iCor.l5. 35-49 ; Ph. 3. 21). For the last judgment, see Coming of Christ; for the state of the saved, see Heaven ; and for the punishment of the lost, see Gehenna; Hell. This punishment is described as eternal (aidifios, Mt.25.46), a word used of time which has a beginning, but never of time which has an ending ; it might be translated " end- less." The idea of a temporary hell, and the ultimate salvation of all men (Universalism) is not found in the Bible. It is God's will that all men should be saved (iTim.2.4) ; hut it does not follow that all men will accept the offer of salvation : there is " sin which hath never forgiveness." The idea that the damned will ultimately cease to exist (Annihilationism) rests upon a misunderstanding of the associa- tion connected with the words death, destruc- tion, etc., as used in the Bible of the punish- ment of the wicked. These words imply utter ruin — the loss of all that makes life worth living ; but they do not involve the idea of a cessation of existence. [Death.] The Bible never seems to contemplate the death of the soul in this latter sense. Salmond, I mtnortality ; Agar Beet, Last Things ; Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), art. " Eschatology." [s.c.G.] Gaal (Judg.9.26-41), son of Ebed(a slave), a freebooter, who attempted to supplant Abimelech at Shechem. His appeal to Canaanite tradition indicates that he was not an Israelite. A braggart over his wine, he was disconcerted by Abimelech's sudden appear- ance, but forced to fight by Zebul's taunts. After his defeat, Zebul drove him out of Shechem. Ver. 33 {cf. 36) is illustrated by the remark of Stanley (S. and P. pp. 234 f.) that in the valley of Shechem " the exhalations re- main hovering among the branches and leaves of the olive trees, and hence that lovely bluish haze." [h.m.s.] Oa'ash, a "hill" (properly " mountain" — hdr), S. of Timnatii-heres (Jos.24.30). The name has not been recovered. [c.r.c] Oaba' (A.V. Jos.l8.24; Ezr.2.26; Ne.7.30): R.V. Geba). [Gibeah.] Gab'ael. — 1. An ancestor of Tobit (Tob. l.i). — 2. A poor Jew (Tob. 1. 17. Vulg.) of " Rages in Media," to whom Tobias lent 10 talents of silver (Tob. 1.14, 4. 1, 20,5. 6, 9. 1, 5, 10.2). Oab'atha (Est.Apoc.l2.i) = Bigthan. Gabbai', the head of an important family of Benjamin resident at Jerusalem (Ne.11.8). Gab batha is given as the Heb. or Aramaic name {raifsed up) of the " Pave- ment," where the judgment-seat or bema was planted, from which Pilate delivered our Lord to death (Jn.i9.13). The place was outside the praetorium, for Pilate brought Jesus forth from thence to it. Apparently a public place just outside the tower Antonia, and raised above the street, is intended. [c.r.c] ■ Gab'des (iEsd.5.2o) =Gaba (Ezr.2.26). &ABB,IAS Gabpias, the " brother " (Tob.l.14) of Gabael, Tobit's creditor, though E.V. in 4.2o makes Gabael the " son " of Gabrias ; but the Gk. allows of either (cf. Ac.l.13 with Ju.i). Gabpiel', " man of El," or " hero of God." In O.T., Dan.8.i6,9.2i only, not in Apocrypha, but in Pseudepigrapha. Often inEth. Enoch, e.g., he "is over Paradise and the serpents [? seraphim] and the cherubim " (xx. 7) ; intercedes for those who dwell on earth (xl. 6), and probably in Asc. Is. iii. 16, xi. 4. He is still invoked in the evening prayer of the Jews. In N.T., Lu.l. 19,26 only (to Zachariah and to Mary). He represents angelic ministry to man, as Michael represents angehc opposition to Satan. For Jewish and Arabian legends, see Jew. Encycl. s.v. ; cf. Lueken, Michael, pp. 32 ff., 55 f.. Ill ff. [a.l.w.] Gad (LXX. dai/j.ovi.ov. dal/xwv ; Vulg. fortuna), properly " the Gad " ; i.e. " the [god of] good luck." In A.V. of Is.65.li the clause " that pre- pare a table for that troop " has in the margin instead of " troop " the proper name " Gad " (cf. Gen.30.li), evidently some idol worshipped by the Jews in Babylon. That Gad was the deity Fortune (LXX., and R.V. which likewise personifies "Destiny," A.V. "that number") is supported by the etymology (Syr. gadd, Arab. jadd), and is commonly accepted. Gesenius is probably right as to Gad being the planet J upiter which was regarded by Eastern astrologers as the star of greater good fortune. Movers fa- vours the planet Venus. Illustrations of the ancient custom [lectisternia ; cf. Je.7.i8) of plac- ing T banqueting table in honour of idols will be found in the table spread for the sun among the Ethiopians (Her. iii. 17,18), and in the feast made by the Babylonians for their god Bel (Belsff. ; cf. Her. i. 181, etc.). Evidences of the worship of Gad, as the god of fortune, in Canaan may perhaps be found in the proper names Baal-gad (Jos.ll. 17,12.7,13.5) and Mig- dal-gad (Jos.i5.37), "'the tower of Gad." G. A. Smith on Is. 65. 11 ; Delitzsch on Gen. 30. 11 ; Lenormant, Chaldaean Magic, p. 120. [h.c.b.] Gad [fortune). The ethnic name Gadites occurs in 17 instances. — 1. Jacob's seventh son, and the first child of Zilpah, adopted by Leah and named (see R.V.) from her exclamation (b''ghadh), " in luck." A.V., however, follows the Massora in rendering it " a troop [i.e. of children] cometh," agreeing with the play on the name in Jacob's blessing (Gen.30.ii,49. 19), "a troop shall press upon him" (R.V., cf. margin). Gad had seven sons at the time of the descent into Egypt (46.i6). In the desert, under Elizur and Eliasaph, the numbers of the tribe [Palestine] decreased (Num.1. 25, 26.18), and included seven clans (26.15) who marched on S. flank (2.14), the spy selected from Gad being Geuel (13. 15). On the con- quest of Gilead the tribe chose that region, because fit for the cattle taken as spoil (32.1-31 ); but the fighting men went over Jordan, to assist in the conquest of the W. They stood on Ebal to repeat the curses (Deut. 27.13) ; and the blessing of Moses (33. 20) compares Gad to a lion, and refers to the meaning of his name — " blessed is he who increases fortune " — as also to the early settlement of his "portion" by the lawgiver, to which the Gadites re- turned (Jos.22.9-34 ; iSam.13.7 ; 2Sam.24.5). GAD 291 Some Gadites, such as Bani (2Sam.23.36), joined David early, and are said to have been famous for skill in war and for swiftness (iChr. 5.18,12.8), being trained in fighting the Hagarites (5.19) E. of Gilead. These heroes were found especially at Jazer in Gilead (26. 31,32). The tribe was, however, smitten by Hazael of Damascus (2K. 10. 32, 33), and finally taken captive by Tiglath-pileser in 734 B.C. (iChr.5.22,26), when the Ammonites over- ran their territory (Je.49.i). The tribe is last noticed in Ezk. 48. 27,34 ; Rev. 7. 5. The Tribal Lot coincided with the western slopes of Gilead, including nearly all the Jordan Valley E. of the river, from Zaphon to Jazer and Beth-aram. But as Manasseh extended its conquests northwards. Gad appears to have pushed its border N. on the edge of Bashan, besides holding " half," or " part of," Gilead (Deut. 3. 12, 16 ; Jos. 13. 24-28 ; iChr.5.ii), in- cluding all the cities of that region, and bounded on E. by the Mahanaim district (Jos.13.25,26). The Gadites had also rebuilt three towns in the territory of Reuben (Num.32. 34), and their presence at Ataroth " from of old " is noticed on the Moabite Stone. Probably J air of Gilead (Judg.lO.3) was a judge of the tribe of Gad — 2. A prophet, or seer, in the time of David (iSam.22.5 ; 2Sam.24.19), sent to warn 292 GAD, mVER OF the king of impending punishment (iChr.21. 9-19). He regulated the music of the temple (2Chr.29.25), and was one of the three chroni- clers of David's reign (iChr.29.29). [c.r.c] Gad, Riven of. [Jaazer.] Gadara, Gadapenes. Gadara was the capital of Peraea (see Josephus, 13 Ant. xiii. 3, 4 Wars vii. 3). It was taken by Antiochus III. in 218 B.C., and by Alexander Jannaeus c. 100 B.C. It submitted to Vespasian in 68 a.d. It was famous for hot springs. It is now the ruined town Mekeis, about 7 miles S.E. of the S. end of the sea of Galilee, and 6 miles E. of Jordan, on the low hills. [Decapolis.] The ruins within the walls include two theatres and a basilica, with Roman sarcophagi. (See Schu- macher, Northern 'Ajlun, pp. 46-80.) For N.T. notices, see Gergesenes. [c.r.c] Gaddi', son of Susi ; the Manassite spy sent by Moses to explore Canaan (Num.13. 11). Gaddiel', son of Sodi ; a Zebulunite, one of the twelve spies (Num. 13. 10). Gadi', father of Menahem (2K. 15. 14, 17). Gadites. [Gad.] Ga'ham, son of Nahor, Abraham's brother by his concubine Reumah (Gen. 22. 24). Ga'han. The Bene-Gahar were Neth- inim who returned from captivity with Zerub- babel (Ezr.2.47 ; Ne.7.49). Gaius (Caius), one of the more common Roman names, (i) Gaiusof Macedonia is men- tioned Ac.l9. 29 ; (2) Gaius of Derbe Ac.20.4 ; (3) Gaius of Corinth R0.I6.23 ; iCor.l.14. These are all in connexion with St. Paul. (4) To a disciple of this name St. John addressed his third epistle, where he four several times calls him " beloved," and speaks of his satis- factory conduct and excellent report as a Christian, and in particular of his courageous and generous reception and entertainment of strangers, which had apparently met with un- due criticism and blame among his fellow- churchmen. It is possible that these " stran- gers " may have been those itinerant evangel- ists (airbaToXoL) mentioned in the Didache, xi. ; cf. Eus. 5 Hist. Eccl. X. 2. There is no ground for identifying any of the above with one another, nor with him whom St. John made Bp. of Pergamum (Const. Apost. vii. 46). [c.l.f.] Gal'aad (Jth. 1.8,15.5 ; iMac.5.9ff., 13.22), the Gk. form of Gilead. Galal', three Levites ; descendants of (i) Asaph (iChr.9.15), (2) Elkanah (9.i6), and (3) Jeduthuu (Ne. 11.17)- Galatia, in its earlier and stricter sense, denoted a i)art of the dreary tableland of Asia Minor, S. of Bithynia, about 100 m. broad, and 200 m. long from S.W. to N.E. ; but shortly before the Christian era it acejuired a much wider signification as the official designation of a new Roman province of far larger dimensions. The name was derived from the Ciallic or Keltic invaders, who forced their way into the country c. 280 B.C. ; and for a similar reason it was called Gallf)-Graecia by the Romans, who found a considerable (ik. population there before them. Although the Keltic immigrants were few in iiumber, compared with the native Phrygians, they retained their characteristics, and held a predominant jiosition for several centuries. Leading at first a i)rcdatory life, or fighting in the service of the rival kings of Asia GALATIANS, EPISTLE TO Minor, they gradually settled down as a ruling caste among a mixed population of Phrygians, Greeks, and Jews ; and quitting their encamp- ments, or fortified v-illages, they resorted to cities, of which Ancyra, Tavium, and Pessinus were the chief. Espousing the cause of the Romans in the war against Mithridates, their chiefs were rewarded with grants of additional territory — one of them (Deiotarus) being ulti- mately recognized as king of Galatia. On the death of Amyntas, the last of his successors (25 A.D.), the country passed into the hands of the Romans, and was constituted as a regular province, which was enlarged in various direc- tions. The name is employed bv St. Paul in iCor.16.1; Gal.1.2 (cf. 3.i) ; 2tim.4.io. A comparison of iCor.16.1 with Ac.20.4 (where " Gaius of Derbe and Timothy " [of Lystra] accompany St. I'aul on his way to Jerusalem, with the offerings from Galatia and elsewhere) favours the wider sense, which includes Pisidian Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, and Derbe — as in iPe.l.i. The name also occurs twice in Acts. In 16.6 the " Phrygo-Galatic region " (Ramsay) denotes the part of Phrygia in the province of Galatia. In 18. 23 " the region of Galatia and Phrygia " would not have been a suitable designation for Galatia proper and Phrygia, but refers to St. Paul's journey in the Galatic part of Lycaonia (in which Derbe and Lystra lay) and Phrygia — " through the upper country " to Ephesus (IS.i). [Galatians, Ep. to.] Galatians, Epistle to, one of the Pauline letters whose genuineness is scarcely disputed. The main question is whether it was addressed to Keltic Christians in K.W. Galatia, or to the churches in Pisidia and Lycaonia which re- ceived the Gospel from St. Paul in his first missionary journey (AclSf.). Though the latter had no connexion with the Keltic race, the title Galatians was the only acceptable name by which they could be addressed in com- mon ; and it was a mode of speech quite in har- mony with the apostle's imperial sympathies and his habit of grouping churches according to the province in which they were situated (e.g. " Syria," " Asia," " Macedonia," " Achaia "). Moreover, in this wider sense the expression " O foolish Galatians " (Gal.3.i) would be much less offensive than if applied to a proud community like the inhabitants of Gala- tia proper. Confirmation of this view, suffi- cient to outweigh the snpjiosed allusions in the epistle to traits of the Keltic character, will be found on a comparison of the following pas- sages: Gal.l.6,3.i. Ac.l4.i8f. ; Gal. 2.1,9,13, Ac.13.2, 46.51. 14.12 ; Gal.3.28, .\c.i3.44f. ; Gal. 4.1.). Ac.l4.iif. ; Gal.S.ii, Ac.16.3; C.al. 6.17, Ac. 14.19, cf. 2Tini.3.ii. As St. Paul had a deep interest in his S. Galatian converts, revisiting them at least once, for the purpose of confirming and organizing them (.Ac. 16. 1-6, cf. 18. 23), it would have been surprising if no letter had bt-en addressed to tliem. On the other hand, tiie very existence of a Pauline church in N. Galatia is doubtful, its planting not being recorded in .\cts. It is also difficult to see why tiie apostle should have undertaken a toilsome journey from the neighbourhood of Antioch or Iconium to such a remote district, when (as is implied inGal.4.i3)hehadnointeii- GALBANUM GATLiILEE 293 tiou of preaching there, especially if already suffering from his "infirmity" there referred to ; or how he should have subsequently found himself " over against Mvsia," when proceeding toBithynia (Ac.16.7). [Paul.] The object oi the epistle was to arrest and counteract a strong tendency to Jewish ritualism. St. Paul, there- fore, seeks first to vindicate his apostolic au- thority, which had been impugned by J udaizing teachers on the ground that he had never seen the Lord and owed his Gospel to the apostles at Jerusalem. He then deals with the doc- trinal question, showing that the law had been (Gal. If. ) superseded by the Gospel, as the full development of that principle of faith which had been all along the secret of acceptance with God (3f. ). Finally, he reminds his converts of the blessings they had derived from the Gospel he preached, and warns them against the abuse of their liberty, exhorting them to live after the Spirit. The date is uncertain. Indications are found in 1.6 ("so quicklv removing," R.V.) and 4.13 ("the first time,'" R.V.) ; cf. l.iSf., 2.1-10, regarding visits to Jerusalem. On the South-Galatian theory, St. Paul's first visit to Galatia is recorded in Ac.lS.f., and was previous to the Council of Jerusalem (49-50 a.d.), his second visit (presupposed in Gal. 4. 1 3) being soon after that event (Ac. 16. 1-6) ; so that, possibly, the epistle may have been written 51-33 a.d., perhaps from Corinth (Rendall) or Antioch (Ramsay), being due to a fresh outbreak of the J udaizing forces which had been checked by the council. If addressed to Christians in N. Galatia, the epistle could not have been written till after St. Paul's second visit (Ac. 18. 23), and is often assigned, therefore, to the beginning of his subsequent " three years " in Ephesus (54- 55 A.D.). But if " so quickly " merely refers to the suddenness with which the news of the defection reached the apostle, it is permissible, on either theory, to adopt Bishop Lightfoot's view that the epistle was wTitten several years later (57-58 a.d.), probably when St. Paul was on his way from Macedonia to Greece (Ac. 20. 2 ; cf. Gal.1.2), between the writing of 2C0T. and Romans. It bears a striking resemblance to the former in tone and spirit, and to the latter both in argument and expression. Lightfoot on Ep. to Gal. ; Sir Wm. Ramsay's The Ch. in the Roman Empire, and cognate works ; Askwith on Ep. to Gal. ; Adeney's Comm. in Century Bible, Randall's in Exposi- tor's Gk. T., etc. [j.a.m'c] Galbanum, one of the perfumes employed in the preparation of the sacred incense (Ex.30. 34). The galbanum of commerce is brought chiefly from India and the Levant. It is a gum-resin obtained from several Persian um- bellifers of the genus Ferula. The odour is strongly pungent and medicinal. Whether this be the substance intended in Exodus {hel- b''nd) has been doubted. Pliny, however, is explicit (xii. 25) : " Moreover, we have from Syria, out of the same mountaine Amanus, another kind of gum called Galbanum, issuing out of an hearbe like Fenell-geant, which some call by the name of the said Rosin, others, Stagonitis. . . . The right Galbanum, if you burne it, chaseth awaySerpents, with the strong perfume thereof. It is sold for five deniers the pound : and is used only in Physicke for medi- cines." Galbanum is also mentioned in Ecclus. 24.15, as yielding apleasant odour, in company with onyx (onycha, an odoriferous shell) and storax. [H.C.H.] Galeed' {the heap of witness; Gen. 31. 47). [Gilead ; Jegar-sahadutha.] Galgrala (i Mac. 9. 2). The situation is not clear, but apparently the Upper Gilgal is meant. [Gilgal, 2.] [c.r.c] Galilee (probably " rolling " hills, plur. Geliloth), the N. province of W. Palestine, including Upper Galilee, where the mountains rise to 4,000 ft. above the sea, and (to its S.) Lower Galilee, where the hills generally are less than 1,000 ft. (1,500 near Nazareth), with small plains and broad valleys. The first is noticed in Joshua (20.7,21.32) as " mount Naphtali," near Kedesh. Lower Galilee (iK. 9. 11), including 20 cities near Cabul — or on the N.W. of the province, near Accho — was partly surrendered to Hiram of T\Te by Solomon. Upper Galilee — as far S. as Hazor — was attacked by Tiglath-pileser III. in 734 or 732 B.C. (2K. 15.29). To this Isaiah refers (9.1) ; for the Ass\Tian advance from Damas- cus led " by the way sea-ward, over Jordan, to Galilee of the nations " ; but the future glory of Galilee is here predicted (see R.V.). The population was then transferred to Assyria, and the "Gentiles" {goyim) probably replaced them. The Jews were withdrawn thence in 164 B.C. to Judaea (iMac.5.15-23), and about 152 B.C. the province of Galilee is noticed with Samaria and Judaea (10. 30), including Cades (11. 63), but not Ptolemais (5.55,12.47,49). See a'lso Tob.1.2 ; Jth.l.8,15.5. In the Mish- na, Galilee includes three regions (Shebiith ix. 2), the Upper and Lower divided at Caphar Hananiah [Hannathon], where the mountains rise rapidly, with " the valley " — i.e. the Upper Jordan valley. The W. and N. boun- daries of Galilee are defined, between Accho and Caesarea Philippi, in the Talmudic litera- ture (Neubauer, Geog. du Tal. p. 11) ; and the low W. hills and plain, were outside Upper Galilee. The line ran from the " wall of Accho," and from Achzib, passing such known sites as G'athin {J'atlnin), Kebartha (Kdbry), Beth Zanita (Zutveinita), the fort of Gelil (Jelil), Kania of 'Aiya (Qdna and 'Aya), Berii (Berids), Migdol Kherub (el Khiirbeh), 'Aulem {'Almon), 'Aiun (the 'AyiXn plain), etc. Josephus, though fixing the N. border of Samaria at Ginaea (3 Wars iii. 4) or Geman (2 Wars xii. 3), now Jenin [En- gannim], does not include the " great plain of Samaria " [Esdraelon] in Galilee. He makes Lower Galilee extend N. from Xaloth [Chis- loth-tabor] to Bersabe (2 Wars xx. 6, 3 Wars iii. i), probably at the ruin Abu Sheb'a, close to Hannathon, while its E. and W. limits were Tiberias and a city called Za- bulon, near Accho (2 Wars xviii. 9). Accho, or Ptolemais, was outside Lower Galilee, but Saab (Sh'aib), 10 miles to its E., was within the border (3 Wars vii. 21). Upper Galilee ran N. from Bersabe to Baka, near Tyre, and the boundaries on E. and W. were Thella {et Tell, near Bethsaida) and Melloth, or AValia. close to Aloth. This agrees with the Tal- mudic statements. In the N.T. Galilee is mentioned in 35 chapters of the Gospels and 294 GALILEE, SEA OF Acts, the reference being in each case to Lower Galilee, including Nazareth (Mt.2.22), Caper- naum (Lu.4.31), and Cana (Jn.2.ii). It was in the tetrarchy of Herod Antipas (Lu.S.i), and was the third province of W. Palestine (Ac.9.31). The dialect of Galilee differed from that of Jerusalem (Mk.l4.7o ; Lu.22.59). The capital of Galilee was at Tiberias in our Lord's time, its other chief towns being Sepphoris (Sefftirieh), N. of Nazareth, and Kedesh in Upper Galilee. Lower Galilee had a large population; and many villages noticed by Josephus are still called by their old names. After 135 A.D. the Sanhedrin sat at various centres in Lower Galilee, and finally at Tiberias. [Palestine.] [c.r.c] Galilee, Sea of (Mt. 4.18,15.29 ; Mk.l.i6, 7.31 ; Jn.6.1). [Gennesaret.] Gall represents in A.V. two Heb. words, (i) w'rerd, or m'rdrd, denotes etymologically, " that which is bitter " (cf. Job 13.26). Hence the term is applied to the " bile " or " gall" (Job 16.13,20.25) ; it is also used of the " poi- son " of serpents (Job 2O.14), which theancients erroneously believed was their gall. " The best wTiters who have searched most curiously into the secrets of Nature, doe hold " (says Pliny) " that the venome of Serpents is nought else but their gall." (2) rosh, generally trans- lated " gall " by A. v., is in H0.IO.4 and Am. 6. 12 rendered "hemlock." In Deut.32.33 and Job 20.16 it denotes the " poison " or " venom " of serpents. From Deut.29.i8, and Lam.S.ig, compared with Ho.lO..|, it is evident that the Heb. term denotes some bitter and perhaps poisonous plant. Other writers have supposed, and with some reason (from Deut.32.32), that some berry-bearing plant must be intended. Gesenius understands " poppies." The cap- sules of the Papaveraceae may well give the name of it (head to the plant in question, just as we speak of poppy heads. The various species of this family spring up quickly in corn- fields, and the juice is extremely bitter. A steeped solution of poppy heads may be " the water of gall " of Je.8.14 ; but the positive identification of j^all with poppy (Papavcr som- niferum) is an unwarrantable assumption. The confusion between the senses of bitterness and venom in the doubled use of " gall " runs through many passages. The Roman soldiers offered our Lord, just before His crucifixion, "vinegar mingled with gall" (Mt.27.34), or "wine mingled with myrrh" (Mk.i5.23). "Gall " is to be undcrsto(Kl as merely express- ing the bitter nature of the draught. Notwith- standing the opinion of many ancient and mod- ern conmientators, that the " wine mingled with myrrh " was offered to our Lord as an ano- dvne, it was probably a mere ordinary beverage of the Romans. Had the soldiers intended a mitigation of suffering, they would have offered a draught drugged with some narcotic, [h.c.u.] Gallery. The A.\'. so rcndrrs four Heb. words, (i) 'attuq (E/.k.41.i5) and (2) 'attiq (41.16,42.3,5); these words meaning a " separation," or cloister ; LXX. irfpiarvXov Vulg. pnrticus. (3) rdhU (marg. Can. 1. 17), supposed to mean a ceiling adorned with fret- work (LX.\. (paTuJiixara), as a clerical error for rdhii (q^rl), corrected by the Massora. (4) rdhdt cognate to the preceding (Caii.T.j), where GAMES the hair of Solomon's bride is described. The proper rendering seems to be " the king is caught in the tangles." The word is rendered also (Gen. 30.38,41 ; Ex.2. 16) "gutters" or " water-troughs," as meaning a network of channels. Others suppose it to refer to the " flowing " of locks and water. [c.r.c] Galley. [Ship.] Gallitn' {springs ; iSam.25.44 ; Is.lO.30), a place mentioned, with others N. of Jerusa- lem, as alarmed by the AssNTian advance. It may, however, be the Galein of LXX., now Beit Jdla, 4 miles S.W. of Jerusalem. [Elte- KON.] There are good springs in the valley 2 miles N. [Laish.] [c.r.c] Gallio, proconsul of Achaia, when St. Paul was at Corinth (50-51 a.d.). He was brother of Seneca, the Stoic writer, Nero's tutor. Seneca bears testimony to his brother's charm of manner and beauty of character. Gallio was spared when Seneca fell, but perished after- wards among the many victims of Nero's reign. His conduct at the trial of St. Paul (Ac.l8. 12-17) is one of the many instances given by St. Luke of Roman impartiality towards the Christian faith in early days. Gallio's indifference (I8.17), which has become proverbial, was not so much indifference to religious questions as to the outbreak of Gk. spite against the Jewish accusers of St. Paul. See Ramsay, St. P. the Trav. pp. 258 ff. M. E. Bourget [be Rebus Delphicis) has recently found a text of the emperor Claudius men- tioning a rescript sent to L. Junius Gallio as proconsul of Achaia in 52 a.d. [e.r.b.] Gallows. [Crimes.] Gam'ael (iEsd.8. 29) = Daniel, 2. Gamaliel, son of Pedahzur ; leader of Manasseh at Sinai (Num.1. 10,2.20,7.54,59, 10.23). Gamaliel. Rabban Gamaliel I., grand- father of R. Gamaliel II. (and sometimes con- fused with him), was at the height of his fame at the time of the trial related in Ac.5. 27-40. Notices of him in rabbinic literature cor- respond with the account in this chapter of the great influence and tolerant attitude of Gamaliel. He was the teacher of St. Paul (22.3), and the apostle of the Gentiles may have been prepared for the lessons of his later life by the precepts of charity to Gentiles which tradition in the Mishna ascribes to Gamaliel (GiUin, quoted by Hamburger). [Scribe.] [e.r.b.] Games. The notices of juvenile gaines are very few. It must not, however, be in- ferred from this that the Heb. children were without the amusements adapted to their age. In Egvpt, inside the mummy cases of children, there have been found their toys; among such are dolls, some with movable arms and legs.: (Sec Wilkinson, ii. pp. 426 ff.) The only recorded sports, however, are keeping tame birds (Job41.5) and imitating the proceedings of marriages or funerals (.Mt.U.iO) ; though that there were more manly sports is unques- tionable, as may be inferred from the following passages: 2Sain.2.i2ff. This very bloodthirsty sport, which perhaps occurred during a truce, can be paralleled by similar things ainong other peoples. Running is referred to in 2Sam.l.23 ; archery in iSaiu.20.2o ; rolling the disc in GAMES Zech.12.3 ; playing at ball, popular among many peoples of antiquity, in Is. 22. 18. Much bodily exercise was an absolute necessity to people who were constantly fighting, in spite of the fact that the natural earnestness of their character and the influence of the climate alike indisposed the Hebrews to much active exer- tion. The chief amusement of the men ap- pears to have consisted in conversation and joking (Je.l5.i7; Pr.26.19); also in asking riddles (litdhoth) ; and, above all, story-telling, which is the characteristic pastime of Orientals. In Jerome's day the usual sport consisted in lifting weights as a trial of strength, as prac- tised also in Egypt. Dice are mentioned by the Talmudists, probably introduced from Egypt. Assyrian dice of bronze have also been discovered. Public games were altogether foreign to the spirit of Heb. institutions — the great religious festivals supplied the plea- surable excitement and feelings of national union which rendered the games of Greece so popular, and at the same time inspired the persuasion that such gatherings should be ex- clusively connected with religious duties. Ac- cordingly the erection of a gymnasium by J ason was looked upon as a heathenish proceeding (iMac.1.14 ; 2Mac.4.i2-i4). The entire ab- sence of verbal or historical reference to sports in the gospels shows how little they entered into the life of the Jews. Among the Greeks every city of any size possessed its theatre and stadium. At Ephesus an annual contest was held in honour of Diana. It is probable that St. Paul was present when these games were proceeding. A direct reference to such ex- hibitions is made in 1C0r.i5.32, and his epistles abound with allusions to the Gk. contests, borrowed probably from the Isth- mian games, at which he may well have been present during his first visit to Corinth. These contests (iTim.6.12 ; 2Tim.4'.7) were divided into two classes, the pancratium, consisting of boxing and wrestling, and the pentathlon, con- sisting of leaping, running, quoiting, hurling the spear, and wrestling. The competitors (iCor.9.25 ; 2Tim.2.5) required a long and severe course of previous training (iTim.4.8), with a particular diet (iCor.9.25,27). In the Olympic contests these preparatory exercises extended over a period of ten months, during the last of which they were conducted under the supervision of appointed ofiicers. The contests took place in the presence of a vast multitude of spectators (Heb.l2.i), the com- petitors being the spectacle (iCor.4'.9 ; Heb. 10.33). The games were opened by the pro- clamation of a herald, whose office it was also to announce the name of the victor before the assembled multitude. The judge was selected for his spotless integrity (2Tim.4. 8) : his office was to decide any disputes and to give the prize (iCor.9.24 ; Ph. 3. 14), consisting of a crown (2Tim.2.5,4.8) of leaves of wild olive at the Olympic games, and of pine, or at one period, ivy, at the Isthmian games. St. Paul alludes to two only out of the five contests, boxing and running, most fre- quently to the latter. In boxing (cf. iCor.9. 26) the hands and arms were bound with the cestus, a band of leather studded with nails or knobs. The foot-race (2Tim.4.7) was run GARDEN 295 in the stadium (iCor.9.24), an oblong area, open at one end and rounded in a semicircular form at the other, along the sides of which were the raised tiers of seats on which the spectators sat. The judge was stationed by the goal (Ph. 3.14), which was clearly visible from one end of the stadium to the other. Gammadims' (Ezk.27.ii), the defenders of the towers of Tyre. The word probably means " fierce " warriors, like the Arab. jamad. [c.r.c] Ga'mul, a priest ; the leader of the 22nd course in the sanctuary-service (iChr.24.i7). Gap. " Sons of Gar " were among the " sons of the servants of Solomon" {iEsd.5.34 only). Garden. Gardens in the East are, as the Heb. word indicates, inclosures, on the outskirts of towns, planted with various trees and shrubs. We learn that they were surrounded by hedges of thorn (Is.5.5), or walls of stone (Pr.24.31). For further protection lodges (Is. 1.8 ; Lam. 2. 6) or watchtowers (Mk.l2.i) were built in them, in which sat the keeper (Job 27. 18), to drive away the wild beasts and robbers, as is the case to this day. The gardens of the Hebrews were planted with flowers and aromatic shrubs (Can. 4.16,6.2), besides olives, fig-trees, nuts, or wal- nuts (6. 11), pomegranates, and other fruits for domestic use (Ex.23. 11 ; Je.29.5 ; Am. 9.14). Gardens of herbs, or kitchen-gardens, are men- tioned in Deut. 11. 10 and iK.21.2. Cucumbers were grown in them (Is.1.8 ; Ba.6.70), and probably also melons, leeks, onions, and garlic, which are spoken of (Num. 11. 5) as the pro- ducts of a neighbouring country. The rose- garden in Jerusalem (Tal. Bab. Baba Kama 82. 6) was remarkable as having been the only one which, from the time of the prophets, existed within the city walls. But of all the gardens of Palestine none is possessed of associations more sacred and imperishable than the garden of Gethsemane, beside the oil-presses on the slopes of Olivet. Is. 17. 10 seems to imply that in some gardens exotics were reared. In a climate like that of Palestine, the neighbourhood of water was im- portant in selecting the site of a garden. To the old Heb. poets " a well-watered garden," or " a tree planted by the waters," was an emblem of luxuriant fertility and material prosperity (Is.58.li ; Je.l7.8,31.i2). From a neighbour- ing stream or cistern were supplied the channels or conduits intersecting the gardens, and con- veying water to allparts(Ps.l. 3 ;Ec.2.6;Ecclus. 24.30). The expression " to water with the foot " in Deut. 11. 10 probably means to direct the stream by pressing the mud banks of the channels with the naked foot, as may still be seen done in the East. The orange, lemon, and mulberry groves around and behind Jaffa supply, perhaps, the most striking peculiarities of Oriental gardens, which Maundrell describes as " a confused mis- cellany of trees jumbled together, without either posts, walks, arbours, or anything of art or design, so that they seem like thickets rather than gardens." The kings and nobles had their country-houses surrounded by gardens (iK.21.1 ; 2K.9.27), and these were used on festal occasions (Can.S.i). The garden of Ahasuerus was in a court of the palace (Esth.1.5) adjoining the banqueting-hall 296 GAREB {7.7). In Babylon the gardens and orchards were inclosed by the city walls. In large gar- dens the orchard was probably, as in Egypt, the inclosure set apart for the cultivation of date and sycomore trees, and fruit trees of various kinds (Can. 4. 13 ; Ec.2.5). The an- cient Hebrews made use of gardens as places of burial (Jn.i9.41). Manasseh and his son Amon were buried in the garden of their palace, the garden of Uzza (2 K. 21. 18, 26). The retirement of gardens rendered them favourite places for devotion (Mt.26.36 ; Jn.18.1 ; cf. Gen.24.63). In the degenerate times of the monarchy they were the scenes of idolatrous worship (Is.l.29, 65.3,66.17), and idols were probably erected in them. Gardeners are alluded to in Job 27. 18 and Jn.2O.15. But how far the art of garden- ing was carried among the Hebrews we have few means of ascertaining. That they were acquainted with the process of grafting is evi- dent from Ro.ll. 17,24, as well as from the minute prohibitions of the Mishna. The tradi- tional gardens and pools of Solomon [Etam], supposed to be alluded to in Ec.2.5, 6, are shown in the Wddy Urids {i.e. Hortus), a little S. of Bethlehem {c/. Josephus, 8 Ant. vii. 3). The " king's garden," mentioned in 2K.25.4, Ne.3. 15, Je. 39. 4, 52. 7, was near the pool of Siloam and the mouth of the Tyropoeon. Gareb', "the Itiirite," one of the heroes of David's armv (2Sam.23.38). Oapeb', Hiil — 1. (Je.3i.39.) A hill, per- haps marking N. limit of Jerusalem, probably "of gardens" (.Arab, jarbah, "plantation"). — 2. As the proper name of one of David's captains (2Sam.23.38 ; 1Chr.ll.40), it probably meant " expert." [c.r.c] Gap'izim (2Mar. 5. 23,6.2) — Gerizim. Oaplick (Num. 11. 5) is the Allium sativum of Linnaeus, which abounds in Egypt, where it was always held in reverential estimation. Pliny says, " I cannot overpasse the foolish superstition of the .'Egyptians, who use to sweare by Garlicke and Onions, calling them to witnesse in taking their othes, as if they were no lesse than some gods." [h.c.ii.] Oarment. [Dress.] Gap'mlte, The. Keilah the Garmite — i.e. descendant of Gerem, in the genealogical lists of the families of Judah (iChr.4.19). Gappison. The Heb. words so rendered in A.V. are derivatives from the root ndfabh, to "place erect" fl'iLi-AR], which may be ap- plied to a variety of objects, (i) maijabh and maffdbhd undoubtedly mean a " garrison," or fortified post (rSam. 13. 23, 14.1,4,12,15 ; 2Sam. 23.14). (2) n-(ibh is used for a " garrison " (iChr.ll.i6), but also for a "column" erected in an enemy's country as a token of conquest (iSam.13.3), ^^^ elsewhere it means " officers " placed over a vanquished people (2Sam.8.6,i4 ; 1Chr.l8.13 ; 2Chr.l7.2). Gashmu'. [Gksiiem.] Gatam', an Edfimite " duke " ; son of Eliphaz son of Esau (Gen.36.ii,i6 ; iChr. 1.36). Gate. The word is used sometimes to mean a walled town (Gen. 22.17. 24.60; Deut.l2.i2; Judg.5.S; Ru.4.io;Ps.87.2,122.2). Gates were of wood (Judg.9.52),but platcdwith metal, locked and barred (Dent. 3. 5 ; Ps.l07.i6 ; Is.45.i,2), with bronze and iron. Babylonian gates had GATH votive texts on the lintels, and Hebrew gates were inscribed with passages from the law (Deut.6.9). Solomon's temple had gates of fir .^ J i^ Ilili'llNI'! !.• ... ANCIHNT i-.(".vi-nA.\ DooK. (Wilkinson.) and of olive wood, adorned with gold (1K.6. 31-35; 2K.I8.16). (iate-keepers are noticed (2 K. 12.9, 25.18, etc.; Je.35.4), and chambers in gate towers (2Sam.l8. 24). [Cities.] [c.r.c] Gate, Beautiful. [Temple.] Gate, Pposelytes of the. [Prose- lytes.] Gath, one of the five cities of the PhiUs- tine lords. The O.T. notices do not fix its site ; and, unless it be noticed as Giti Rimuna [see Gath-rimmon] in the .Amarna letters (Berlin 154), there are no certain monumental allusions. Eusebius {Onomasticon) places it 5 miles N. of Beit Jibrin, on the Lydda road. This is usually supposed to refer to Tell es ■^dfi, a village on a high hill with a white cliff, 7i miles N. of Beit Jibrin. Under the ruins of the mediaeval castle of Blanche Garde, built in 1 144 A.D., recent excavations have here laid bare the remains of an early Canaanite town, including a line of monumental stones, probably once sacred. [Cv.zkr.] The site, 100 ft. above the plain, where the valley of Elah enters it, was very strong ; and to Gath the Philistines fled down this valley (see iSam.17.52). It was a city of .Anakim, not conquered by Joshua (Jos.ll.22,13.3), but taken possiblv in Samuel's time (iSam.5. 8.6.17.7.14). David fled to Achish. the Philistine king of Gatii (21. 10), as did Shimei (1K.2.39-41) ; and Ziklag belonged to Gath (iSam.27.2-6). See also 2Sam.l.2o,15.i8, 21.20,22. It was attacked by Hazael II. of Syria (2K.12.17) ; and llzziah destroyed its walls about 750 n.c. (2Chr.26.6). Amos (6.2) still notices it as a Philistine city. See also iChr.7.21 (an early raid from Gath to Go- shen), 8.13 (Benjaraite attack), 18. i (David's GATH-HEPHER conquest). 20.6,8 (the giants inGath), 2Chr.ll. 7,8, where it occurs with Adullam and Mare- shah ; Cf. MORESHETH-GATH. [C.R.C] Gath-he'phep, Gittah'-he'phep, a town on E. border of Zebulun, the home of J onah (Jot. 19.13 ; 2K. 14.25). Jerome (in Jonam) places it 2 Roman miles E. of Sepphoris, the tomb of Jonah being shown. Now el Mesh-hed (the memorial), with a tomb of Jonah noticed by pilgrims since 4th cent. a.d. [c.r.c] Gath-rimmon'. — 1. A city of Dan given to the Levites (Jos. 21. 24 ; iChr.6.69), not far from Joppa (Jos.i9.45). Eusebius (Onomas- ticon) places it 12 Roman miles S. of Lydda. In the Amarna tablets (Berlin 154) it is called Giti Rimuna. — 2. A town of Manasseh W. of the Jordan, assigned to the Levites (Jos. 21. 25). Perhaps the village Jett, 12 miles N.W. of Samaria. [c.r.c] Gaza (Arab. Ghazzeh), more correctly AzzAH (strong), as in Deut.2.23, iK.4'.24, Je.25.20, the most southern city on the shore trade-route from Palestine to Egypt. In i Chr.7.28 Gaza is an error, probably for Ai. It was on the S. border of Canaan (Gen. 10. 19), and was the limit of Joshua's attacks on the Anakim (Jos. 10. 41, 11. 22). It was claimed by Judah (15.47), but, according to LXX. render- ing, was not taken (Judg.l.i8). The Midian- ites and their allies, in 13th cent, b.c, overran Palestine to Gaza (6.4), perhaps in alliance with the Egyptians. Samson (16. 1,21) was here imprisoned by the Philistines. It was one of the five cities of the Philistine lords (iSam.6.17), and the limit of Hezekiah's conquests (2K.I8.8). Its conquest by Pha- raoh Necho, c. 609 B.C., is mentioned by Jere- miah (47.1,5), and the city was denounced earlier (Am. 1.6, 7 ; Zeph.2.4), but it still had a king after the Captivity (Zech.9.5). Jona- than and Simon, brothers of Judas Macca- baeus, attacked it c. 150 and 143 B.C. (iMac. 11.61,62.13.43). The road from Jerusalem passed through a desert near this city (Ac. 8. 26). In the 15th cent. b.c. Gaza was subject to Egypt, and was a refuge for the Canaanites fleeing from the 'Abiri or Hebrews (Amarna Letters, Berlin 57, 105, 199). About 1330 b.c it is noticed with Raphia (Refdh), in the S. of Palestine, by the Egyptian Mohar traveller. In 732 B.C. Tiglath-pileser attacked Gaza, and its king Hanun fled to Egypt, but at length submitted. Sennacherib, in 702 b.c, restored Silli-bel (Baal is my shade), whom Hezekiah had overthrown, as king of Gaza ; and Esar-haddon (c. 680 b.c) mentions him as a tributary. After the fall of Tyre, Alexander the Great, in 332 b.c, met with resistance only at Gaza on his way to Egypt. Gaza appears to have been always a trading centre. It was still a pagan city in 400 a.d., with a famous temple of Marna (our lord), which was then destroyed with other shrines (see Reland, Pal. Illustr. ii. p. 793). Its pros- perity continued throughout the Middle Ages, and it is still an important trade depot. It had no natural harbour, but the Maiuma (or "water-place") called Minois (el Mineh) was a landing-place 2 miles W. of the city, where remains of buildings are found (Surv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 236, 251). The cityTitself (Surv. W^ Pal, iii. pp. 248-251) stands on a hill. GEBAL. 297 100 feet high, in the plain, and is surrounded by mounds covering the mediaeval walls. The town has a population of 18,000 persons. The great mosque is a Templar church of 12th cent. A.D. The surrounding gardens contain 15 wells and many palms. They extend for over 2 miles round the town, and a fine olive grove stretches 4 miles N. There are some 200 Gk. Christians, and a Gk. church. An early Egyptian text has been found here, with several Gk. inscriptions, one as late as 640 A.D. The houses are mostly of mud, but the mosques, etc., of stone. [c.r.c] Gaz'apa(iMac.9.52,13.53,14.7,34,15.28,16. I ; 2Mac. 10. 32-36). [Gezer.] Ga'zathites, The (Jos. 13. 3), inhabitants of Gaza; rendered Gazites in Judg.16.2. Ga'zep (2Sam.5.25 ; iChr.l4.i6) = Gezer. Gaze'pa. — 1. (iMac.4.15,7.45) = Gezer. — 2. (iEsd.5.3i)=: Gazzam. Gazez', a name occurring twice in iChr.2. 46 ; (i) as son, (2) as grandson, of Caleb by Ephah his concubine. The name has perhaps been repeated by a clerical error. Ga'zites, The. [Gazathites.] Gazzam'. The Bene-Gazzam were Ne- thinim who returned from the Captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.48 ; Ne.7.51). Ge'ba (hill; in Jos. 18. 24 ; Ezr.2.26 ; and Ne.7.30 ; A.V. Gaba). — 1. A city of Benja- min, otherwise Gibeah, now the village Jeb'a, S. W. of MiCHMASH. It was given to the priests (Jos. 21. 17) and occupied by Philistines in the time of Saul (iSam.13.3). It was rebuilt by Asa (iK.15.22), and was then, and in Josiah's reign, the N. limit of the kingdom of Judah (2K.23.8). See iChr.6.60,8.6 ; 2Chr.l6.6 ; Ne. 11.31,12.29; Is. 10.29; Zech. 14.10. — 2. Aplace mentioned (Jth.3.io) to define thepointreached by the Babylonian army ("between Geba and Scythopolis ") in attacking Bethulia ; or from Beisdn [Beth-shean = Scythopolis] io Jeb'a, a village on the S. edge of the plain of Dothan, and 6 miles S.W. of Bethulia. It is noticed by Eusebius (Onomasticon) as Gabe, E. of Caesarea. [c.r.c] Gebal', a Phoenician seaport, now Jibeil, a town with mediaeval walls and a Roman street of columns, 4 miles N. of the Adonis River, and about 20 miles N. of Beirut. Its ruins were explored by Renan. The " land of the Giblites " (R.V. Gebalites) was in Leba- non, but within the N. boundary of Israel. It was not conquered by Joshua (Jos. 13. 5). Stone-cutters thence (see R.V.) aided in build- ing Solomon's temple (iK.5.i8) ; and about 600 B.C. Gebal was famous for ship-building (Ezk.27.9). It may be intended in Ps.83.7, where a general confederacy with Assyria, in- cluding Tyre and Philistia, with the Ammonites, Moabites, and Edomites (perhaps in 732 b.c), is described. The Amarna letters include 50 from Ribadda, king of Gebal in 15th cent, b.c He was attacked by confederated Amorites and Hittites, and his city taken. He speaks of silver and gold in its temple, and of the papyrus trampled by the Hittites. This was famous in the Greek age, when Gebal was called Bublos, or Byblus, from this plant. (Hence our word " Bible.") About 1330 B.C. anEgyptian traveller (the Mohar) notices the temple of a goddess at Gebal. Tiglath- 298 QEBER pileser III. in 738 b.c. received tribute from its kina Sibitti-bel ; Sennacherib from another king of Gebal, Urumelek, in 703 b.c. ; and Esar-haddon from another, Milki-asapa, about 680 B.C. The famous stela of Yehu-melek of Gebal (i Corpus Sem. Inscrip. i. 10), about 500 B.C. or later, describes his piety as a " just king," and the bronze altar he erected (with a gold image) to " Baalath of Gebal." It represents him pouring a libation, standing before the seated Isis-like goddess, under the wings of the sun-god. A coin of Gebal, with Gk. te.xt, 'If'/ias I?(''/i\oi', shows the temple, with its court, and cone emblem. In the vicinity are found rock-cut tombs of various ages and Roman sarcophagi. A fine Greco- Phoenician entablature from Gebal (in the Louvre) represents the winged sun with two uraei snakes. The death of Tammuz was mourned annually (till 4th cent, a.d.) at the Adonis River hard by, and the stream sprang from the fountain of Aphek, 3, at the shrine of the " mourning Venus." [c.r.c] Ge'bep. — 1. The son of Geber resided in the fortress of Ramoth-gilead, and had charge of the E. part of the tribe of Manasseh (1K.4.13). — 2. Geber the son of Uri had a district S. of the former — in the " land of Gilead," but mainlv in Reuben (1K.4.19). [Palestine.] Oebim' (pits; Is.lO.31). The LXX. reads Gibbeir. It was near Jerusalem, but, like Gallim (Beit Jala), in the same passage, may have been S. of the city. There is a ruin Jubb er Riim (pit of the Greeks) about 2 miles S.E. of the city. [c.R.c] Gedaliah'. — 1. Son of Ahikam (Jeremiah's protector, Jc.26.24), and grandson of Shaphan the secretary of king Josiah. After the destruc- tion of the Temple, 588 b.c, Nebuchadnezzar departed from Judaea, leaving Gedaliah with a Chaldean guard (40-5) at Mizpah, to govern the vine-dressers and husbandmen (52. 16) exempted from captivity. Jeremiah joined Gedaliah ; and Mizpah became the resort of Jews from various quarters (40. 6, 11 ; cf. 39.14). He was murdered by Ishmael two months after his appointment (Je.4i.1-9; cf. Josephus, 10 Ant. ix. 4). — 2. A Levite nmsician, son of Jeduthun (iChr.25.3,9). — 3. A priest who put away his foreign wife (Ezr.10.i8). — 4. Son of Pasliur (Je.38.i), one of those who caused Jeremiah to be imprisoned.-^S. Grandfather of Zeiihaniah (Zeph.l.i). Oed'dup (iEsd.5.30) = Gahar. Ged'eon. — 1. An ancestor of Judith (Jth.8. i)._2. The Gk. form of Gideon (Heb.ll.32). Ge'dep (hed^e, or xvall), a royal city of the Canaauites (Jos.i2.13), apparently in far S. [(iEDOR, 2.1 [c.R.c] Gedepah' (Jos.i5.36), a town in the Sliephelah region of J udah. The site is doubt- ful. The Gedrus of Jerome (Onomasttcon), now the ruin Jcdireh, 9 miles S. of Lydda, is in Dan. The Gedcritc (iChr.27.28), who ruled in the Shephelaii for Solomon, may have be- longed to this town. [c.R.c] ciedepathite. The. [Gedor, 3.] Gedepite, The. [Gederah.] Gedepoth'. — 1. ( Jos. 15.4 1-) A city of Judaii, ai)i>ariiitly on N.W. border near Beth- DAGON. I'robabiy the modern village Qatrah (Warren), 5 miles E. of Yebnah, and called GEHENNA Cedron later (iMac.15.39.41,16.9). — 2. A town noticed with others in the Shephelah (2Chr.28.18), apparently Gederah. [cr.c] Gedepotha'im (Jos.i5.36). Apparently a note has crept in, as there are 14 cities of the Shephelah without this one. The name in LXX. becomes " folds " or " walls " (etravXeis) belonging to Gederah, which it follows in the list. [c.r.c.] Gedop' (iChr.8.31,9.37), an ancestor of Saul. It is also the name of three towns. — 1. A town of J udah in the Hebron mountains (Jos. 15.58; iChr.4.4), now Jediir, a ruin 4 miles N. of Halhul, with which it is noticed. — 2. A place in the plainsof Simeon, towards Edom (iChr.4. 39), with a valley (gay). It is probably Geder, but the site is unknown. — 3. A town of Ben- jamin (iChr. 12. 7), where the Gederathite (ver. 4) probably dwelt. Now the village Jedireh, 6 miles N. of Jerusalem. [c.R.c] Gehazi', the servant (lit. hoy) of Elisha, sent as the prophet's messenger on two occasions to the good Shunammite (2K.4) ; obtained fraudulently money and garments from Naaman; was miraculously smitten with incurable leprosy ; and dismissed from the prophet's service (2K.5). Later, he is men- tioned as relating to king Joram all the great things which Elisha had done (2K.8). Gehenna, a later name derived from the earlier valley of Hinnom (Heb. gd hinnom), or valley of the son, or of the sons of Hinnom. This place, so called perhaps originally after some ancient hero, is generally identified with the valley to the W. and S. of Jerusalem, beginning from near the Jaffa Gate on the W., running first southwards, then bending east- wards, and finally on the S.E. of the city join- ing with the Tyropoeon and Kidron Valleys leading off to the Dead Sea. (Sayce and W. Robertson Smith identify it with the central vallev or Tyropoeon, which runs through the middle of the city itself; but see J udah.) The boundary between the tribes of J udah and Benjamin ran down this valley (Jos. 15. 8, 18. 16). Afterwards the name became of ill omen, from the use to which the valley was put. Solomon introduced into Jerusalem the worship of Molech, and built a high place for that purpose in the " mount that is before Jerusalem" (1K.II.7; see Olives, Mt.). Sacrifices in which human beings were "passed through the fire " — i.e. possibly purged by fire, more probably burned alive — formed a part of this worship. One particular spot in the valley, called Toi'heth (Warren says in the lower part of the valley, and near its junction with the other valleys), was especially used for these sacrifices in the reigns of .Ahaz and Manasseh (2K. 16.3,21. 6 ; 2Chr.28.3.33.6 ; Je.7.31. 32.35). and Josiah, in order to prevent its being used in this way again, "defiled" it (2K.23.io). Jeremiah, shortly afterwards, cursed the spot, and predicted that it should be called the " valley of slaughter," and become a burial- place, defiled with dead men's bones (Je.7.31. 19.2-13, probablv uttered in the early years of Jehoiakim, in whose reign the human sacri- fices were revived; cf. Ezk.2O.31). Mediaeval Jewish scholars assert that the valley was used after this time for depositing the refuse of the city, including the bodies of the friendless or GELILOTH criminal dead, and that to get rid of them fires were constantl)' burning. If this is the fact (it has some probability, though little evidence), it would add to the idea of a curse attaching to the spot ; and whether from this, or from the old association with human sacrifices by fire, Gehenna next appears (not in O.T. or Apoc, though Is. 50. II and 66.24 and Jth.l6.17 are probably allusions ; cf. 2.Esd.7.36) as the name of the final place of punishment for the wicked in the next world — the punishment being by fire and the fire being eternal {Book of Enoch, xxvii. 2, 3). It was distinguished (generally, though not always) from Sheol, the place of the departed both good and bad. This is the sense in which it is invariably used in N.T. by our Lord and the apostles (see also Hell, by which word Gehenna is translated in A.V. ). See, for literature, under Hell. [s.c.g.] Geliloth', " over against " the ascent of Adummim (Jos. 18. 17), answers to Gilgal (15. 7). It probably means " rolling " downs, and applies to the hummocks of the Jordan plain (Jos. 22. 10, II, A.V. borders ; and in Heb. in Ezk.47.8, A.V. country). It also applies to the downs of the Philistine plain (Jos.13.2, A.V. borders ; Jl.3.4, A.V. coasts). [Galilee.] [c.r.c] Gemalli', father of Ammiel, i (Num.13. 12). Gemapiah'. — 1. Son of Shaphan the scribe, and father of Michaiah, 6. He was a noble of Judah, from whose chamber in the house of the Lord Baruch read Jeremiah's alarming prophecy to the people, 606 b.c. He, in vain, begged Jehoiakim not to burn the roll (Je.36). — 2. Son of Hilkiah ; one of the bearers of Jeremiah's letter to the captive Jews (Je.29.3). Gems. [Precious Stones.] Genealogries. The key to the interest of the O.T. genealogies is their witness to earnest- ness in the preservation of " the holy seed " (Is. 6. 13; Ezr.9.2). Patriotism and religion combined to make the covenant people careful to trace out their descent from Abraham, and Abraham's from Adam. This differentiates the genealogies of the O.T. from those of profane history, although in both we see the same principle of expressing history through tables of descent. No other nation had the Messianic hope(Gen.3.i5); no other nation had its system of land tenure and its dignities of priesthood and kingship so solemnly bound up with family succession (1K.2I.3; Num. 36. 7; Ex.29. 9; Ps.89.3,4). Accordingly, the care for genealo- gies is shown right down to the appearance of Messiah (Lu.2.4, 1.5,2.36), from the very first book of the Bible — which indeed bears the name of Genesis, and is built up on a framework or scheme marked by the recurring formula, " These are the generations of ... " (Gen. 2. 4,5.1,6.9,10.1,11.10,11.27.25.12,19,36.1) — and some of the more active rulers and kings marked their reigns by attention to genealo- gies ; e.g. David (iChr.24), Hezekiah (iChr.9. X ; 2Chr.31. 16-19), Zerubbabel (iChr.9.i ; Ne. 12.22,23). Hence for a right interpretation of Holy Scripture it is important to have just no- tions of the nature of these genealogical records, and it is specially important to remember : (i) that*^they refer to political and territorial divisions as much as to strictly genealogical GENEALOGY OF JESTJS CHRIST 299 descent, so that all who are called " sons " of a patriarch were not necessarily his children (cf. Gen.lO.15, " Canaan begat Zidon his first- born, and Heth, and the Jebusite, and the Amorite," etc. ; iChr.2.51, " Salma the father of Bethlehem"); (2) that the sequence of generations may represent the succession to inheritance or headship in a tribe or family rather than the relationship of father and son. Further, the genealogies were often abbrevi- ated, merely specif^'ing such links as would indicate from what chief houses the person descended, and great caution is therefore necessary in using them as measures of time. They are also peculiarly liable to corruptions of the text : Jerome found those in the LXX. version so confused that the names seemed bar- barous rather than Hebraic, and in Josephus the lists of high-priests are so corrupt as to be hardly recognizable. It is, however, a particular indication of trustworthiness that in the same family the same names should so often recur, though sometimes disguised, because in Heb. the same name may have various forms — e.g. Abiud. The genealogies are sometimes ascending, as in iChr.6. 33-43, Ezr.7.1-5, some- times descending, as in Ru.4.18-22, iChr.3. Fe- males are named in them when there is some- thing remarkable about them, or when any right or property is transmitted through them (Gen.ll.29,22.23,35.23-26;Ex.6.23;Num.26.33; iChr.2.4,16). The genealogical system naturally came to an end with the destruction of Jeru- salem, when the land was taken away from the Jewish race, and when the promise to David was fulfilled and the priesthood of Aaron was superseded by the exaltation of Jesus the Messiah to the right hand of God. [c.r.d.b.] Genealogry of Jesus Christ. In the O.T., which looked forward to the coming of the Seed of the Woman (Gen.3.15), it is natural to find many genealogies ; but in the N.T. we only find one, that of the Messiah, Jesus Christ, Who summed up in His own Person the history of the O.T., and from Whom all N.T. history was to proceed. In view of the prophecy of the Protevangelium and the mystery of the Vir- gin Birth, we should have expected the descent of J esus to be traced through His mother Mary ; but in contemporary circles, J ewish and Gentile, birthrights could not be claimed through the mother : and as the purpose of the genealogy is to vindicate the claim of Jesus to be the " Son of David " and heir of the promises to Abraham, the genealogy is that of His foster- father Joseph. Difficulties, however, arise from the genealogy being given in two forms. St. Luke alone traces the descent from Adam to Abraham, and then St. Matthew and St. Luke agree in the generations from Abraham to David. Thenceforward they differ except in the names of Salathiel and Zorobabel, until we come to Matthan the grandfather of Joseph, (i) The explanation given by Africanus in the. 2nd cent, professed to be derived from the des- cendants of our Lord's kindred, and was based on theLevirate law of the Jews. It was that St. Matthew gives the natural, St. Luke the legal, pedigree. Matthan of the house of Solomon and Melchi of the house of Nathan married the same woman. Heli the son of Melchi having died childless^ his uterine brother Jacob, 300 GENEALOGY OF JESUS CHRIST Matthau's son, took his wife and raised up seed to him, so that the offspring, J oseph, was legally Heli's son as stated by St. Luke, but naturally Jacob's son as stated by St. Matthew. {2) But this theory, which quickly gained general ac- ceptance in the Church, and for 12 centuries retained undisputed supremacy, breaks down when we compare the two lists more closely. The genealogy in St. Matthew exhibits the successive heirs of the kingdom, ending with Christ as David's reputed son. It is, there- fore, the legal pedigree, exhibiting Joseph as legal successor to the throne. The genealogy in St. Luke is the actual line of descent, ex- hibiting Joseph's real birth as David's son through Nathan, and thus showing why, on the failure of the direct line. He became heir to Solomon's crown. Had the steps of ances- try coincided with those of the succession, one pedigree only could in the nature of things be proper ; and the 2nd pedigree, tracing Joseph's ancestry through private persons, by the side of one tracing it through kings, is in itself a proof that the latter is not the true stem of birth. (3) Indeed, the entry of the name Jeconias itself shows that St. Matthew's cannot be the actual genealogy, for he died childless (J e. 22. 30), and an heir was found for him in Salathiel or Shealtiel, thesonof Neri, who was of the house of Nathan. Salathiel with his heirs became reckoned among " the sons of Jeconiah " (i Chr.3.17), and accordingly Salathicl's nephew Zorobabel, the son of Pedaiah (iChr.3.18,19), appears next to him in the line of throne suc- cession. (4) On comparing the lists from this pointit seems probable that Khesa (Lu.3.27) is not the son, but the title, of Zorobabel, which has slipped in from the margin, an indication that the pedigree was worked backwards from a simple list of names — Neri, Shealtiel, Zoroba- bel, Rhesa, Joanan, etc. This correction brings St. Luke into harmony both with St. Matthew and iChr. For the name Joanan is the Gk. equi- valent of Heb. Hananiah (iChr.S.io). and St. Luke's J uda (3.26) is the same as St. Matthew's .\biud (I.13 ^ ah-yfhud), or Hodaviah ( iChr.3. 24, R.V.). (5) As noted above, the two gene- alogies coincide in the name of Matthan or Matthat, to whom are assigned two different sons, Jacob and Heli, but the same grandson or heir, Joseph. The explanation is that as Jacob had no son, Joseph, his brother Heli's child, became his heir, and the claimant to the throne of David, a position into which Mat- than himself had stepped on the failure of the line of Abiud's eldest son in Eleazar (Mt.l.15), Matthan being descended from Joseph, a younger son of Abiud (Mt.l.13) or J uda (Lu.3. 26). (6) It will be noted, however, that St. Matthew has omitted Joanan, and probably other links in the descent, perhaps in order that between Jeconiah and Joseph there should only be the 14 generations to which, as a help to memory, he restrictecUiimsclf. St. Luke for the same period gives 23 generations. Between David and Jeconiah St. Matthew omits 3 gene- rations— Ahaziah, Joash, Amaziah — for the same reason. But both genealogies agree in only giving 3 names between Salmon and David — viz. Boaz, Obed, and Jesse — whereas the period between the entry into Canaan and tbe birth of David was, according to the GENERATION, GENERATIONS received chronology, between 4 and 5 centuries. For the period of ahnost equal length between Solomon and Jehoiachin, St. Luke's genealogy contains about 20 names. The difficulty is best met by accepting the genealogy as correct, and shortening the chronology by reckoning the heroes of the book of Judges to have been much more contemporary than used to be thought. fCHRONOLOGY.] This expedient brings Israelitish history into harmony with the Egyptian, with the traditional Jewish date of the Exodus, with the fragment of Edomitish history preserved in Gcn.36.31-39, and with the internal evidence of the Israelitish history itself. The genealogy in St. Luke is not without traces of mystical arrangement, for from Adani to Christ there are, including Cainan and Khesa, 76 generations, to which St. Augustine added, " which was the son of God" (ver. 38), thus making from God to Christ 77, the number typical of forgiveness of all sins in baptism ; and it is placed appropria- ately after the baptism in which Jesus was manifested as Messiah, the heir to David's throne and to Abraham's call. The trust- worthiness of St. Luke's pedigree as that of the actual lineage of Joseph seems proved by the naturalness of the frequent recurrence of the same names (c/. Lu.l.6i) ; for if we begin with Nathan, his son Mattatha and 4 others, of whom the last was grandfather to Joseph, had names which are merely modifications of Nathan (Matthat twice, Mattathias twice); or if we begin with Joseph, there are no less than 3 of his name between him and Nathan. For the generations between .^dam and .■\bra- hamthe LXX.text is followed, which gives the 2nd Cainan (3.36), not found in the Heb. In St. Matthew's genealogy the most remarkable feature is the reference to the 4 women — ^Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and Bathsheba — who, either as of heathen origin or by personal guilt, would be excluded from fellowship with the Pharisees, as if the evangelist meant to teach that as these were allowed to be in the line of Messiah's ancestry, so others like them would be ad- mitted to His kingdom. [c.r.d.b.] i Generation, Generations. Two en- I tireiy different words in Heb. are represented by these terms in the Hng. O.T. (i) dor. This infers a body of contemporaries (Gk. a-vvrjXi- ^-ta;ro^,(ial.l.I4), who grow up together, see the same events, and look at things upon the whole from the same point of view. This tends to I produce a moral resemblance. " Whereunto shall I liken the men of this generation ? " gives the N.T. equivalent nidor in O.T. (2) iol'dhoth (only plur in O.T.) is specially noticeable as 1 a title of II out of 12 original sections of I Genesis. The first section records the creation of the " heavens and earth," in the sense in which those terms are used in ch. 1 and 2. 1-3, incl. The following sections give the sttiry of tlie iirogeny or "generations " of "the I heavens and earth," of Adam, Noah, Noah's sons, Shem, Terah, Ishmael, Isaac, Esau (2), and Jacob. The contents of these sections ' justify their titles in every case. The same word for "generations" is used of Levi (I';x.6.i6, ig), Aaron (Num. 3.1), Pharez (Ru.4.i8). and of the tribes of Israel in Num.1 and in iCIironicles. In I all cases it has the sense of olTspring. [c.h.w.] GENESIS Genesis, the first of the five books of the law, or Pentateuch. The Jews designate it b'yeshith, " In the beginning," from its opening words. The Gk. translators gave it the ap- propriate name " Genesis " (origin), be- cause it recounts the origin of the world and man, and the beginnings of things generally. In character. Genesis not only furnishes the necessary introduction to the history of the Exodus and law-giving, and of the events of the wilderness, contained in the books that follow, but forms the introduction to the whole history of revelation. In sublimity and interest, in the depth of its ideas, and preg- nancy of its purpose and principles, no book of antiquity can compare with it. — I. The book opens with the sublime epos of creation (1-2. 3). This is followed by the special narrative of the creation of the first human pair, of Eden, of the temptation and fall, and of the earliest promise (2.4-3). The story of Cain and Abel introduces the account of the beginnings of civilization among the Cainites, and of the descent of mankind along the lines of impiety and piety respectively, till the growing corrup- tion of the world brings on the catastrophe of the flood (4-6.8). The narrative of this catas- trophe leads up to the covenant with Noah and the new distribution of the race (6.9-IO). Mankind having again become impious and God-defying (11. 1-26), the extinction of true religion is averted by the call of Abraham, and the making of a covenant with him and his posterity (11.27,12,15,17). The line of blessing traced through Seth and Noah, then narrowed to the posterity of Shem (9.26,27), is now definitely fixed in the line of Abraham, and is further limited in the succeeding history to the descendants of Isaac and of Jacob. There- after the book, with brief notices of collateral branches, confines itself to the lives of Abra- ham, Isaac, and Jacob. It narrates God's revelations and providences in connexion with these patriarchs, and the singular train of events which led, under Joseph, to Jacob and his household being taken down to Egypt, there to increase, and await the further de- velopment of the divine purposes. No book in the Bible presents a greater aspect of well- planned unity than this opening book of origins. Its materials, diversified in themselves, are presented in the framework of a scheme of ten " generations." The order is as follows : The story of creation (1-2. 3) stands first, as the proem of the whole. Then succeed — I. " The generations of the heavens and the earth " (2-4-4). This heading might well have stood at the beginning of ch. 1 (in the opinion of some it originally did so), but is actually used to combine closely the stately creation narrative with the narrative of man's forma- tion and trial that follows. 2. " The book of the generations of Adam" (5-6.8). 3. "The generations of Noah" (6.9-9). 4. "The generations of the sons of Noah " (10-11. 9). 5. "The generations of Shem" (11. 10-26). 6. "The generations of Terah" (11.27-25.ii); this long section includes the life of Abraham. 7. "The generations of Ishmael " (25. 12-18). 8. "The generations of Isaac" (25.19-35); another long section. 9. " The generations of Esau " (36.1-8), and " The generations of GENESIS 30l Esau in mount Seir" (36. 9-37. i); two parts. 10. "The generations of Jacob" (37.2-50); this includes the history of Joseph. These different sections usually begin with a short recapitulatory statement (cf. 5.1,2,6.9,10, etc.). — II. In the modern critical theory of the origin of the book, Genesis is conceived of as corn- piled by successive redactors from three main documents : (a) A picturesquely-written narra- tive, marked by the predominant use of the name "Jehovah" (hence called J), embody- ing the traditions of patriarchal times current in Israel in the later days of the monarchy. This is thought to have originated about 850 B.C. The characteristics of the J narra- tive may be studied in such passages as 2-4-4 (in 2.4,3 the divine names are designedly com- bined), 11.1-9,12,18,24, etc. (b) A narrative largely parallel to the above, and closely re- sembling it in style, but marked by the use of the divine name " Elohim," or " God" (hence called E). It may have originated about 750 B.C. (Certain critics reverse these dates and relations.) It is preserved only in fragments, and in parts (as in the life of Joseph) is closely interwoven with the other. Examples of it may be seen in ch. 20 (where by most it is sup- posed to enter), 21.6-31,31,40,41,50 (mainly). These two narratives are supposed to have been combined into one (JE) a century or two after their appearance, (c) A priestly narra- tive (P), originally composed, it is assumed, diu-ing or after the Exile in Babylon, as intro- ductory to the Levitical legislation, and now furnishing the framework in which the JE narratives in Genesis are set. It also is marked by the use of the name " Elohim," as far as Ex.6. Its style, in contrast with that of JE, is described as dry, legal, enumerative, statistical, etc. Style and vocabulary can be studied in such sections as 1,2.4,5,17,23,46, and in the flood-story, in 6.9-22,7.11-21,24,8. 15-19,9 (alternating with Jehovistic sections). On the documentary theory generally, see Pentateuch. On the anal^'sis in Genesis, it may be sufficient here to repeat that, while a distinction in character and style between the so-called P sections and the remaining narratives is freely recognized, no good reasons can be shown for (i) regarding J and E as separate documents at all ; (2) treating either J or E or P as documents that ever had a separate existence or independent circulation; and specially (3) holding P to be a production of the age of the Exile. Against these critical opinions, on the other hand, the strongest reasons speak. The similarity, parallel character throughout, and close inter- relations of J and E are such that, apart from the difference in the use of the divine names (which, in the few sections in which it occurs, may be otherwise explained), no one would ever have thought of distinguishing them, or can even yet distinguish them, without com- plete disintegration of the narratives. The stories of the sacrifice of Isaac (22) and of Jacob at Bethel (28-10-22), e.g., are so split up by the critics between J and E as completely to destroy their unity. Regarding J, the older advocates of the " Supplementary " theory {e.g. Bleek) were assuredly right in arguing that the Jehovistic portions (often 302 d^ENESlS single verses or mere clauses) could never have formed an independent history ; while the broken and unequal character of the so-called priestly narrative is a protest against the idea of its ever having separately existed (Graf, the originator of the new theory, held it did not). E.g., 37.2 (P) reads, "These are the genera- tions of Jacob," but there is not a word more from P till we reach 41. 46 : "Joseph was thirty years old when he stood before Pharaoh." The two elements, J and P, are throughout inseparably conjoined. P alone, e.g., records the ages and deaths of the patriarchs. Since the discovery of the Babylonian narrative of the Deluge, the matter can be brought to a yet nearer test. The stronghold of the disin- tegrationists has been the composite character of the narrative of the Flood (6-8). But it is now ascertained beyond dispute that it needs the narratives oiboth J and P to yield the com- plete parallel to the cuneiform version. E.g. P gives the measurements ot the ark, but lacks the sending out of the birds ; J has the birds, and also the sacrifice of Noah, which P wants. The baselessness of the theory of the post-Exilian origin of P is elsewhere shown [Pentateuch]; but there are special indica- tions of early character in (ienesis. E.g. the fourth commandment (Ex.20.ii,31.i7)is based on the sabbath rest of God in Gen. 2. 1-3 ; Deut.4.32 uiuiiistakably refers back to (ien. 1.27. Such phrases as " to their seed after them" (Ueut. 1.8,4.37,10.15), "that he may be to them an Elohim " (Deut.29.i3), arc characteristically Elohistic. — III. The above considerations have a direct bearing on the immemorial traditional belief in the Mosaic authorship of Genesis. The book taken by itself, still more in its coimexion with the Pentateuch as a whole, can only have origin- ated in a creative age such as that of the Exodus ; and no man can be thought of so suitable as Moses — versed in the culture of Egypt, deeply interested in the traditions of his people, and leader and lawgiver of his nation — to have planned and skilfully laid the foundations of the work. The facts that earlier materials may have been employed, that different hands co-operated in the literary execution, and that the book was only gradu- ally brought into its present shape, do not detract from its essentially Mosaic character. The few passages which are thought to in- dicate a later date are very indecisive, and at most point to a revision not later than the days of the judges or early kings. Such are : (a) " The Canaanite was then in the land " (Gen. 12. 6,13.7). No Israelite in the days of the later kingdom needed to be informed that the Canaanites had not been expelled when Abraham entered the country. The passage naturally means that the Canaanites (recent immigrants) were already in the land, {b) " Before there reigned any king over tlie children of Israel" (36.31). This may be a gloss, but kings were in view for Israel even in the Mosaic age (Gen.l7.(>, 16,35. 1 1 ; I)eut.l7.i4- 20). The list of kings in Iid(jin, moreover (Gen. 36), stopping with Hadar (ver. 39), apparently a person still living, points to a date much earlier than the time of Saul, (c) Mention of "Hebron" and "Dan" (13.i8,14.i4). This Genesis is thought to imply an anachronism (c/. Jos. 14. 15,15.13; Judg.l8.29). But " Hebron " (the Canaanitish " Kirjath-arba ") was probably a genuine patriarchal name, and " Dan " may have been " Dan-jaan " (2Sam.24.6) ; pro- bably, however, in the latter case, there is a substitution for the earlier name " Laish." (rf) "Landof the Hebrews" (Gen.4O.15). The phrase is not necessarily posterior to the con- quest. Abraham is already in 14. 13 " Abram the Hebrew," and his descendants had in Joseph's time been a couple of centuries in the land. Alleged repetitions, contradictions, and duplications of incidents are equally un- satisfactory as proofs of non-historicity and later authorship. The story of the Flood is remarked on above. Hagar's " two flights " (16,21) — the latter really an expulsion — are on the face of them quite distinct incidents : one before Ishmael was born, the other when he was a grown boy. Abraham's two denials of his wife (12,20) were the result of a settled policy — " at every place whither we shall come " (20.13), and Isaac weakly followed his father's example (26). There is a direct re- ference in 26.1 to 12.10, showing the narrator's knowledge of both incidents. Jacob's second visit to Bethel (36.9-15) is abundantly led up to by divine command (31. 13, 35. 1,3), with presupposition of the first visit (35-9). So of other instances. The conspicuous element in the narrative is its unity. Many internal marks attest the historical character of the narratives in Genesis — so different from the folklore of other peoples — their simplicity, fidelity to patriarchal conditions, depth and purposefulness, and place in the organism of revelation. But recent years have brought, in the results of archaeological investigation, startling new proofs of the antiquity and trustworthiness of the contents of the book. It is now known — e.g. from Babylonian dis- covery— that the early parts of Genesis (io con- tain, as has always been believed, the oldest traditions of our race (Creation, Flood, etc), though in a far purer form than heathen nations possessed them ; that the centre of distribution of ancient civilization was Baby- lonia (11); that Babylon was older than Nineveh, and that the founders of Babylonian civilization were non-Semitic (10. 8, 10, 11); that the historical relations in the time of Chedorlaomer (Elamitic dynasty, alliances with Arioch, Amraphel = Hammurabi, etc.) are accurately portrayed (14)"; that such an in- cident as Sarah giving her maid to Abrahain, and afterwards disnussing her (16,21), is in precise correspondence with the customs and laws of the time (Code of Hammurabi) ; that the pictures of Egyptian life in Joseph's history are minutely correct, even in the points in which they were most assailed, etc. Such corrobora- tions increase in number every year with the further advance of knowledge. Science, too, brings its confirmations to the Biblical story, as in the ace umulating evidences of a great deluge submerging tlie world of earliest man. On the other hand, the relations of Genesis to the sciences (astronomy, geology, etc.) are better understood, and people are more chary of seeking in these i)rimitive pages anticipations of twentieth-century scientific discoveries, or in the time OF THE PATRIAliCHS lUustrathi^ the Pentateuch. EnglzsK Jfltea 20 20 30 -40 Jciliii. BartliaLomew lie Co-,£<3iii? GENNESAiR, WATES, O:^ the materials for an exact chronology of the human race. Traditional chronology has to enlarge its bounds to admit of the rise of such mighty civilizations as Bible and monuments alike reveal to us. Driver, Book of Gen. ; De- litzsch, Comm. on Gen. ; Green, Unity of Gen. ; Redpath, Mod. Crit. and Gen. (S.P.C.K.) ; Watson, Book of Gen., a true History; Dods, Gen. (Expositor's Bible); Whitelaw, Gen.{Pulpit Comm.); Wright, Scientific Confirmations of O.T. Hist. See also Pentateuch. [j-o.] Gennesap, "Water of (1Mac.ll.67). [Gennesaret.] Gennesapet (rendered " Garden of kings," or " of luxuriance " ; see Chinnereth), a region on N.W. shore of the sea, or lake, which is called that of Galilee, and of Ti- berias (Jn.21.i), as well as of Gennesaret, or of Gennesar (Josephus, 13 Ant. v. 7, 3 Wars X. 7). The " land of Gennesaret " (Mt.l4. 34; Mk.6.53) was a small plain, now called el Ghuweir (the little hollow), on the shores of which Capernaum stood. Josephus speaks of its fertility (3 Wars x. 8) and of its fountain Capharnaum, probably the 'Ain d Madowerah, or " round spring," which still has in it the Coracinus fish which he mentions. He makes it about 3^ miles by 2^ miles, the actual measurements being 3 miles along the coast, from near Magdala, and 2 miles ex- treme breadth N.W. Its fruits are noticed in the Talmud (Tal. Bab. Pesakhim 8 b). The sea of Gennesaret is a fresh-water lake, full of fish, measuring 13 miles from where the GERGESENES 303 Jordan enters on N. to~where it flows out at Taricheae (Kerak) on S. The widest part is 8 miles E. and W., near Magdala. On E. the steep slopes rise from the shores (which are 682 feet below the Mediterranean) to 1,700 feet above the water. On the S.W. the cliffs and slopes — equally steep — rise 1,400 feet. On N.W. the spurs of Upper Galilee fall to- wards the lake, and are about 700 feet above the water. They consist of very rugged lime- stone and basalt. The scenery, with cliffs mirrored in the waters and a flat plateau above the E. slopes, is bare and treeless — in contrast with the luxuriance of the little plain of Gennesaret. The lake is subject to sudden squalls from the W. gorges, especially in spring (Mt.14.24 ; Mk.6.48 ; Jn.6.18). See Mt. 4.18; Mk.7.31 ; Lu.5.1. The lake is now called Bahr Tubariyah, " sea of Tiberias." [c.r.c] Genne'us, father of ApoUonius (2Mac.l2.2). Gentiles, the term applied in O.T. to all nations outside the chosen people. The same Heb. word goyim is also variously ren- dered "nations" and "heathen" in E.V. For the various phases in the attitude of Israel towards the Gentiles, see Heathen. InN.T. the usual antithesis is between Jews and Gentiles (^dv-q), where the latter term still covers all who are not of the Hebrew race. Sometimes, however, the contrast is between Jews and Greeks ("EWrji/es). where the term chosen (notPo^^aloi) is significant of the extent to which Gk. influence had permeated the E. [e.g. Ro.2.9); the " Greeks " being taken as typical of non-Jewish culture. Further, as was natural, the Christian point of view in- troduced a new use of the term ; the name " Gentile " {'idv-q) being sometimes found in contrast not merely with Jews but with Chris- tians [e.g. iCor.5.1). In such passages it is the equivalent of " heathen " in the sense in which a Christian, not a Jew, would use the word. [j.c.v.D.] Genubath', son of Hadad, an Edomite of royal race, by an Egyptian princess, sister of Tahpenes, the queen of the Pharaoh who governed Egypt in the latter part of David's reign (iK. 11. 19, 20 ; cf. 16). Geon (Ecclus.24.27). [GiHON ; River.] Gepa', one of the "sons," i.e. descendants, of Benjamin (Gen.46.2i). According to iChr. 8^3-7 he was son of Bela; but the text here is very confusing, and the three Geras may be re- duced to two. Gera, who is named (Judg.3.15) as the ancestor of Ehud, was the father or an- cestor of Shimei (2Sam.l6.5). [r.b.g.] Gepah. [Weights and Measures.] Gerap' (Gen.lO.19,20.1,2,26.6,17,18,20,26 ; 2Chr.l4.i3,i4), a royal Philistine city near Gaza, with a valley in which wells were dug by Abraham and Isaac. Now the ruin Umm Jerrdr, 7 miles S. of Gaza, on E. bank of the great boundary valley running from Beer- sheba. Water is still obtained by digging shallow pits in the valley bed. Some rubble cisterns exist in ruins on the mound [Surv. W. Pal. iii. p. 389). [c.r.c] Ge'pasa, a city in N. Gilead, first noticed c. 85 B.C. (i Wars iv. 8) ; now Jerdsh, a ruined Roman city of 2nd cent. a. d., with remains of temples, theatres, and a later church of 4th or 5th cent. A.D. [Gergesenes.] [c.r.c] Gepg-esenes (A.V., Mt.8.28), inhabi- tants of a place E. of the sea of Galilee, ap- parently in Decapolis (Mk.5.2o). Origen states that most MSS. in his time read 304 aEROESITES, THE Gerasenes, and some Gadarenes. The various readings may be best seea tabulated. Mt.8.28. Mk.5.i. l,u.8.26,37. A.V. Gergesenes Gadarenes Gadarenes R.V. Gac^enes Gerasenes Gerasenes Alex. MS. — Gadarenes Gadarenes Vat. MS. Gadarenes Gerasenes Gerasenes Sin. MS. Gazarenes Gergesenes Gergesenes The Onomasticon speaks of a village on a hill, by the sea of Tiberias, which Eusebius and Jerome alike call Gergesa. It is probable, however, that the real name was Gerasa, re- presented by the ruin Qersa (pronounced by Arabs Gersa) opposite Tiberias, near the shore of the lake. This has no connexion with the city Gerasa ; but it might be described as in the region of Gadara, the capital of Peraea, and one of the cities of Decapolis. A steep slope falls from the plateau to the lake at Qersa. [c.r.c] Gep'gesites, The (Jth.5.i6) = Girgash- ITES. Gepizim' (probably Arab, jaraz, " bare," OERSHON Passover. Gilgal they place at Jileijil, a ruiii 2 miles E. of the mountain. The 'AmUd shrine, at the N. foot, is the site of Joshua's stone (Jos. 24. 26), and he is buried to the S. of the mountain. [Timnath-heres.] The sons of Aaron are buried on the S.E. [Gibeah of Phinehas], and Joseph on the N. The temple built before 330 b.c. (Josephus, 11 Ant. viii. 2, 6, 7; 13 Ant. ix. i) and destroyed by John Hyrcanus c. 129 e.g. (i Wars ii. 6), was not standing in the time of our Lord (Jn.4.2o). The mountain is extremely rocky and barren, rising 2,850 ft. above the sea, and command- ing extensive views E., W., and S. The ruins include those of an octagonal church built by the emperor Zeno c. 474 a.d., and of the sur- rounding fortress erected by Justinian c. 530 A.D., with a large reservoir. Its foundation stones are supposed to have been taken from Gilgal, according to the Samaritans, who believe that Abraham offered Isaac on the mountain top. [Moriah.] For details see Sur- vey W. Pal. ii. pp. 148-149, 188-190. [c.r.c] \ n-.w uF f.i':Ri7iM meaning " barren places " ; Garizim in 2 Mac. 5.23,6.2), the sacred mountain of the Sama- ritans, immediately S. of Shechem, with Ebal to its N. These two mountains were " over Jordan westwards, the way of sunset, in the land of the Canaauitcs who inhabit the 'Ara- bah opposite Gilgal, beside the oaks [A.V. plains] of Moreh " (Dcut.ll.29). Jerome {Onomasticon, "Golgol" and "Gebal") denies that they were at Shechem, placing them near Gilgal ; but Josephus adnuts tlie site at Shechem (4 Ant. viii. 44), which is clearly in- tended in Judges (9.7). The blessings were said on Gcrizina, and the curses on Ebal (Deut.27.12) ; and the Samaritans claim that Joshua's altar (JOs.8.30-35) was on tierizim, which they read for Ebal in Dent. 27. 4. On the sununit of Gerizim they show a flat rock, with a cup-lioiiow in it and a cistern beside it, as the site where Joshua erected the taber- nacle. On the N.W. slope,at Ldzeh [Luz], which they suppose to be Bethel, they celebrate the 1111; IIOI.V ROCK. i Gepphe'nians, The (2Mac.i3.24 only). I From the nature of the case the Gcrrheniaus must have been S. of Ptolemais. Cirotius seems to have been the iirst to suggest the ' town Gerrhon {Ihc tcall). [Suur.] Ewald conjectures that the inhabitants of the ancient city of Gerar are meant. Gepshom'. — 1. The first-born son of Moses and Zijiporah. The name is explained (Ex. 2.22. 18. 3) as="a stranger there," Moses being a foreigner in Midian — " For he said, I have been a stranger [g^r] in a foreign land." As a Ileb. word, its meaning is " expulsion." The circumcision of Gershom is probably re- lated in Ex. 4. 25. — 2. The form under which Gersiion, tlie eldest son of Levi, appears in iChr.6.i6ff.,15.7. — 3- Tiie representative of th<; jiricstly family oi Piiinelias, among those who accompanied Ezra from Babylon (Ezr.8.2). Gepshon', the eldest of the three sons of Levi, born before the descent of Jacob's family into Egypt (Gcn.46.ii ; Ex.6.i6). But the G-ERSHONITES, THE Gt-EZER 305 families of Gershon were outstripped in fame | which our Lord was wont to visit (Lu.22.39 ; by their younger brethren of Kohath, from whom sprang Moses and the priestly line of Aaron. At the census in the wilderness of Sinai the number of the males of the Bene- Gershon was 7,500 (Num. 3. 22), midway be- tween the Kohathites and the Merarites. The sons of Gershon had charge of the fabrics of the tabernacle — the coverings, curtains, hangings, and cords (Num. 3. 25, 26, 4. 25, 26). For the transport of these they had two covered wagons and four oxen (7.3,7). In the encamp- ment their station was behind the tabernacle, on the W. side (Num. 3. 2 3). Thirteen of the Levitical cities fell to the lot of the Gershonites : two in Manasseh beyond Jordan, four in Issachar,fourin Asher, andthreeinNaphtali. In the time of David (according to the Chronicler) the temple music was entrusted to the Ger- shonite family of Asaph, the Kohathite family of Heman, and the Merarite family of Ethan or Jeduthun (iChr.6. 31-47,25. 1-7). At the cleansing of the temple, in the days of Hezekiah, Gershonites are named with other Levites (2Chr.29.i2,i3), and at Josiah's national Passover Asaphite singers were present (2Chr. 35.15). Asaphites to the number of 128 (Ezr. 2.41 ; or 148, Ne.7.44) returned from exile with Zerubbabel ; and at the laying of the founda- tion of the temple Asaphites led the service of praise (Ezr. 3. 10, 11). Gepshonites, The, the descendants of Gershon, son of Levi (Num. 3. 21, etc.; Jos. 21.33; iChr.23.7 ; 2Chr.29.12). In the sing, it occurs in iChr.26.2i (of Laadan), 29.8 (of Jehiel). Gep'son (iEsd.8.29) = Gershom, 3. Gep'zites, The, a tribe noticed with the Geshurites and the Amalekites (iSam.27.8 ; see A.V. marg. and R.V.). The reading Gez- rites (A.V.) appears improbable, as Gezer was N. of Gath. [c.R.c] Gesem, Land of (Jth.l.g) = Goshen. Gesham' (properly Geshan, as R.V.), a son of Jahdai in the genealogy of Judah and family of Caleb (iChr.2.47). Ge'shem or Gashmu (Ne. 2.19, 6. 1,2, 6). The name of an Arab enemy of the Jews. Geshup' (probably Arab, jesher, " hard and rough"). Two regions are so named. — 1. Near Argob, Maacah, and Bashan (Deut.3.14 ; J OS. 12. 5, 13. 13), a kingdom of Aram in David's time (2Sam.3.3,13.37,38,14.23,32,15.8 ; iChr.2. 23). This is probably the Jedur region. [Ituraea.] — 2. The land of the Geshurites (iSam.27.8) or Geshuri (Jos. 13. 2), near Philistia and the region of the Amalekites, who dwelt S. of Beer-sheba, in the direction of Shur. It was not far from the "south (neghebh) of Judah " (iSam.27.io), and near the Gezrites (Gerzites, or inhabitants of a " barren " region). [c.r.c] Geshupi' and Gesh'upites. — 1. The in- habitants of Geshur (Deut.3.14; Jos. 12.5, 13. 11). — 2. An ancient tribe which dwelt in the desert S. of Philistia (Jos.13.2 ; iSam.27.8). Gethep, the third in order of the sons of Aram (Gen. 10. 23). No satisfactory trace of his descendants has been found. Gethsemane {oil-press), a place men- tioned by name in Mt.26.36, Mk.i4.32 only. It was apparently on the mount of Olives, Jn.8.1), and was a garden beyond the brook KiDRON (or Cedron, Jn.lS.i). It may have been near Bethany. It was shown in a church at the foot of Olivet in 4th cent. a.d. {Onomas- ticon), probably at the old Gk. site by the " Grotto of the Agony," immediately N. of the road from Bethany, and adjoining the church of the Virgin's tomb — built c. iioo a.d. on the ruins of the former chapel, and containing the tomb of queen MeUsinda, who died in 1161 a.d. The grotto on its E. appears to have been a cistern ; its rock roof was painted in fresco in the Middle Ages. The Franciscans in 1847 enclosed as the site a group of olives S. of the road. This is now a garden, with modern walls {Surv. W. Pal., Jerusalem vol., pp. 402- 403). [Jesus Christ.] [c.r.c] Geuel', the Gadite spy, son of Machi (Num. 13.15). Ge'zep {cut off), an isolated hill (Gazer, 2Sam.5.25 ; iChr.l4.i6, R.V. Gezer), a royal city of Canaanites, whose king Horam came to aid J aphia of Lachish against J oshua ( J os.lO. 33,12.12). It marked the original boundary of Joseph (16.3,10 ; iChr.7.28), and was given to the Levites (Jos.21.2i ; iChr.6.67), but the Canaanites still dwelt in it as tributaries (Judg.1.29). In iChr.20.4 it stands for Gob (2Sam.2i.18). It marked the Philistine border in Samuel's time (2Sam.5.25 ; iChr.7.28), and was not taken by David, but burnt by the Pharaoh who gave it, as his daughter's dower, to Solomon, who rebuilt it (iK. 9. 15-17)- As Gazara, it is said to have been fortified by Jonathan the Hasmonaean c. 160 b.c. (iMac. 9.52) ; and Simon his brother made his son John Hyrcanus its ruler in 143 e.g., whereby he escaped the massacre of his father and brothers in 135 b.c. (iMac.l3. 53, 14.7.34. 15.28, 35,16.1,19,21 ; 2Mac.lO.32). It was known to Eusebius as 4 miles N. (actually N.W.) of Emmaus ('Amwds), and is now a strong site, on a hill 250 ft. above the plain, 20 miles W.N.W. of Jerusalem, still called Tell Jezer (Clermont-Ganneau). It was attacked by Saladin in 1177 a.d., and given up to the Egyptians in 1252 a.d. It appears to be the Kazir of the list of Thothmes III. (No. 104) in i6th cent, b.c The Amarna tablets include four letters from Milkilu, king of Gezer in 15th cent. B.C. (Berlin 108, 109, Brit. Mus. 62, 63) ; whence it appears that he was suspected by the Pharaoh, after defeat by the rebels of Ajalon and Zorah (Berlin 137), and replaced by a cer- tain Yapa'a [J aphia], who was more loyal, and who wrote three letters from Gezer (Brit. Mus. 49-51). The city gave tribute to the 'Abiri (Berlin 103). Probably Gezer was made subject to Lachish, where J aphia ruled (Jos. 10. 33), and which the 'Abiri attacked (Berlin 104). The site of this strong fortress (see Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 417, 428-439) is partly occupied by the little village of A bu Shusheh. Wine-presses and Christian rock-cut tombs occur on the rocky hill, where M. Clermont-Ganneau found two inscriptions, cut on flat rocks, in Gk. and in square Heb. of the 2nd cent. B.C. or later. The Heb. in each case is Tahum Gezer, " limit of Gezer," and the Gk. is Alkios — the name of a person buried near Lydda. The recent ex- cavations at Gezer, by Mr. R. A. S. Macalister, 20 306 GEZRITES have disclosed remains of Canaanite origin, perhaps as old, in the lower strata, as 2000 b.c. (including seal cylinders, small idols, and pottery), with Egyptian scarabs — some be- lieved to be as old as the 12th dynasty. On the N.E. a row of huge monumental stones was unearthed, as at Tell es Safi [Gath], resembling those still standing on the surface in Moab {Surv. E. Pal. p. 187). Such a group (of three stones) is represented on a Phoenician stela from Lilybaeum, on W. coast of Sicily (Corpus Inscr. Semit. i. No. 135), with a worshipper before it. These sacred stones at Gezer stand on a pavement, under which was found buried a brick of pure gold worth £100. The Gezer ruins are of all ages, down to the Byzantine period and perhaps later. The town was rebuilt several times, and walled in the Gk. and in earlier ages. Mr. Macahster has found two cuneiform tablets, each dated in a year corresponding to 649 B.C., with Heb. names, proving trade relations with the Assyrians in the reign of Assur-bani-pal. He found also skeletons of babies, enclosed in pottery turns, which seem to have been baked afterwards, as the bones are charred. Such remains occur also at Taanach, and it is suggested that the infants were so offered to Molech. Similar vases, with burnt human remains, were, how- ever, found in 1871 by Col. Ross at Susa (Shushan). E. of the Tigris, and the charring was perhaps merely due to the baking of the vase after the remains had been enclosed. Mr. Macalister's latest discoveries (1908) include interesting tombs of women, with zodiacal signs and Egyptian scarabs. [c.r.c] Gezpites. [Gkrzites.] Ghost, Holy. [Spirit, Holy.] Giah', a place named only in 2Sam.2.24, to designate the position of the hill Ammah. The word means " bursting forth " [Gihon], probably a spring. [Ammah.] [c.r.c] Giants. Allusions to giant races of men occur very frequently (chiefly under three dif- ferent names) in Holy Scripture, (i) n'philim. The first reference is under this name in Gen. 6. 4, " The Ncphilim were in the earth in those days ; and also, after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same were mighty men [Heb. gibborim] which were of old, the men of renown." From this passage it has been inferred that the Nephilim represent beings similar to the Gk. and Rom. demigods, but see Sons of God. In spite of the many difficulties of this passage, it seems best to identify the Nephilim not (as some have supposed) with the "sons of God," but with their offspring. The Ncphilim are again alluded to in Num.13. 33, " And there we saw the Nephilim, the sons of Anak, which come of the Nephilim : and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight." Here the spies are induced by their terror to exaggerate the sta- ture of the Anakim wliom tliey encountered, until thev compared them actually with the Nephilim'of earlier Biblical history. The "sons of God" have been variously explained as "men of power," "men with great gifts," "Cainites," " Sethites," " worshippers of false gods," "devils," "angels." (2) 'I'mdqim. The "sons of Anak " were a gigantic race of men dwelling ftlBEAfl in and around Hebron. Reference to them iS found in Num. 13. 22, cf. 33 ; Deut.l.28,2.10 ff., 9.2 ; Jos. 11. 2if. ; 15.13 f. ; Judg.l.20. A com- parison of these passages suggests that Anak is not so much the name of a person as the title of the race ; while Arba is apparently the name of the individual from whom their origin was commonly derived (Jos. 14. 15, 15. 13). The An- akim were akin to the .A.morites and Periz- zites. They seem to have been a formidable race of fighters, although somewhat dull in in- tellect. It was this warlike appearance of the tribe that so terrified the Israelite spies (Num. 13.33). I'^ the wars that followed the death of Moses, they were driven out by Joshua, with the exception of a few who found refuge in the Philistine cities of Ashdod, Gath, and Gaza (Jos. 11. 21, 22). Possibly the stature of Goliath may be due to the surviving stock of the sons of Anak among the Philistines. (3) rphd'im. The earliest mention of this class of giants is in Gen. 14.5, where it is stated that Chedorlao- nier and his confederates " smote Rephaim." Originally, as it would seem, the name of a dis- trict (the vale of Rephaim, near J erusalem), the word became applied to the gigantic inhabit- ants of the region. They are mentioned again in Gen. 15. 20, Deut.2.io,20 ; and the survivors of the stock are represented in Og, the gigantic king of Bashan (Deut.S.ii ; Jos. 12. 4, 13.12, 17.15). Like the Anakim, to whom they were probably akin, they found refuge with the Philistines, and united against the Israelites (2Sam.2i.18, R.V. marg. ; iChr.20.4). Among other races of giants, the Gibborim (Heb. mighty men) have been in this article identi- fied with the Nephilim (Gen. 14. 5 ; see above). The Emiin (Heb. haughty men), occupying the country held later by the Moabites, and the Zuzim (14. 5), who occupied the town of Ham, between Arnon and the Jabbok, were probably simply divisions of the Rephaim. [Emims ; Zuzims.] [t.a.m.] Gibbar'. Bene-Gibbar, to the number of 95, returned with Zerubbabel from Babylon (Ezr.2.20). Gibbethon', a town of Dan (Jos. 19. 44), given with its " suburbs " to the Kohathite Levites(21.23). It was near Philistia (iK.15. 27,16.15,17), probably at the present village Qibbieh, 6 miles E. of Lydda. [c.r.c] Gibea'. Sheva, "the father of Machbenah," and " father of Gibea," is mentioned with other names unmistakably those of places and not persons among thedescendants of J udah (iChr. 2.49). Probably the word is a later spelling for CiiBEAu, I. of J udah. Gibeah' (/;///). — 1. A town in the moun- tains of J udah, now Jeb'a, a village 11 miles S.W. of Jerusalem, and 2 miles S.E. of Tim- NAH (Tibna), with which it is noticed (Jos. 15.57); probably Geba (2Sam.5.25). — 2. Gi- beah of Benjamin, near Ram ah (Judg.l9.i2, 13,16), where the Benjamites were exter- minated (20.4-43). It had a cave (ver. 33, Heb. Geba), and two roads led (ver. 31), one to Bethel (see R.V.) and one to Gibeah " by the plain " (A.V. field). These notices clearly refer to Jeb'a [Geba], and to the Sahel Jeb'a, or " plain of (ieba " — a small plateau to S.E. of the knoll on which the village stands. Geba was a priests' citv (Jos.21.i7). which was why diBliAH 01* PHINEHAS the Levite on this occasion sought lodging at it {cf. Ezel) ; and Gibeah of the Elohim, Saul's home, was inhabited by a band of pro- phets (iSam.lO.5,10). It came to be known as Gibeah of Saul (10.26,11-4, 23. 19,26.1), as well as Geba, or Gibeah, of Benjamin (13.2,3, 15), and was close to Ramah (22.6). The word, however, sometimes applies to the dis- trict round the town. Thus Saul abode " in the end of Gibeah, under a pomegranate in MiGRON " (" the precipice," 14.2), his watch- men being in the city (ver. 16) ; and again, " at Gibeah, under a tamarisk in Ramah " (22.6) ; as also in Is. 10. 29, where Gibeah and Geba occur together with Ramah and Michmash. The Philistine " post " was here smitten by Jonathan (iSam. 13. 3), and is noticed in Gibeah earher (10. 5). See also 1Sam.i5.34 ; 2Sam.21. 6,23.29 ; 1Chr.ll.31 ; 2Chr.l3.2 ; Ho.5.8 (coupled with Ramah), 9.9,10.9. Josephus also places Gibeah of Saul close to Michmash (^ Wars ii.i). [Bozez.] [c.r.c] Gibeah' of Phinehas' (Jos. 24. 33; A.V. hill ; cf. R.V. marg.), a place in mount Ephraim where Eleazar son of Aaron was buried. The Samaritan Chronicle (Neubauer, Journal Asiatique, Dec. 1869, p. 450) places this tomb at Kefr 'Avarthah, a place often mentioned in Samaritan literature. (See Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 219, 288, 303-305, '"Special Papers," p. 227.) These tombs of Eleazar, Phinehas, Abishuah, and Ithamar are still shown at 'Awertah, a village E. of Gerizim, and 4 miles S. of She- chem, within the border of Ephraim. [c.r.c] Gibeath' (Jos. 18. 28), a town of Benjamin (noticed with Kirjath) ; probably the ruin Jeb'a, 2 m. S.W. of Qiiriet el 'Anab. [c.r.c] Gib'eathite, The, i.e. the native of Gibeath; applied to Shemaah (iChr.12.3). Gibeon', a royal Hivite city alhed to Chephirah, Beeroth, and Kirjath-jearim (Jos. 9. 3-17, 10. 1, 2, 12, 11. 19), noticed with Ramah and Beeroth (18. 25) as given to Benjamin. Joshua, in the plain between Makkedah and Ajalon (10. 12), commands the sun to be dumb (or " dark ") as it rises behind Gibeon. Gibeon was a city of priests (21. 17), to whom the deceitful Hivites were made slaves (9.23). It had a pool — perhaps the fine spring in a cave at el Jib, the recognized site, 6 miles N.W. of Jerusalem (2Sam.2.i3,i6). The occasion on which " Saul slew the Gibeon- ites" (2Sam.2i.1-9) is not recorded, unless the reference is to Nob, a priestly city where the tabernacle was in Saul's time (1Sam.2i.1-9), and where the priests were slain by him (22.19). From Nob the tabernacle was removed to Gibeon — perhaps not far off — where was a great bdmd, and where also the altar was kept in Solomon's time (iK.3.4,5,9.2 ; 1Chr.l6.39, 21.29 ; 2Chr.l.3,i3). Isaiah refers to Joshua in the valley " by Gibeon " (Heb. 'emeq h'^- gibh'on, 28.21), and Jeremiah to a prophet from Gibeon (28. i, 41. 12, 16). It was inhabited after the Captivity (Ne.3.7,7.25). It is mentioned by Shishak, the Pharaoh who attacked Judaea after Solomon's death, in his list of conquests, as Kebe'ana (No. 23). The old town stood S. of the village, on a hill 300 ft. high. Eight springs flow from this hill. The cave spring to E. has at the back a rock passage, which led up into the city. There is GSfiEdN 30? a small plain to S., and rock tombs {Suru. W. Pal. iii. pp. 10, 94-100). [c.r.c] Glb'lites, The. The "land of the Gib- lites " is mentioned in connexion with Lebanon among the portions of the Promised Land not conquered by Joshua (Jos. 13. 5). There is no doubt that the allusion is to the inhabitants of the city Gebal (cf. R.V.). Giddaiti', a temple-musician, one of the 14 sons of Heman, the king's seer (iChr.25.4). Giddel'. Children of Giddel were among (i) the Nethinim (Ezr.2.47; Ne.7.49), (2) the " servants of Solomon " (Ezr.2.56 ; Ne.7.58), who returned from captivity with Zerubbabel. Gideon [the hewer), also Jerubbaal (Baal defends, Judg.6.22, merely popular etymology), also Jerubbesheth (2Sam.ll. 21 ; cf. Ishbaal and Ishbosheth), son of Joash, the Abiezrite (Jos.17.2) of Manasseh, who dwelt at Ophrah. From the narrative (esp. Judg.6. 14,27,35, 8. i8ff.) we gather that 6.15 is an Orientalism, not to be taken literally. Sayce regards Joash as in some sense a king (Early Hist, of Heb.). — The Midianite Oppression. Stanley (Sin. and Pal. p. 136) writes : " Pales- tine is an island in a desert of waste ; and from this very fact it is also an island in the midst of pirates. The Bedouin tribes are the corsairs of the wilderness ; the plains which run into the mountains are the creeks into which they naturally penetrate." Midian ( = Ishmael,8.24), Amalek,' and the children of the E. (b'ni qedhem, from the Syrian desert) had swept up the plain of Esdraelon, and down the maritime plain to Gaza. Like locusts for multitude, like locusts they ate up the crops. After seven incursions, resistance seemed useless. Gideon's brothers had been murdered at Tabor ; the peo- ple fled to mountain fastnesses. Even Gideon, the mighty hero (6.12), beats out wheat in the winepress. (Threshing-floors were on the tops of hills.) A prophet had merely reminded the people of past deliverances, and Gideon in despair asks, " Where be all His wondrous works ? " — The Preparation of Gideon, (a) A theophany beneath the terebinth, attested by the fire that consumes the offering, is Gideon's commission, (b) A dream. " In the first revelation God acknowledged Gideon, in the second He called on Gideon to acknowledge Him " (Keil). (c) Gideon destroys the altar of Baal, with its idolatrous Asherah. (Note 6.25, R.V. marg. Apparently there were two bul- locks, and the one sacrificed probably belonged to Gideon [Bertheau]. Moore says " text corrupt," and translates second — " fat.") (d) Gideon's life saved by the wit of Joash. " In popular outbreaks, procrastination means security " (Farrar). W. R. Smith (Relig. of Sem. 163) translates 6.31, " The man who strives with Baal dies before the morning." See his comment, (e) The Spirit of the Lord [cf. 3.10) comes on Gideon. He raises Man- asseh, Asher, Zebulun, and NaphtaU, but not Issachar, which was probably too down- trodden. (/) Note that it is when full of en- thusiasm, inspired by God, that he tries the Spirit by asking two signs. The first was not conclusive, for wool attracts dew. For the spiritual significance, see St. Ambrose, De Spir. Sanct. i. Introd. — The Preparation of the Army at the well Harod. (See G. A. Smith, 308 QIDEONI Hist. Geog. p. 398.) Gideon commands those afraid to depart ; 22,000 do so. (The words " depart from mount Gilead " were probably proverbial in the tribe of Manasseh, but " de- part " in Heb. is a hapax legomenon of uncer- tain meaning.) He takes 10,000 to the stream, and all but 300 are rejected for not lapping water. The text is here difficult ; but if the stream was the front of their position, and the margins were covered with reeds and bushes, circumspection was necessary against surprise. 7.8 (R.V. marg.) explains the number of horns. — Gideon's Reconnaissance, 7.9-14. He over- hears the Midianite's dream, and regards it as an omen (bath-qol) ; cf. iSam. 14.9,10. The tent is everything to a nomad, the barley-cake repre- sents the husbandman. " We are probably to imagine a round, flat, hardl)aked ash-cake trundling through the camp till it strikes the tent, and turns it upside down " (Moore). — The Attack. While the watch is being changed, the three companies take up their position un- observed. They shatter their pitchers, display their torches, and blow on their horns. Critics object that the torches hid in pitchers required two hands. The horns, however, may well have been slung at their backs until wanted. The host fled down Jezreelto Beth-shittah, to Zererath (Judg.7.22; cf. 2Chr.4.i7), unto the lip of Abel- meholah. Naphtali, Asher, and .Manasseh joined the pursuit. 7.23 is not inconsistent with 6.35. Thedismissed forces were not far distant. Those afraid to attack were ready to pursue and spoil. The Midianites divided at Jordan. Zebah and Zalmunna apparently crossed near Beth-shan. Okeb and Zeeb lied down the Ghor, to be intercepted by Ephraim at Beth- barah. Ephraim's expostulation probably took place the other side of Jordan, but before the second victory. It is absurd to argue that the narrative is contradicted from Gideon's diplomatic words, minimizing his action. It is also quite inadmissible to argue that 8.4-21 refers to another event. The compiler is obvi- ously here using another authority. Siccoth and Penuel refused succour, and were put to the ban. Zebah and Zalmunna fled S.E., and reached Karkor. Gideon outflanked them, and surprised them once again by attacking them from the E. when in fancied security. On his return he " taught " Succoth and Penuel by barbarous punishments, and slew the kings Zebah and Zalmunna. — Subsequent Life. King- ship was offered to him and his family, and refused. Gideon was anxious that Jehovah alone should rule ; but out of the spoil he created an ephod, apparently expectitig divine guidance by means of it. This act was schis- raatical ; but Shiloh was in Ephraim, and perhaps a decayed sanctuary. Gideon could argue that God had entered into direct com- munication with himself, and that Ophrah had been C(jnsecratcd by a theophany. (See Ephod; Robertson, Early liel. of Isr. 231; Oehlcr, Theol. of O.T. ii. 134.) That (iideon had many wives and 70 sons is evidence of his wealth and power. He died at a good old age. and was buried ill the tomb of Joash, his father. [Mn.iANiTKs. I [11. M.S.] Oldeonl, father of Am DAN (Num.1. 1 1, etc.). Cldom' {cutting down, or cutting off ; ] udg. 20.45). It may refer to some precipice, or merely mean " till cut off " — of the defeated Bcnjamites. [c.R.c] Giep-eagrle, an unclean bird mentioned in Lev. 11. 18 and Deut.i4.17. There is good reason to believe that the Heb. rdhdm, translated gier-eagle in the A.V., is identical with rakham, fem. rakhmah, the .Arab, name llll 11.\1'11A.N lC.VVH.N(.i:R-\lI.TrKi:. for the black and white Egyptian scavenger- vulture (Neophron percnopterus). These use- ful, although disgusting, birds are very common in .\frica, Syria, and India, and are never molested by the natives, who are well aware of their value. [V^ulture.] [r.l.] Gift. The giving and receiving of presents is a formal and significant proceeding among Orientals ; and a proof of the important part which presents play in their social life may be found in the fact that there are 15 expressions in Heb. for the one idea. Many of these have specific meanings. E.g. minhd applies to a present from an inferior to a superior, as from subjects to a king (J udg. 3. 15 ; 1K.IO.25) ; hence it is used technically for the " meal-offering " (Ezk.46.20, etc.). mas'eth expresses conversely a present from a superior to an inferior — e.g. listh.2.i.S. shohadh is a gift or bribe for the purpose of escaping punishment, presented cither to a judge (Ex. 23. 8, etc.) t>r a conqueror (2K.I6.8). .Again, the term "gift" is fre- (juently used for "tribute" or "fee"; and hence the expression "to bring presents " = to own submission (Ps.68.2i),76.i i ; Is.18.7). Friends brought presents to friends on any joyful occasion (Esth.9.19.22); those who asked information or advice to those who gave it (2K.8.8); the needy to the wealthy frt>m whom assistance was expected (Gen. 43. 11 ; 2 K. 15. 19. etc.). On the occasion of a .Makkiac.i:, the bridegroom not only paid the parents for his bride (A.V. dowry), but also gave the bride certain jiresents (Gen. 34.12; cf. 24.22). The nature of the i>resents was as various as the occasions. Ere(|uently gifts were (and still are) demanded as a right ; and in sending pre- sents to others, a quid pro quo was generally expected in return. In N.T. bCipov and S6na = " material," and 5w/jed " spiritual gifts." On XcplafiaTo. see Church ; and see Coruan for Mt. GIHON 15.5 ; Mk.7.11. Trumbull, Studies in Oriental Social Life. Gihon' (gushing). — 1. The name of a river (Gen. 2. 13) watering Cush, and rising near the springs of the Euphrates. The Babylo- nians called Cappadocia Kusu {i.e. " sunset " or the West) and the river intended may be the Halys or otherwise the Jihdn, flowing N.W. and S.W. respectively from E. Cappadocia. The latter is the later Pyramus. — 2. A spring at Jerusalem, to which Solomon was brought "down" to be anointed (iK. 1.33,38, 45). Hezekiah stopped "the upper source [mofa ; A.V. water course] of Gihon, and brought it down straight towards the city of David on the W." (2Chr.32.30). In the Siloam text, the mofa is the source whence the aqueduct was excavated to the pool ib''rekhd) at Siloam. Manasseh built a wall " outside the city of David, westward of Gihon in the nahal " (2Chr.33.14). It is clear that Gihon was the cave-spring which still " gushes " from a subterranean cavern at 'A in Umm ed Deraj (the spring of steps) in the nahal, a term always meaning the Kidron [see Valleys]. The mouth is now stopped, and — since 728 B.C. — the water has always flowed down the Shiloah aqueduct from the back of the cave. Solomon at Gihon was thus in full view of Adonijah at the stone (or rock) of Zoheleth (iK.1.9), which was by En-rogel. [c.r.c] Gilalai', one of the priests' sons at the con- secration of the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.i2.36). Gilboa, the mountain range E. of the plain of Esdraelon, rising at the highest to 1,650 ft. above the sea, or 1,400 above the plain to W., and 2,000 above the Jordan Valley to its E. It was named from the " bubbling source " at the village of Gilboa (now Jelbon), near S. end of the range, where there is a perennial spring-well. The mountain itself is very bare, but once had vines at Jezreel on its N.W. slopes. It is noticed exclusively as the scene of Saul's defeat and death, his camp beingat Jezreel(iSam.29.i). See iSam.28.4,31. 1,8 : 2Sam. 1.6,21, 21. 12 ; iChr.l0.i,8. [c.r.c] Gilead, with the article in Heb., " the stony " region ; not connected with Galeed (Gen. 31. 47), the " heap of witness." The mountain plateau E. of Jordan, about 3,000 ft. above sea-level, the highest point being Jebel Osk'a (3,597 ft.). Gilead extends 60 miles N. and S. from the Yarmuq River to the plain N. of Heshbon, and about 20 from Jordan to the E. desert. The W. slopes are very steep, formed of sandstone below and limestone above. It is well watered by springs and streams on the slopes, and divided into two provinces by the Jabbok, which runs first N.E. from Rabbath-ammon, then W. to Jordan. The N. region is now Jebel 'Ajlun ; the S. is the Belqd (empty). All Gilead is rocky, but the 'Ajlun as far S. as Snf and Reimun is covered by oak forests, with flowery glades, and brooks haunted by the roe. The Belqd is bare, with some copses and to the S. a wood of firs (Pinus carica). The region was famed for its balm (Gen.37.25 ; Je. 8. 22,46. 11) and for pasture. It still supports flocks and herds. The capital of N. Gilead was Ramoth (Reimun ; see 1K.4.13), and of S. Gilead MAHA^fAIM (Muhhmah), S. of the river Jabbok GILGAL 309 (Gen. 32. 2, 22), Succoth (Tell Dar'ala) being N. of this stream (Gen.33.i7). W. Gilead and the Jordan Valley to the river belonged to Gad ; E. Gilead to Manasseh and to the Ammonites (Jos.12.2,5,13.30,31). The towns of Gilead included Tob (Taiyibeh), Mizpeh (Stlf), Zaphon (el Hammeh) in the N., and JoGBEHAH (Jubeihah) in the S.. Jazer (iChr. 26.31) being on the S. border [Jaazer] ; in the valley Beth-haran (Rdmeh) [Beth-aram] andBETH-NiMRAH (Nimrin) inS., and Succoth just N. of the Jabbok River. The N. course of the latter separated Gad from the Ammonites on the E. — History. The original Zamzummims (Deut.2.20) preceded the Ammonites, and the Amorites who conquered Gilead shortly before the Hebrew conquest. In the 9th cent. B.C. Hazaelof Syria smote this region (2K.IO. 33) ; and in 734 B.C. Tiglath-pileser III. took captive thence the tribes of Israel (2 K. 15. 29). Idolatrous worship then prevailed (Ho. 12. 11). About 650 B.C. an Arab invasion from S. extended to Bashan ; but the Assyrian king Assur-bani-pal recovered Gilead a few years later, though the population remained Arab in subsequent times (iMac.5 25). Gilead is also a patronymic (Num. 26. 29, 30 ; Judg.ll. 1,2), "the father of Gilead" (iChr.7.14) meaning the ancestor of Gileadites. [c.r.c] Gilead, Mount (Judg.7.3), seems to stand for Gilboa, but R.V. understands " go round about " (marg.) instead of " depart from.." [Gideon.] [c.r.c] Gileadites, The. a branch of the tribe of Manasseh, inhabiting Gilead (Num.26. 29 ; 2 K. 15. 25). There appears to have been an old-standing feud between them and the Ephraimites, who taunted them with being deserters (Judg.12.4). J air (Judg.lO.3) is de- scribed as " the Gileadite " ; as also Jephthah (11. 1 ) and Barzillai of Rogelim (2Sam.i7.27). Gilg-al' (circle). — 1. A place E. of Jericho, where the twelve stones from Jordan were erected, probably in a circle (Deut.ll.30 ; Jos.4.19,5.9,10,9.6,10.7). In Jos. 10.15 the LXX. omits the return of Israel to Gilgal, which seems to be a repetition of 10. 43, and which interrupts the narrative (see 14.6). It lay N. of the valley of Achor (15.7), which was the border between Judah and Benjamin. It is now represented by a few traces of ruins, and of a tank, beside a fine tamarisk, at Jiljulieh, 3 miles E. of the old Jericho (Tell es Sultan), and on the N. side of Wddy Qelt. [AcHOR.] Gilgal remained a sacred centre till the building of the Jerusalem temple. The " quarries [p''sUim'\ which were by [i.e. be- longed to] Gilgal" (Judg.3.19,26) are other- wise "images" in marg. and so in 21 other passages. Samuel visited Gilgal as a sacred centre (iSam.7.i6), and here the kingdom was "renewed" (11.14,15) after Saul's first victory. Here also the rejection of Saul occurred (13.4- 15,15.12-33). Henceforth it is noticed only when David passed over Jordan (2Sam.i9.15, 40), and by the early prophets as a centre of worship and sacrifice which had become idola- trous (Ho.4.i5,9.i5,12.ii ; Am. 4.4, 5. 5). Micah, referring to Balaam, says " that ye may know from Shittim to Gilgal " (6.5).— 2. A place in the mountains, whence Elijah " went down " to reach Bethel (iK.2.i) ; now the village 310 aiLOH Jiljilia, 7 miles N. of Beitin, with a valley be- tween. It stands on a high hill. It appears to be the place intended in Ne.i2.29 (" house of Gilgal"), noticed with Gf.ba, and is pro- bably Galgala, on the way from N. to Jeru- salem (iMac.9.2). — 3. "Gilgal of the nations" (goyim) was a royal city, noticed with Dor (Jos.12.23). It is now the village Jiljulieh, in the Sharon plain, 4 miles N. of Antipatris. For the Samaritan Gilgal, which does not agree with O.T. notices, see Gerizim. [c.r.cI Giloh', a city in the Hebron mountains, given to Judah (jos.i5.51); now probably the ruin Jala, 3 miles N. of Halhul. It was the home of Ahithophel (2Sam.i5.12, 23.34). [c.R.c] Oi'lonite, The, native of Giloh ; applied to Ahithophel only (2Sam.l5.i2,23.34). Gimzo', a town which, with its villages, was taken bv the Philistines in the reign of Ahaz (2Chr.28.18). The name (Jimzu) is still at- tached to a large village 3 miles S.E. of Lydda, S. of the road from Lydda to Jerusalem. Gin, a trap for birds or beasts : it consisted of a net (Is.8.i4), and a stick to act as a springe (Am.3.5). [Hunting.] Ginath', father of Tibni (iK. 16.21,22). Ginnetho' (Ne.12.4) or GIn'nethon (10.6,12.16), a priest who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah. CtivAle (Mghor, 'ezor), worn both by men and women. The common girdle was of leather (2K.I.8 ; Mt.3.4), like that worn by the Bed- ouin of the present day. A finer girdle was made of linen (Je.l3.i ; Ezk.l6.io), embroid- ered with silk, and sometimes with gold and silver thread (Dan. 10. 3 : Rev.l.13,15.6). The manufacture of these formed part of the employment of women (Pr.3i.24). They pro- bably resembled the Arab, hizdm, or waist- shawl, and were worn by men about the loins (Is. 5. 27,11. 5). The girdle of women was generally jooser, and was worn above the hips, except when they were actively en- gaged (Pr.3i.17). The military girdle was worn about the waist ; the sword or dagger was suspended from it (Judg.3.i6 ; 2Sam.20. 8 : Ps.45.3). Hence girding up the loins de- notes preparation for battle or for active exer- tion. In times of mourning, girdles of sack- cloth were worn as marks of humiliation and sorrow (Is.3. 24, 22.12). Girdles were used as pockets, as among the Arabs still, and as purses, one end of the girdle being folded back for the purpose (Mt.lO.Q; Mk.6.8). The 'abhnet., or girdle worn bv the priests about the close- fitting gown (Kx. 28. 39, 39. 29). is described by Josephus as made of linen so fine of texture as to look like the slough of a snake, and em- broidered with flowers of scarlet, jturple, blue, and fine linen. It was about four fingers broad, and was wrapped several times round the priest's bodv, the ends hanging down to the feet. The " curious girdle " (Ex. 28. 8) was of the same materials and cf)Iours as the ephod — that is, of "gold, blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen." Josephus describes it as sewn to the breastplate. After passing once rr)und it was tied in front upon the seam, the cuds h,iH^;iii(,' down. OIPRashltes, The (Gen. 15. 21 ; Deut.T.i; J, >s. 3. in. 24.11 ; iChr.1.14 ; Ne.9.8), Glpgra- site, The ((ien.l0.i6), one of the nations in GLORY possession of Canaan before the entrance of the children of Israel. Gispa', an overseer of the Nethinim, in " the Ophel," after the return from captivity (Ne.ll.21). Glttah-he'phep. [Gath-hepher.] Gltta'im, a place apparently in the lot of Benjamin (Ne.ll.33), to which the Benjamites fled from Beeroth (2Sam.4.3). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Git'tites, the 600 men who followed David from Gath, under Ittaithe Gittite (2Sam.i5.18, 19), and who probably acted as a body-guard. Obed-edom " the Gittite " may have been so named from the town of Gittaim in Benjamin (2Sam.4'.3 ; Ne.ll.33), or from Gath-rimmon. Gittith. [Psalms, Titles of.] Gi'zonite, The. " The sons of Hashem the Gizonite " are named amongst the warriors of David's guard (1Chr.ll.34). [Jashen.] Glass. The Heb. word (z^'khukhith) occurs only in Job 28.17, where A.V. renders it " crys- tal." This seems to be the only allusion to glass in O.T. , but the Hebrews must haveknown of the invention, which, from paintings repre- senting the process of glass-blowing discovered at Beni-Hasan, and in tombs at other places, we know to be at least as old as the time of Osirtasen I., c. 2200 b.c. Fragments, too, of wine vases as old as the Exodus have been discovered in Egypt. The art was known to the ancient Babylonians. Glass was even far more extensively used in ancient than in mo- dern times. The Egyptians knew the arts of cutting, grinding, and engraving it, and could inlay it with gold or enamel, and " permeate opaque glass with designs of various colours." They could also colour it so brilliantly as to imitate precious stones, so as often to defy detection. In N.T. glass is alluded to as an emblem of brightness (Rev.4.6,15.2,21.i8). [Handicrafts, (5).] Gleaning:. (See Corner.) The gleaning of fruit trees, as well as of cornfields, was reserved for the poor (Lev.l9.9,io ; Judg.8.2). Glede (or, dead), one of the English names of the kite {Milvus ictinus), employed in Deut.i4.13, among the unclean birds of prey, as the equivalent of the Heb. rd'd. The trans- lators of A.V. apparently distinguish between kite and glede ; and Tristram has suggested that by the latter they mean the buzzard, which he states to be called glede in the N. of England and Ireland. The present writer cannot, although both species used to be known locally as /'j.'//oc/{, find any confirmation of the latter statement ; and even if true, it would by no means prove that buzzard is the correct translation of rcVd. [r.l.] Glopy, or Shechinah. The word Shechi- nah (derived from the verb shdkhcn, "to rest," or "dwell"; from which also comes the word for "tabernacle") is not found in the Bible. It was used by the later Jews to express the visible splendour of the Divine Presence, es- pecially when " resting " or " dwelling " be- tween the cherubim on the mercy-seat, in the tabernacle or in Solomon's temple. It was supposed to be wanting in the second temple, being one of the five jKirticuIars in which the Jews counted this to be deficient, though they confidently expected its return in the days of the GNAT Messiah. The term is first found in the Tar- gums, where it is used in a special manner as a periphrasis for God, considered as "dwelling" in the midst of Israel. It is thus used, especially by Onkelos, to avoid any suspicion of material- ism, or ascription of corporeity to God. Thus (to take one out of many examples) in Ex. 25. 8 Onkelos paraphrases, " I will make my Shechinah to dwell among them." On the other hand, the words "cloud" or "glory," which seemed to the rabbis sufficiently in- corporeal, are never rendered by Shechinah. The term in Christian use is usually applied simply to the luminous cloud, or the brilliant light enveloped in cloud, which appears both in O.T. and N.T. as a sign of the Divine Presence. This may be regarded as a type of the Incar- nation, as the Divinity of our Lord was partly concealed under the veil of His flesh, though visibly shining through it in the Transfigura- tion, and in His appearances to Saul of Tarsus and to St. John in Patmos after His ascension. Further illustration of this may be found in Jn.1.14 and in Rev. 21. 3. Allusions to the O.T. Shechinah are also seen in Mt.17.5, Lu. 2.Q, and Ro.9.4. Marshall, in Hastings, D.B. (ed- 1902), "Shekinah"; Hastings, Diet, of Christ and the Gospels, " Glory." [a.r.w.] Gnat, mentioned only in the proverbial saying used by our Lord in Mt.23.24, where " strain out " (R.V.) is a better translation than " strain at." Gnosticism, a group of systems of thought, Oriental in character, taking in the idea of Redemption through Christ, and in- fluenced by Judaism and Hellenism, which flourished chiefly in the 2nd cent. The Gnostics had no quarrel with common Christi- anity for common people ; but claimed to be the intellectual aristocracy who knew what was behind the scenes, and went deeper than mere appearances, passing from 56Ja — that which seems to be — to7ctD(ns — real knowledge. They held that God was beyond attribute and entirely infinite. The passage from infinite to finite can only be explained by constant limita- tion. Hence arose a series of emanations, or aeons, each giving rise to others farther from the source, and so weaker, till at last matter and a material world is produced. But how is the origin of evil to be explained ? Here the Gnostics split into two sections. The Moderate Gnostics regarded the creator, or demiurge, as an imperfect instrument of the Supreme God. The world is evil because the creator made mistakes. The Extreme Gnostics declared the demiiu^ge to be positively wicked. These two parties also differed in their views of Christ. The Moderate Gnostics regarded His manhood as real, but called Him a mere instrument of God. His divinity only came down on Him with the dove at baptism, and left Him before crucifixion. The Extreme Gnostics regarded the whole Incarnation as visionary. This is Docetism. Gnosticism produced many different schools of thought ; but those founded by Valentinus and Marcion are the most im- portant. The apparent references in N.T. to Gnosticism or to ideas from which Gnosticism had its genesis are as follows: (i) Ac.8.9-24 contains the story of Simon Magus, regarded by ecclesiastical writers as the father of all GOAT 311 Gnosticism. He practised magical arts, and was called the " Great Power of God." (2) The word -yvQiffLs, which in N.T. generally implies a " deep knowledge of spiritual things," is used in iCor.8.1 in a bad sense by St. Paul, who con- trasts it with aya-mq; " Knowledge puffeth up, but love edifieth." (3) In Col. passim a heresy is attacked which combined asceticism, scrupulousness regarding seasons, etc, with angel-worship and a wTong conception of the person of Christ. (4) In the Pastoral Epistles we come still nearer to the Gnostic idea. Here we see a "different doctrine" (eTepodiSacrKaXe'iv), consisting of fables, endless genealogies (iTim. 1.4), foolish questionings, strifes and "fightings about the law " (Tit. 3. 9). It forbade to marry, and commanded to abstain from meats (iTim. 4.3), and is described as "profane babblings" and " oppositions of knowledge [A.V. science] falsely so-called" (iTim.6.20). (5) iJn.4.1-3 combats a form of Docetism which denied that Jesus Christ had come in the flesh. (6) Ju. 4,7,10,19 and 2Pe.2.io,2i contain a polemic against certain Antinomians, which might refer to those Gnostics who showed their con tempt for matter by wallowing in sin with the body, and claiming to keep the mind pure. (7) The Apocalypse contains references to cer- tain NicoLAiTANES who knew " the deep things of Satan " — a phrase which has a Gnostic ring (Rev. 2. 6, 15, 20, 24). A theory which flourished for some time made all these passages refer to heresies of the 2nd cent., and found in them signs of the late date of the N.T. writings. This theory is now generally abandoned, for the developed Gnostic heresies of the 2nd cent, presuppose the N.T. All that may safely be said is, that while Gnosticism cannot* be de- finitely found in N.T., there are signs of the tendencies out of which it grew. Mansel, Gnostic Heresies ; Hort, Judaistic Christianity ; Lightfoot on the Colossian Heresy ; also art. in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904). [r.s.m.1 Goad, (i) A.V. so renders Heb. malmedh habbdqdr, meaning something to " teach an ox " (Judg.3.31 only). The LXX. understands a ploughshare to have been the weapon. It is perhaps connected with the Akkadian lam-da, "plough-yoke," a heavy bar. [Yoke.] (2) Heb. ddrhdn, an instrument, "sharpened," and probably of iron. [Shamgar.] The LXX. understands "sickle" in iSam.l3.2i, and "goad" in Ec.l2.ii. It possibly means a " sharp " instrument (Arab, dharah). The ordinary ox-goad in Palestine is a long stick with a pointed iron shoe. [c.r.c] Goat. Of the Heb. words translated goat and she-goat in A.V. the most common is 'ez, which denotes either sex. All the other words, with two exceptions, denote the he-goat. These are yd'el, pi. y'elim, "wild goats" (iSam.24.2 ; Job 39. 1; Ps.l04.i8), and 'aqqo, rendered "wild goat" in Deut.14.5. There are several breeds of domesticated goat (Capra hircus) at the present day in Palestine and Syria, but whether they are identical with those reared by the ancient Hebrews it is impossible to say. Among these are the long-eared Syrian goat and the Angora goat, with fine long hair, yd'cl denotes, in all probability, the beden (Capra nubiana sinaitica), a local race of a species of ibex common to the mountains of the Sinaitic 312 GOATH peninsula, Arabia, and N. Africa. It differs markedly from the European ibex by the narrow front surface of the horns of the bucks. LONG-EARED SYRIAN GOAT. thereby approaching the pasang, or wild goat (Capra hircus aegagrus) of mount Ararat, the Taurus range, Persia, etc. 'aqqo, which occurs only in Deut.14.5, is likewise translated "wild goat " ; not improbably it is a synonym of yd'el, as the ancient Jews are scarcely likely to have been acquainted 'with the pasang. For the use of the word sa'ir, pi. s^'irhn, which often means he-goats, see Satyr. [r.l.] Goath', a place near J erusalem, named with the hill Gareb (Je.3i.39 only). The Peshitta Syriac reads Gibeah (see R.V.). [c.r.c] Oob {pit; 2Sam.21.i8,i9), an unknown Philistine town. In iChr.20.4, Gezer stands instead. The LXX. (Vat. MS.) reads Gath in the first-quoted verse, and Rom in the second, but Gezer in the third, which is perhaps the true reading. [c.r.c] Goblet (Heb. 'aggdn), a circular vessel for liquor (Can. 7. 2). Translated "basons" (Ex. 24.6) and "cups" (Is.22.24). God. I. The Teaching of O.T. The Jewish and Christian conceptions of God rise out of the common basis of Semitic religion by a process of gradual elevation and purification. In the oldest Pentateuchal documents, dating from the earlier or middle period of the mon- archy, we still have strongly marked the tendency to associate the presence of God with certain prominent natural objects, such as trees (Gen.l3.i8,R.V.,18.i,R.V..35.4 ; Jos.24. 26, etc.), springs ((Jen. 16.14,21. 30-33 ; Ex. 17.iff. ; Num.20.8ff.), stones (esp. Gen. 28. 11,18,22; cf. Is.ST.O) , hill-tops or "high places " (iSam. 9.13, 10.5 ; iK.3.2.3 ; cf. Deut.12.2). Probably many of the sites thus regarded as sacred were ancient Canaanite sanctuaries which Israel took over. The natural phenomenon which they themselves most habitually associated with Godhead was GOD the storm, with its accompaniments of thunder, lightning, and earthquake (Ps.l8.7-15, etc.). It is not easy to define the exact nature of this association, because the Hebrew had not yet begun to reflect upon it ; the storm brought God to his mind as though He were locally present. That his ideas should be strongly anthropomorphic was also quite inevitable (Gen. 3. 8,8.21, 11. 5, etc.); he had no higher analogy than himself to apply to the Power outside himself. The characteristic Heb. name for God is Jehovah {yahwe), the original signification of which is still much debated (see Driver, Gen. pp. 407 ff.). As to its history, the early documents (for nomenclature, see Pentateuch) differ : J throws it back to the beginning of the human race (Gen. 4. 26) ; E regards it as the subject of a special reve- lation to Moses (Ex.3. 13, 14 ; cf. 6.2,3 P); the name also appears among the Midianites or Kenites (Ex. 18. 8-12, cf. with Judg.l.i6,4. 11). In any case it was under this Name that Moses carried out his great work, binding the people to Jehovah as their God, and bringing home to them that they were in a special sense His people. This reciprocal relation became the fundamental fact of Israel's subsequent history. It is connected with a great act of deliverance, and is conceived of under the form of a " covenant " (Ex. 34.4-8), in which, how- ever, the divine choice of Israel preponderates : it was Jehovah who chose Israel, and not Israel Jehovah ; the covenant is a 5iadr)Kr], not a avvdriKT]. This divine act is the starting- point of the history of Israel as a nation ; what remained was to work out the implica- tions contained in it. The first requisite was to bring about a complete loyalty of Israel to its God. This end was only attained after a long and obstinate struggle, extending over the whole period of Israel's independence. When Israel entered Canaan, it found the in- habitants in possession of a higher and more seductive civilization than its own. The peo- ple very largely gave way to the idolatrous and immoral Baal-worship of the Canaanite tribes and their Phoenician neighbours. Against this the prophets of Jehovah contended stren- uously, and at last with success. The exiles who returned imder the edict of C>tus (538 B.C.) returned in a temper more amenable to the exhortations of its religious leaders, and idolatry was at last effectively suppressed. In the course of this history, as tlie horizon of Israel widened, the conception of God widened with it. It became at once loftier and more comprehensive (Ps. 89. 11, 93. 1,2, 95. 3 -5, 97. 1,2, 9,135.5,6; Is.37. 16,40.12-26, etc.), and also more exclusive (Ex. 34.14 ; Deut.4.24,6.14,15, 32.16-22 ; Is.42.8, etc.). The great prophet of the Exile whose writings are bound up with Isaiah's pours scorn upon the idols of the heathen (Is.44. 9-20,57. 3-13 ; cf. Ps.115.4-8, 135.15-18, etc.), which by degrees come to be treated as having no real existence. Thus monolatry, or the worship of a single God, becomes monotheism, or the more exjilicit repudiation of all gods but this one (Deut.6.4 ; 1 Zech.14.9). As the conception of this one I God becomes loftier it also becomes purer. \ The old materialisms and anthropomorphisms I are stripped away. A distinction is drawn GOD between the essential being of God and His manifestations by the help of such conceptions as " the angel of Jehovah " (Gen.l6.7-11, 22. 11,15,31.11 ; Ho. 12. 4), the "presence or face of Jehovah " (Ex. 33. 14 ; Deut.4.37 ; Is.GS.g), the "glory of Jehovah" (Ex.40. 34, 35 ; iK. 8. II, etc.), and — still more spiritual — "the name of Jehovah," a very pregnant expres- sion in O.T. (Ps.20.i,44.8, etc.). The idea of holiness, which at first is physical, becomes more and more moral. This is the great work of the writing prophets and Deut., and con- stitutes the most marked superiority of the religion of Israel over all other ancient re- ligions. Here again there is a natural growth ; with the improved conceptions of morals generally, the essentially moral character of God is grasped and emphasized (Ex.34. 6, 7 ; Job 15.15,35.10 ; Is.57.i5 ; Hab.l.13). The defect that lingers longest — that indeed passes over from O.T. times into N.T., and even yet is not wholly eradicated from Judaism — is the belief in the special privilege of Israel, con- sidered primarily and mainly as privilege, and not as precedence in the call to service. At an early date the prophets corrected this delusion : " You only have I known of all the families of the earth : therefore I will visit upon you all your iniquities " (Am. 3. 2). The prophets preached a coming judgment, a great " day of the Lord " ; and it is true that this judgment was meant in the first instance for the enemies and oppressors of Israel, to redress the balance of fortune that had weighed down so hardly against them. But it had also another side : it was to be at the same time a purifying judgment for Israel itself, to purge away its dross and take awaj' all its tin (Is.l.25 ). Then, beyond the judgment, when the double process of recompense and discipline was com- plete, Israel would be restored to God's favour and the age of paradise would retiurn(Is. 11. 1-9). This was the hope which buoyed up the nation in its troubles and gave a tinge of idealism to its outlook. At its head was to be the old Da- vidic monarchv, continued or revived (Mi. 5. 2ff. ; Is.ll.iff. ; 'Je.23.5ff. ; Ezk.37.15-28). Thus was formed the conception of the Messianic King, Who, though in one sense a Son of David, was in another sense Son of God (Ps.2.7 ; cf. 89.27ff. ; Mk. 12. 35-37 and parallels), and with attributes higher than those of David (Is.9.i- 7). The expectation of this coming King was a living expectation in the ist cent. B.C. (cf. esp. Ps. S0I.I7.23-51, written about 60-40 B.C.). Round this faith as a nucleus there gathered a number of other beliefs, which all tended to the same effect. It was characteristic of the teachers of Israel to pass with great ease from the collective idea to the personal, and from the personal back again to the collective. It should be remembered that the philosophic notion of personality did not yet exist, and there was no word for it ; also that the primi- tive unit was the family tribe or nation rather than the individual. Accordingly we find the idea of divine sonship at onetime applied to the nation (Ex. 4. 22 ; Ho.ll.i), and at another to the Davidic king (aSam. 7.14), who, as we should say, represents the nation ; and there is a great tendency for the two ideas to coalesce (esp. Ps.89.27ff.). In like manner, the remarkable GOD 313 conception of the Servant of Jehovah in Is.42ff. stands indeed for Israel as a people, but for the people personified as it were in an individual. As the prophets laboured and suffered for Israel, so Israel laboured and suffered on behalf of the other nations, towards whom it discharged the functions of a prophet ; and the prophets were in a special sense " men of God " or " servants of Jehovah." — II. The Teaching of the Gospels. There had thus grown up a group of ideal conceptions, which, though distinct in their origin, were allied in their general purpose. These conceptions were, as it were, waiting to be brought and fused together in a single Figure, which was to be itself also the embodiment of an ideal. So, when our Lord became incarnate upon earth and began to fulfil His ministry, He went back upon them and took them to Himself. They expressed so many different functions or aspects of His mission. He was at once David's Son and David's Lord. He was the ideal King (though not as the world counts kingship), and also the suffering Servant. He summed up the history of Israel in His single person, so that language originally applied to Israel as a people could be applied also to Him ; and the N.T. writers regard Him as repeating features in that history (Mt.2.i5,12.i7-2i, etc.). The combination of all these ideal elements in a living Person was not natural but supernatural ; it meant that He was the culmination of the ages, and that the previous history of Israel as the people of God's choice for the accomplish- ment of His purposes was at once crowned and fulfilled in Him. How did the Lord Jesus Christ conceive of God and of Himself ? Broadly speaking, we may say that His teaching presupposes that of O.T., esp. Deut., Ps., and Prophets, with the vindictiveness left out. On one point, the spirituality of God, the verse Jn. 4.24 is more explicit than anything in the O.T. ; and a similar concise and summary expression, " God is love " (ijn.4.8,i6), probably reflects the teaching of our Lord Himself (c/.Jn.3.i6, 14.23). But there is one aspect which belongs distinctively to the gospels. The O.T. had spoken of God as Father in the sense of Creator. Occasionally the term is used to express the closeness of the relation between God and Israel (Ex. 4.22 ; Deut. 32. 6 ; Je. 3. 19, 31. 9,20) or between God and the pious Israelite (Ps.l03. 13; Is. 63. 16). In the Gospels this conception of the Fatherhood of God becomes central and fundamental. All the teaching as to man and the Son of Man is deducible from it. In par- ticular, it supplies the key to the nature and mission of Christ Himself. The key is the complete reciprocity of relation between the Son and the Father (Mt.ll.27 and parallels). Those critics who would minimize the teaching of the gospels draw the line at moral coinci- dence of will and purpose. Undoubtedly there is this coincidence in the fullest degree ; but there is no limitation to this in the gospels. The Fourth Gospel lays a special stress on the " oneness " of the Son with the Father (10. 30, 17.11,20), and the writer shows in the Prologue that he traces up this " oneness " to essential identity of nature. This is not only the consist- ent teaching of the Epistles, but it is suggested by the peculiar designation which Christ chose 314 OOD for Himself, the " Son of Man." The more direct original of this phrase is to be sought in Dan.7.13,14, where it appears to stand for re- generate Israel (see, however, Gressman, op. cit. infra). In any case; in the Similitudes of Enoch the name had already come to be applied to the Messiah, and particularly to the Messiah as Judge. Our Lord not only took it to Himself in this sense, but it is also suffi- ciently clear that He associated it with other significant examples of the phrase in O.T., notably Ps.8.4. Our Lord's use runs up into mystery, but He clearly distinguishes between Himself and all other sons of men, and connects the title with the transcendent element in His own self-consciousness. [Jf.sus Christ; In- carnation ; John, Gospel of.] — III. The Teaching of the Epistles. If our Lord thus associates Himself in a unique manner with the Father, we find the same association in the Epistles, from the first extant Christian writing onwards (iTh.l.i). It is character- istic that it is found especially in the opening salutations, not only of the Pauline epp. but of others (iPe.l.1-3 ; 2jn.3 ; Ju.i ; cf. Rev. 1.4-6), which shows that as far back as we can go it was already a fixed point under- stood and assumed amongst Christians. Be- sides the salutations, there are explicit pas- sages (culminating in Col. 1. 15- 19) which show that St. Paul already had a doctrine substantially equivalent to that of the Johan- nine Logos. This teaching arises out of re- flection upon the Person of Christ in the varied forms of its manifestation. No lower concep- tion seemed to do justice to what He was and evidently felt Himself to be. The appearance of Christ upon earth could thus only be de- scribed as an incarnation of the Divine (Jn.l. 14). But if so, if there was at one and the same moment God manifest and God invisible, that meant that there was at least a double principle (6(''o apxo-i) in the Godhead. In the recognition of this lay the germ of the Doctrine of the Trinity, in the rapid growth of that doctrine the first step was the recognition of Christ as divine ; the second step was the recognition of the work of the Holy Spirit. There had been a steady consistency in the Biblical language as to the direct influence of God upon the hu- man soul ; it was referred to the Spirit of God or the Holy Spirit. [Spirit, Holy.] In the apostolic age, from the Ascension and Day of Pentecost onwards, this influence was exhibited in heightened forms ; the faculties with which man is endowed seemed to work with unusual activity and unusual effect. It was natural to set this down, and the apostles and first Christians generally did set it down, to a special movement of the Spirit of God. In this was seen another manifestation of the Divine upon earth ; and so there arose the conception of a third element in the Godhead. Thus the doctrine of the Trinity became comjilete ; not, of course, at first in its formulated expression, but as a comprehensive religious experience. Time and reflection alone were needed to give this experience a name and express it in terms of the intellect ; and already in N.T. we may see the process quickly coming to a head. In some of the opening salutations to which re- ference has been made above (iPe.l.1-3 ; Rev. GOD, SON OF 1.4-6) all three terms, Father, Son, and Spirit, are introduced, virtually or expressly. But Dr. Moberly has shown (Atonement and Person- ality, p. 192) that the double invocation which is characteristic of the Pauline epistles is not really " a maimed Trinitarian formula," but that the full Trinity is implied — in the prayer that grace and peace may come down from God to man, such inflowing from above being the special work of the Spirit. The incompleteness of the formula as such is due to the fact that the apostle is not yet attempting to formulate doctrine, but is still at the stage of experience, which is the raw material of doctrine. Was the belief in the Trinity, then, a creation of the apostles or of the Church of the apostolic age ? Or does it go back farther still to our Lord Himself ? The latter conclusion seems more probable. Even such passages as Mt.28.19, 2 Cor. 13. 1 4, are not exactly formulated doctrine, but they are doctrine far on the road to formu- lation. The second of the two references may be within, and is certainly not much beyond, twenty-five years from the Crucifixion ; and the belief appears in it in a very fixed form, equally familiar to the writer and to his readers. Is it too much to infer that it has its roots in language used by Christ ? And so, when St. John in the last discourses (Jn. 14-18) gives explicit teaching on the subject of the Paraclete, and on the Paraclete in relation to the Father and the Son, it seems fair to say that this teaching is confirmed as being, sub- stantially at least, what it seems likely that Christ must have spoken. Beyond this point we need not go. We have seen the conception of God throughout the O.T. period rising gra- dually to a height of sublimity and purity. We have seen it perfected by our Lord Jesus Christ by being made to centre in the idea of Father- hood. We have seen it expanded so as to include the Godhead of the Son, and along with that also the Godhead of the Holy Spirit. It was left for the Church to define what was implicit in this history — not to go beyond the history and introduce superfluous imaginings of its own, but to express, or at least to adumbrate, conceptually the inner meaning of that which it had already experienced in those momentous years in which its career began. Theology is conscious reflection ; but the facts on v/hich it reflects are facts of life. — Literature. The great art. by Kautzsch, " The Religion of Israel," in Hastings, D.B. (extra vol., in 5 vol. ed. 1904), is the most complete survey of the subject in English. Cf. A. B. Davidson, art. " God (in O.T.) " (a mature and finished production), in the same work, and Theol. of O.T. (posthumous, and not quite so satis- factory) ; Montefiore, Hibbert Lectures for i8q2 ; and on a smaller scale, Ottley, Religion of Israel (1905). A new phase is marked by such books as Gressman, Ursprung d. isr-jud. Eschatologie (1905) and Baentsch, Mono- theismus (1906). For the doctrine of the Trinity there is very valuable material in Moberly, Atonement and Personality (1901), esi>. iv, V, viii ; see also Illingworth, Doctrine of the Trinity (1907). [Spirit, Holy; Phil- osophy ; etc.] [w.s.] Ood. Son of. [Jesus Christ ; God ; Incarnation.] GOD, SONS OF God, Sons of. [Sons of God.] Goel', the name of God as Redeemer (Job 19.25 ; Ps.i9.14 ; Is.59.20, etc.). Elsewhere a technical term for one whose duty it is to cham- pion the family rights. On this point Ruth is specially instructive (2. 20, 3. gff., 4. iff., 14). The duty of redeeming the estate of his deceased relative, which had been sold, only devolves upon Boaz in the event of the nearer of kin refusing. The events recorded, at any rate, follow the law of succession (Num.27.5ff. ; cf- Je.32.7ff.), and the similar right granted to the f^o'el to redeem from bondage (r,ev.25.48ff.). It was also the duty of the go' el to marry the childless widow, to perpetuate the name of the dead, the first son being regarded as his (Ru.4. 10 ff.,14 ff.). This custom is clearly presupposed in Gen. 38, and was a standing duty of brothers living with the deceased, the neglect of which brought disgrace (Deut.25.5-io). Pulling off the shoe (Ru.4.7ff.) was the legal process by which the duty was formally refused. Levirate marriage (also a usage among the ancient Per- sians and Indians, and still to-day in vogue amongst the Circassians, the Tartars, the Gal- las, and the Afghans, and connected by Stade with animism) is a kind of substitute for the hope of resurrection ; while, with the perpetua- tion of the family inheritance, it preserved tribal identity (see Lev.25.23ff. and Tribe), and according to Mt.22.24ff. existed in N.T. times. With regard to the go'cl as avenger of blood, see Homicide. [Jubilee Year ; Marriage ; Family, A. ; Levirate Law.] [w.m.] Gogr. — 1- A Reubenite (iChr.5.4), son of Shemaiah. — 2. [Magog.] Golan' (naked land), the name of a city of refuge in Bashan (Deut.4.43 ; Jos. 20. 8, 21. 27 ; iChr.6.71). It lay no doubt in Gaulanitis (Josephus, 8 Ant. ii. 3, i Wars iv. 4, 8), the modern Jauldn, a bare plateau E. of the sea of Galilee. Schnmachev {Across the Jordan, p. 91) supposes the site to be Sahem el Jauldn, a small village with Christian remains, 5 miles S.W. of Ashteroth. [c.r.c] Gold, the most valuable of metals, is used as an emblem of purity (Job 23. 10) and nobility (Lam.4.i). It was known from very early times (Gen. 2. 11^, for it has been found in neolithic tombs and in those of pre-dynastic kings of Egypt. It was at first chiefly used for ornaments, etc. (24.22). Coined money was not known to the ancients till a comparatively late period ; and on the Egyptian tombs gold is represented as being weighed in rings for commercial purposes. (C/. 43.21.) [Money; Weights, Coins.] Gold was very abundant in ancient times (iChr.22.i4 ; aChr. 1.15,9.9 ; Na.2.9 ; Dan. 3.1) ; but this did not depreciate its value, because of the great quantities used by the wealthy for furniture, etc. (1K.6. 22,10 passim ; Esth.1.6 ; Can. 3. 9, 10 ; Je.lO. 9). The chieif countries mentioned as pro- ducing gold are Arabia, Sheba, and Ophir (iK. 9.28,10.2 ; Job 28. 16), and others were Uphaz (Je.10.9 ; Dan.10.5) and Parvaim (2Chr.3.6). MetaUurgic processes are mentioned in Ps. 66.10, Pr.17.3, 27.21 ; and in Is.46.6 the trade of goldsmith (cf. Judg.17.4) is alluded to in connexion with the overlaying of idols with gold-leaf. [Handicrafts.] Goldsmith. [Handicrafts, (2).] GORGIAS 315 Golgrotha. [Calvary.] Goliath, a famous giant of Gath, who " morning and evening for forty days " defied the armies of Israel (iSam.l7). He was possi- bly descended from the old Rephaim, of whom a scattered remnant took refuge with the Philistines after their dispersion, by the Am- monites (Deut.2.20,2i ; 2Sam.21,22). His height was " six cubits and a span," i.e. 7 ft. I in. or 8 ft. 5 in., according to whether we reckon the cubit at 13^ or 16 inches (E.V. "span" here representing zereth, not sit, and so being properly "hand-breadth " = 5*33 in. ; see Weights and Measures). But the LXX. and Josephus read "four cubits and a span," which must therefore be a conscious correction to the scale of the Egyptian cubit (= 2oi in.), and seems to indicate the 13-^^ in. cubit as the one intended in the Heb. measurement. The scene of his combat with David was in Ephes- dammim, between Shochoh and Azekah [Elah, Valley of], although a confused tradition {Bordeaux Pilgrim, 333 a.d.) has given the name of 'Ain Jdlud {spring of Goliath) to the spring of Harod (Judg.7.i). In 2Sam.2i.19 we read that Goliath of Gath was slain by Elhanan, but the rendering " brother of Goliath " (iChr.20.5) is better. Gomep'. — 1. An Aryan nation descended from the eldest son of Japheth (Gen. 10. 2, 3), whose offshoots were Ashkenaz, Riphath, and Togarmah. It appears as an ally of Gog (Ezk.38.6). The Assyrians, under Esar-haddou, c. 675 B.C., defeated the Gimirai N. of Assyria (usually supposed to be the Cimmerians from the Caucasus), who then attacked Gyges king of Lydia (sometimes supposed to be Gog). He defeated them c. 665 B.C., but was finally killed by them ; and they then ravaged all W. Asia. They are also compared with the Cumri (or "dalesmen") of Europe. [Tongues, Confu- sion of.] — 2. The daughter of Diblaim, "wife" of Hosea and mother of Jezreel, Lo-ruhamah, and Lo-ammi (Ho.l.i). [Hosea.] [c.r.c] Gomoppah' (Heb. 'dmord ; cultivation). It is mentioned in 14 chapters of O.T., and the story of its destruction (Gen. 19) was known to the early prophets (Is.l.o,io,13.i9 ; Je. 23. 14, 49.18, 50.40; Am.4.ii ; Zeph.2.9). In 2Esd.2.8 and in N.T. it is spelt Gomoppha (Mt. 10.15; Mk.6.11; Ro.9.29; 2Pe.2.6; Ju.7). [Cities OF THE Plain.] [c.r.c] Gophep-wood (Gen. 6. 14 only). The Heb. word does not occur in the cognate dialects. The A.V. has made no attempt at translation. Two principal conjectures have been proposed, (i) That which interprets the Heb. word as " gdphar, to pitch, or daub with pitch, goph- rith, which signifies bitumen, is not much un- like it " (Harris) ; hence any trees of the resin- ous kind, such as pine, fir, etc. (2) Mr. Fuller has shown its identity with the Gk. Kinrdpiaaos, or cypress, kopher and gopher differing very little in sound. [h.c.h.] Gop'g-ias, a general of Antiochus Epi- phanes, appointed by his regent Lysias to com- mand, together with Ptolemee and Nicanor (iMac.3.38), in the expedition against Judaea, but defeated by Judas, 166 B.C. (4.1-22). In iMac.4, Gorgias, but in 2Mac.8.i2,23, Nicanor, is the more prominent on the Syrian side. Gorgias apparently remained in Judaea. lu 316 GORTYNA 164 B.C., while lioldiiig Jamnia (for which Idtimca, 2Mac. 12.32, is perhaps an error), he defeated Josepih and Azarias, who had attacked him contrary to the orders of Judas (iMac.5. 56ff.). ' [CD.] Gopty'na, a town of Crete, and anciently its most important city, next to Cnossus (iMac.15.23) ; nearly half-way between the E. and W. extremities of the island. It seems to have been the capital under the Romans. Oo'shen. — 1. Called Viai/x by LXX. ; Kaiucav, Kecrcrdv by (ik. writers ; Gessen by Viilg. ; and Gesse by Latin documents), a part of Egypt allotted to the Israelites for their sojourn when they settled in the country (Gen. 46. 34). The name has been found in hieroglyphical in- scriptions, where it appears as kcs or kesein, which, preceded by the Egyptian article, has produced the Gk. name of (^aKovcra, Phacusa. We know from several ancient geographers that Phacusa was the metropolis of the Egyp- tian nome or province of Arabia, situate be- tween " Egypt and the Red Sea " — i.e. in what is now called the Wady Tumilat. This is confirmed by the LXX., where Goshen once appears as Vfa^/x 'Apa/iJta ; and by the Coptic version, which renders it " the land of Gesem of Arabia," meaning the province called Arabia. A Latin docimient of 4th cent. (A.D.)shows that the tradition was then current ; for it speaks of " terra Arabia, terra Gesse, que terra Aegypti pars est." The exact site of Phacusa is known by the indications of Ptolemy, and from exca- vations made on the spot. It is the present village of Saft el Henneh, in the Wady Tumilat, about six miles from Zagazig, on the Fresh- water Canal running from the Kile to the Red Sea. The land of (ioshen would thus be the country around Saft el Henneh, from Belbeis to Abu Kebir, S. and E. of the present Zagazig, the old Bubastis. But it must not be con- sidered as a limited district f)r province. It is the name of a region, which, originally starting from Belbeis in the S., extended in the Wady Tumilat on the E., towards what is now the Suez Canal, including the city of Pithom, and ending at the head of the Arabian Gulf. Goshen, when it was given to the Israelites, docs not seem to have belonged to the adminis- trative division of the country. It was watered by a canal coming from Heliojiolis. Mention of its occupation by strangers is found in an Egyptian text. An inscription nearly con- temporary with the Exodus, speaking of the region around Belbeis, says that it was not cultivated, but " left as pasture for cattle, because of the strangers. It was abandoned since the time of the ancestors." In the Bible, " land of Goshen " is synf)nymous with " land of Rameses " (Gen. 47. 11). This name must be of later date, introduced after Ramses II. made great constructions in the Wady Tumilat, such as the store-cities of Rameses atid Pithom. Probably the name, Goshen, ap])lied to the whole region occupied by the Israelites. When they multii)lied and sjiread f)ver a greater area of land, the name extended with them to the country towards Heliopolis (On), a city which the L.\X. connects witii the Israelite's. Na- ville, Go.tkcn and the Shrine of Saft el Henneh, p. 143 ff. ; Pctrie, Hyksos and Israelite Cities, GOSPELS p. 34. — 2. (ioshen, the land of (Poffo/ii, Gosen), a region conquered by Joshua, apparently near GinKON (Jos. 10. 41, 11. 16). Itoccursonly there, and has not been identified. — 3. A town in the mountains of Judah (Jos.i5.51 only) ; unknown. [e.n.] Gospels. The first point which attracts our notice in reading the Gospels is that the first three Gospels are distinct from the fourth. The first three confine themselves almost exclusively to the events which took place in Galilee, until Christ's last journey to Jerusalem. If we had these Gosp)els alone we could not definitely say that our Lord went to Jerusalem during His ministry until He went there to die. In the Fourth Gospel the occasions on which our Lord visited Jerusalem are marked with precision. The discourses and miracles are connected with these visits. The difference in character is no less than the difference in scene. The first three Gospels usually give a narrative without comment, though all, and especially Matt., apply O.T. prophecies to our Lord. The fourth evangelist speaks with clear authority, and adds comments of his own. Further, they do not claim to be eye-witnesses of oui Lord's ministry, and Lu. implicitly dis- claims any such authority. But Jn. makes this claim in direct terms : the writer " saw " and " bore witness." The character of our Lord's discourses also varies greatly. His say- ings and parables in the first three Gospels nearly always refer to His dealings with us men, and the nature of the Kingdom of God ; His sayings in Jn. refer largely to His relation with the Father, His own Person, and the action of the Holy Sjiirit after His departure. Be- cause they give a common outline or synopsis of our Lord's work the first three Gospels are usually called the Synoptic Gospels. Their relation to each other will be considered in the sections immediately following ; most of their distinctive characteristics are treated under the several heads. The relation of Jn. to the other Gospels will be more fully discussed at the end of this article, (i) How did the Gospel story arise ? Christianity, more than any other religion, is centred in a Person. Jesus Christ is more important to Christianity than Moses to Judaism, Buddha to Buddhism, or Mohammed to Islam. Not only what He taught, but what He was and did and suffered, was believed by the first Christians to be vitally important. If we turn to .Acts or to St. Paul's epistles we find that the preaching of Christianity did not begin with reciting the moral teaching of Jesus, such as is contained in the Sermon on the Mount. It began with proclaiming the need of belief in a risen, cruci- fied Lord (Ac. 2.36,16.31 ; iCor.15.3,4). This brought with it the necessity of saying Who He was, and why He was put to death. Ac. shows that the first teaching, which was given to Jews, was intended to prove that Jesus ful- filled all the best hopes of the Jews concerning the Mkssiaii. His Death and Resurrection were allej^ed to throw light on O.T. jiassages ini]ierfectly understood. His Resurrection was alleged to prove the truth of His claim to be the Son of God and Messiah. His coining to exe- cute judgment was alleged as a means of stim- ulating repentance. Baptism and reception GOSPELS of the Holy Spirit were declared necessary means for appropriating His blessings. The whole was " commended to every man's conscience" (cf. 2Cor.4'.2) by instances of His sublime moral teaching. It was also shown that " He went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of the devil " (Ac. 10. 38). In Mk.l.i and Rev. 14.6 the word " Gospel " seems to signify a written account of the " good news " brought by Jesus Christ. Exactly when such accounts began to be written we cannot tell. A need for something written would begin almost as soon as mis- sionary work began. The absolute necessity for it would be acutely felt at the time when the first generation of eye-witnesses was passing away. As a matter of fact, it seems to have been just at this time that all three Synoptic Gospels were written. The same universally felt need was answered by the same kind of literary enterprise. It is not clear that St. Paul, whose conversion probably took place in 35 A.D., used a written Gospel. His knowledge was based on " revelation " (Gal. 1. 11) and " received from the Lord " (1C0r.ll.23). It is almost certain that this means that it was de- rived from a source which the apostle knew to be inspired, probably an evangelist or prophet. It was from "the Spirit of Jesus" (Ac. 16. 7, R.V.), not necessarily independent of human means. The means was probably oral. St. Paul himself uses the word " Gospel " as meaning the substance of the message which he preached (Gal. 1.11,2. 2 ; Ro.2 16). This must soon have been written down. His friend St. Luke shows how the transition began (Lu.l.i, 2). Those who had been " eye-witnesses and ministers of the word " " delivered " unto others the things most surely believed. Many of these drew up narratives of such things, and St. Luke followed their example. The written Gospels therefore arose from an effort to put down what the apostles and their companions taught, and many such attempts had been made before St. Luke wrote, i.e. probably before 70 a.d. (2) Why do the Synoptic Gospels differ ? It is obvious that not only do all three Synoptic Gospels differ from Jn., but that they differ widely from each other. If we reckon the whole ninnber of incidents in these Gospels as 88, the distribution of in- cidents shared by at least two Gospels is as follows : in all three Gospels, 42 ; in Mk. and Mt. 12 ; in Mk.and Lu. 5 ; in Mt. and Lu. 12. There are also similar groups of incidents. Thus in all three we find together the cure of the paralytic, the call of Levi, and the question of fasting (Mt.9.i-i7 ; Mk. 2.1-22 ; Lu.5.i7- 39) ; so also the plucking of the ears of corn and the cure of the withered hand — events separated by at least a week (Mt.l2.i-2i ; Mk. 2.23-3.6 ; Lu.6.1-11). So too the death of John the Baptist is introduced both in Mt.l'i.3lf. and Mk.6.i7ff. to explain the fear felt by Herod Antipas that he had risen from the dead. In fact, when a parallel passage is found in all three Gospels, it is never immediately followed in both Mt. and Lu. by a whole separate in- cident which is not in Mk. But the differences between the Synoptic Gospels are almost as marked as the resemblances. Thus the ac- count of the birth and infancy of Christ in GOSPELS 31? Mt. differs widely from that in Lu. The incidents of the temptation of our Lord are recorded in a different order in Mt. and Lu., and the temptation is recorded without these incidents in Mk. All three Gospels give a slightly different account of the inscription on the cross, and the words spoken by the cen- turion at the death of Jesus vary in Lu. from the words in Mt. and Mk. Also the language differs, and differs in a very singular manner. All three Gospels are written in Gk., which is far from being classical, and plainly shows the influence of the Aramaic language of Palestine. Yet they differ in style, and not only from each other, for Mt. varies in different sections, and so does Lu. Mk. is in the roughest Gk. and represents the language of an ordinary Jew of ist cent. A.D. who had intercourse with the outside world. Lu. could write the best Gk. of the three, but in places he uses strongly Aramaic idioms, some of which ap- pear to indicate that he drew upon written documents for information. The case of Mt. is similar. It was long ago noticed that the quotations from O.T. which Mt. has in common with Mk. or Lu. are from the Gk. version, while those which are peculiar to himself are nearer to the Heb. There is another important fact. When Mt. and Lu. narrate the same things as Mk., they both use their own favoinrite expressions less often than in those passages which are peculiar to them- selves. If we put aside the discourses of Christ which occur in all three, also all passages which simply narrate our Lord's doings and the account of the Passion, there remain 168 verses which Mt. and Lu. have in common. In these verses there is, on an average, less than one characteristic phrase of Mt. in each verse, whereas in 190 verses peculiar to Mt. there are 5 characteristic phrases to every 4 verses. In Lu. the 168 verses contain about 3 charac- teristic phrases in every 4 verses, whereas in the 164 verses peculiar to Lu. there are about 4 characteristic phrases to every 3 verses. The same phenomenon occurs when we examine the discourses and narrative which are not peculiar to Mt. and Lu., but belong also to Mk. Here again they show a more sparing use of their favourite expressions than in por- tions that are peculiar to themselves. These facts make it practically certain that Mt. and Lu. did not simply take up the usual oral teaching given to converts. The oral teaching, exactly as Lu. tells us, had been already to a great extent written down. And Mt. and Lu. differ from Mk., both because they wished to supplement Mk. and because they copied certain documents which Mk. did not possess. (3) How were the Synoptic Gospels composed? We have shown reasons for believing that the divergences of Mt. and Lu. from Mk. are partly caused by their use of certain written records. We must soon discuss what these records were. In the meantime we have to account for the resemblances of Mt. and Lu. to Mk. On the whole, these can be best accounted for by the theory that they both used Mk., and used it as written in Gk. and not in Aramaic. Except about 30 verses, all the narrative in Mk. is found, and in the same order, in Mt. or in Lu. or in both. SS. Matthew and Luke apparently 318 GOSPELS correct the style and grammar of St. Mark — e.g. both, and especially St. Luke, replace St. Mark's diminutives by more correct words and smooth his harsh phraseology, as in Mk.i3.14, 19. St. Luke in his middle section (9.51-I8. 14) employs another source than Mk. After following Mk. rather closely till the beginning of this section, he leaves Mk., and when the section ends, returns to a verse close to the place in Mk where he left it. The similarity of Mt. and Lu. to Mk. even extends to rare Gk. phrases ; and quotations from the O.T. are sometimes found in two or three Gospels with the same variations from the original (e.g. Mt.3.3 ; Mk.1.3 ; Lu.3.4). Again, in Mt. 26.47, Mk.14.43, Lu.22.47, all three explain, apparently without any necessity, that Judas was one of the Twelve. It is only by a minute examination of the text that the question can be determined, but no theory at present ac- counts for the origin of Mt. and Lu. so satis- factorily as the theory that both used Mk. Mk. is not based upon any written document, so far as we can discover. The primitive tradition preserved by Papias (quoted in I'iuseb. Hist. Ecd. iii. 39) is that Mk., " having become the interpreter of I'eter, wrote down accurately everything that he remembered." Our second Gospel supports this tradition satisfactorily. The other written sources used by Mt. and Lu. comprised a writing to which Papias also alludes. He says, " Matthew then composed the Logia (or Oracles) in the Hebrew tongue, and every one interpreted them as he was able." There is no evidence that the book was actually called " Logia." It seems to have been a collection of numerous precepts of the Lord embodied in a narrative suitable for the catechetical instruction of converts. If we subtract from Mt. and Lu. the material which theyhave in common with Mk., we find that the remainder does largely consist of discourses and precepts of the Lord. Much of this material is reproduced in both Mt. and Lu. But it is reproduced differently. In Mt. it appears in five large blocks of discourses (5-7 ; 10 ; 13 ; 18 ; 25), each followed by a similar formula. See also 11-12 and 23. If we re- move the Marcan portions and some special narratives of Mt., we have in Mt. simply a com- pendium of Christ's teaching. St. Luke shows us an interesting contrast. He presents the discourse-material from an historical point of view. It is framed in a narrative bearing a stamp of genuineness which is sometimes ob- vious. Thus the story of the woman who anointed our Lord's feet is the setting of the parable of the Two Debtors (Lu.7.39f.) ; and Lu. shows better than Mt. the occasion on which our Lord taught the Lord's Prayer (Lu. 11. 1 ; Mt.6.9). St. Matthew originally wrote a collection of discourses in Aramaic, and this was soon translated into Gk., possibly by St. Matthew himself. A similar but not identical collection was used by St. Luke. The language of the discourses is more original in Mt. ; the setting is more historical in Lu. It is almost certain that St. Luke had not read Mt. The middle section of Lu. (9.51-I8.14) is full of the most precious material relating to our Lord's teaching. We believe that St. Luke considered it of the highest possible authority, preferring &6SPELS it even to Mk. It was probably collected by some one who had been with our Lord during His ministry in Peraea, though we are not able to say that the discourses were all spoken at that time. Several sayings are either re* petitions or different reports of sayings which St. Luke has elsewhere copied from Mk. ; they are therefore commonly known as " doublets." Similar doublets occur in Mt., passages of Logian material repeating verses taken from Mk. The Synoptic Gospels are therefore com- posed of (i) Mk. ; (ii) St. Matthew's Aramaic collection of Logia translated into Gk. ; (iii) a similar collection used by St. Luke; (iv) another collection inserted by St. Luke in the middle of his Gospel in one block; (v) special sources used by SS. Matthew and Luke which will be briefly mentioned in the articles on their Gospels. The above theory is fearlessly critical in method and strongly conservative in conclusion. It shows that the principal sources of our Gospels were all written well within the lifetime of the apostles, and that these primitive soiurces all give us substantially the same impression of the Person and authority of Jesus Christ. — Si. John and the Synoptists. It is not at all clear that St. J ohn was acquainted with the Synoptic Gospels. We should, however, note that certain passages suggest that he was : Jn.5. 8f. (Mk.2.iif.); 6.7,io,i9f. (Mk.6.37,40,49f.) ; 12.3,5, 7f- (Mk.14.3-6) ; 13.21 (Mk.l4.i8); 18.18,17 (Mk.14.54.69) ; 18.22 (Mk.14.65). The words of our Lord in Jn.l5.i8-16.2 have been compared with those in Mt. 10. 17-22. There are several points of contact between Jn. and Lu. which deserve attention : e.g. in their narratives of the Resurrection both con- nect the first appearances of our Lord with Jerusalem, and say that there were two angels at the sepulchre. The high-priest Annas is only mentioned by SS. Luke and John (Lu.3.2 ; Ac.4.6; Jn. 18. 13, 24). Lu. and Jn. alone show that Pilate intended the scourging of Jesus to be a concession to the Jews which might cause them to relent, and that it was not a mere pre- liminary to the t rucifixion (Lu.23.22 ; Jn.l9. 1). On the other hand, Jn. agrees with Mt. and Mk. and not Lu. in recording the binding of J esus, the crown of thorns, the purple robe, and the custom of releasing a malefactor at the feast. Both SS. Luke and John display an interest in the Samaritans and tell us about Mary and Martha. They first mention by name the " Romans," " Israelites," and " Solomon's porch." The doctrine of Christ's Person in Lu. is similar to that in Jn. In both He is the "Saviour" (Lu.2.ii ; Ac.5. 31; Jn.4.42 ; ijn.4.14). He brings " salva- tion " (Lu.l.60,71 ; Ac.4.i2 ; Jn.4.22). He comes into conflict with Satan as with one Who has been permitted to have power over the world (Lu.4.fi ; Jn.i4.30). He is able to pass through the midst of His foes unhurt (Lu.4. 29f. ; Jn. 10.39). Hespeaks of " My friends" (l.u.12.4; Jn. 15.14). Both SS. Luke and John speak of the "love" of God (Lu.ll. 42 ; Jn. passim). In both the Holy Spirit is far more prominent than in Mt. or Mk. On the other hand, scarcely a single word charac- teristic of Lu. can be found in Jn. It remains therefore an open question whether Jn. had read Lu. Jn. does not seem to have written &OTfiOLtA§ to supply deficiences in the Gospels previously written. His use of them is not yet sufficiently proved for us to say that he wrote to correct or supplement. His own testimony (20. 31) shows us why he wrote. His Gospel is for people who believe, but whom he wishes to show how they ought to believe. J udging from the semi-Christian forms of misbelief current in the 2nd cent., he desired to correct two ten- dencies. One was falsely spiritualistic, depre- ciating the truth that the Word was made flesh, and despising the Church and sacraments, like the false teachers rebuked by St. Ignatius. The other, more J udaistic, believed crudely in the Church and sacraments, in Christ's miracles and His second advent, and the resurrection of the body, but overlooked the inner meaning of the sacraments and miracles, the truth of Christ's presence with us through His Spirit, and the need of living a risen life here and now. [John, Gospel of.] [l.p-] Gotholi'as (iEsd.8.33) = Athaliah, 3. Gotho'niel, father of Chabris (Jth.6.15). Gourd, (i) qiqdyon, only in J on. 4. 6-10. Though opinions differ, the probability is that the qiqdyon, which afforded shade to the pro- phet Jonab before Nineveh, is the Ricinus com- munis, or castor-oil plant, which, formerly a native of Asia, is now naturalized in America, Africa, and the S. of Europe. Its leaves are large and palmate, with serrated lobes, and would form an excellent shelter. The seeds contain the oil known as " castor-oil," which has for ages been in high repute as a medicine. ftOVEftNOR 319 CASIUR-OIL PLANT. (2) paqqu'oth and p''qd'im. In 2K.4.39, a fruit used as food, disagreeable to the taste, and supposed to be poisonous. In iK. 6. 18,7.24, as an architectural ornament (A.V. knops). There can be no doubt that the "wild gourds " {paqqii'dth) of 2K.4.3g, which one of " the sons of the prophets" gathered ignorantly, suppos- ing therti to be good for food, were a species of the gourd tribe (Cucttrbitaceae), which contains some plants of a very bitter and dangerous character. The leaves and tendrils of this family bear some resemblance to those of the vine. Hence the expression " wild vine " ; and as several kinds of Cticurbitaceae, such as COLOCVNTH. melons, pumpkins, etc., are favourite foods amongst Orientals, the mistake was natiural. The etymology of the word from pdqa', " to split, or burst open," favours the identification with the Ecbalium elaterium, or " squirting cucumber," so called from the elasticity with which the fruit opens and scatters its seeds when touched. Celsius, Rosenmiiller, Winer, and Gesenius favour this explanation. The old versions, however, understand the colo- cj'nth, the fruit of which is about the size of an orange. A drastic medicine in general use is a preparation from this plant. Since the dry gourds of the colocynth, when crushed, burst with a crackling noise, there is good reason for accepting this explanation. [Few Bible ques- tions have been more hotly disputed, since the days of Jerome and Augustine, than that of Jonah's gourd. Pious fathers came to blows and accusations of heresy over the question, gourd versus ivy. The author of Scripture Illustrated says it should be no trivial lesson to theological disputants. h.c.h.] Govepnop is the A.V. rendering of many words: 'alluph, "head of a thousand" (or clan), R.V. chieftain (Zech. 9.7,12.5, 6) ; hoqeq m''hoqeq, " prescriber of laws " (Judg.5.9,14) ; moshel, "holding dominion" (Gen. 45. 26, etc.); ndghidh, "leader," "fore- most " (often of kings of Israel, " prince ") (iChr.29.22 ; 2Chr.28.7); nasi, "of high rank " (often "prince") (2Chr.l.2) ; pdqidh, "com- missioner," "inspector" (Je.20.i) ; sdghdn, " prefect " (Dan.3.2) ; sdr, " chief," " head " (iK.22.26; 2K.23.8); shallit, "man of 320 GOZAN authority " (Gen.42.6) ; Tjyov/nevos, " leader " (Mt.2.6 : Ac.7.10) ; also of the following, which require special mention : (i) pehd, an Assyrian word, used esp. of Persian governors after the Exile (also iK.lO. 15, etc.). "Tattenai, the gov- ernor beyond the river" (I'2zr.5.6, K.V.), was possibly satrap of all Syria ; but the word is more commonly used of subordinate governors of smaller districts, such as J udaea. This office was held by Zerubbabel (Hag.l.i, etc.) and Nehemiali (Ne.5.14), Tirshatha being their Persian title (Ezr.2.63 ; Ne.8.9). The gover- nor administered justice, and was responsible to the satrap for the tribute assessed on his province, which was moreover bound to main- tain him and his staff, finding " the bread of the governor," apparently at the rate of 40 shekels per diem (Ne. 5. 14-18). (2) 'Edvdpxrjs means the ruler of a nation (or tribe), ranking below the title of " king." It was held by Simon ( I Mac. 14. 47), and, when his family lost their independence, by Hyrcanus {]os. 14 Ant. viii. 5). Archelaus was appointed ethnarch by Augustus, with the promise of the rank of king if he showed himself worthy (2 B. J- vi. 3). The title was also given to the head of the Jews at Alexandria and (in the 3rd cent, a.d.) in Palestine. Thus in 2C0r.ll.32 the head of the Jewish community at Damascus may be meant, but more probably the Arabian ruler of the district. Ethnarch was a common title among the Arabians, who were organized on a tribal basis. (3) 'llyfjawv is used specially of the Roman procurators of Judaea: Pilate (.VIt.27.2, etc.), Felix (Ac.23.26), Festus (26. 30). The procurator had supreme control over his province, including the power of life and death; but the " legatus " of Syria had a certain superintendence over him. Quirinus (Lu.2.2) was legatus of Syria 6-9 a.d. ; at the time of Christ's birth he probably held some military office there. (Ramsay, Was Christ born at Bethlehem? ch. xi.). (4) 'ApxiTpiKXivos (Jn.2.8,9), " governor [ruler] of the feast," means either a guest chosen to preside, cf. Ecclus.32.r, or else a sort of head waiter. [Meals.] (5) OtK0i'6/A05(Gal.4.2)isa "steward" managing a minor's property. (6) '0 evdvvwv (Jas.3.4) is "the steersman." [11. s.] Oozan', the tract to which the Israelites were carried away by Pul (Tiglath-pilcscr III.) and Shalmaneser IV., or possibly Sargon (iChr. 5.26 ; 2K.17.6 and 18. 11). This is the (iaiizan- itis of Ptolemy, situated between the Chaboras (Habor, now khabtir, the great Mesoputamian affluent of the liuphrates) and the Saocoras. In an Assyrian geographical list it is mentioned with Nasibina (Nisibis). It became an Assy- rian pr(jvince, ruled by governors from Nine- veh, and revolted against that power in 759 II. c, but was subdued. [t.c.f.] Qpa'ba (iEsd.5.29) = Hagaba. Grape. [Vine.] Grass, (i) This is the ordinary rendering of Uie Hcl). lukir (1K.I8.5; J(.b40.i5; Ps.l04. 14 ; Is. 15. 6). As the herbage rapidly fades under the parching heat of the sun of Palestine, it has afforded to the sacred writers an iinaf,'(; of the fleeting nature of human fortunes (Job 8. 12 ; Ps.37.2). and of the brevity of human life (Is.40.6,7; Ps.90.5). (2) In A.V. of Je.50.ii, GROVE, GROVES " as the heifer at grass " should be " as th6 heifer treading out corn" (cf. Ho.lO.ii). (3) In Num. 22. 4, where mention is made of the ox licking up the grass of the field, the Heb is yereq, which is elsewhere rendered green. (4) 'esebh signifies herbs for human food (Gen. 1. 30; Ps.lO4.14), but also fodder for cattle (Deut.ll. 15; Je.14.6). It is the grass of the field (Gen. 2.5 ; Ex. 9. 22) and of the mountain (Is. 42. 15 ; Pr.27.23). In N.T. the word grass is always the representative of the (ik. x^P'''°^- [Hay.] Grasshopper. [Locust.] Grave. [Burial; Tomb.] Great Sea (Num. 34.6,7 ; Jos.i5.47), the Mediterranean. [Sea; Hor.] Greaves (iniclhi). [.\ums. Defensive, (3).] Greece, Greeks, Grecians. In Zech. 9.13, A.V. renders the Heb. Javan by " Greece." Javan, or Ionia, is named as an Aryan race in Gen. 10. 2 (see iChr. 1.5,7 ; Is. 86. ig ; Ezk. 27.13) ; but about the time when Zechariah wrote the Greeks were coming into conflict with Persia for the first time. They afterwards dominated Palestine from 333 to 63 B.C., and many traces of their presence are found in excavations, including pottery, coins, and Gk. inscriptions. The "Grecians" (J 1.3.6), or lonians, were traders much earlier, who took Hebrew children as slaves, and c. 600 B.C. sold slaves and bronze vessels at Tyre. They were known to Sargon of Assyria c. 710 B.C., and Arcadian Greeks from the Peloponnesus had then settled in Cyprus. See also Dan. 8. 21, 10. 20, 11. 2. (rreek converts to Judaism are noticed, in J n. 12. 20, as coming up to Jerusalem (see Ac. 17. 4) ; and educated Jews then spoke Gk. (21. 37). [Hellenist ; (iENTiLES.] The Jews of .\ntioch and the West are sometimes noticed as " Grecians " (Ac.ll. 20,2 1 ). Greece itself is first mentioned in Ac. 20. 2 (cf. however 1Mac.i2.5-23, which appears somewhat apocryphal). Cireeks, such as the Danai and other tribes of Asia Minor, invaded Palestine in the 13th cent, b.c, even to the borders of Egypt. The presence of pagan Greeks in Palestine, in the 2nd cent. B.C., is attested by inscribed tombs, and texts in honour of .\pollo, excavated in Philistia. The stone of the temple railing, found at Jerusalem by M. Clermont-Ganneau, verifies the statement of Josephus (5 Wars v. 2), and shows that aGk.- si:)eaking population visited Jerusalem in the time of our Lord. Their presence is also proved in Decapohs by texts of the time of Herod the Great in Bashan, wiiile the earliest Palmyra bilinguals, in Syr. and Gk., go back to the same age, when (ik. was the general literary lanuuaKc of the Roman empire. [c.r.c] Greek. [Hellenistic C]reek.] Greyhound (Pr.3O.31 ; Heb. zarzir malhnayim — /.«'. "one girt [R.V. marg., or, well knit] about tlie loins"). The greyhound is still the best sug),'estion, of the many that have been m.ule, as to what animal " comely in going " is here; intendeil. The .\rabs some- times gird tlieir ,i,'revhoun(is to prevent their e.itiuf^ too nine h .ind becoming inactive. Grove, Groves, (i) Thus .\.V. renders throughout the original words retained by R.V. .AsHEKAH, .Aslierini. (:.) In .\.V. of Gen. 21. 33 for 'i-shel ; R.V. rightly tamarisk-tree. So in .\.V. marg. of I Sam. 22.0. [Tamarisk.] [J.R.] GUARS HABAKKUK 321 SACRED SYMBOLIC TREE OF THE ASSYRIANS. From Lord Aberdeen's BIdCk Stone, (hergusson, Nineveh and Persepoiis, p. 298.) See art. " Grove, Groves." Guard, (i) In Heb. tabbah signified a " cook " (iSam. 9.23, 245"; but see Executioner. It is applied to the body-guard of the Icings of Egypt (Gen.37.36) and Babylon (2K.25.8 ; J e. 39.9, 40. 1 ; Dan.2.14). (2) riifim properly means " runners," and is the ordinary term employed for those attendants of kings whose office was to run before the chariot (2Sam.l5.i; iK.1.5), and to form a military guard (iSam. 22.17; 2K.10.25,11.6 ; 2Chr.i2.10). [FooT- MAX.] (3) The terms mishmereth 3ind mishmdr express properly the act of watching, but are occasionally transferred to the persons who kept watch (Ne.4.22, etc. ; Job 7. 12). Gudg'odah'. [Hor-hagidgad.] Guni'. — 1. A son of Naphtali (Gen.46.24 ; iChr.7.13), and founder of the family of the Gunites (Num.26.48). — 2. A Gadite whose descendants dwelt in Gilead (iChr.5.15). Gup, The going- up to (2K.9.27). If Ahaziah fled N. from Jezreel ("the garden house " being Beit Jenn, and Ibleam being Yebla) the site may be at the ruin Qdrd, where the main road towards Beit Jenn ascends the hill 4 miles W. of Yebla. The LXX. reads " ascent of Gai " {i.e. "of the ravine"), [c.r.c] Gup-ba'al, a place or district in which dwelt Arabians (2Chr.26.7). It appears from the context to have been in the country lying between Palestine and the Arabian peninsula ; but this, although probable, cannot be proved. The Arab geographers mention a place called Baal, on the Syrian road, N. of Medina. H Haahashtapi', a man, or a family, imme- diately descended from Ashur, " father of Tekoa" by his second wifeNaarah (iChr.4.6). Habaiah'. Bene-Habaiah were sons of the priests, of doubtful descent, who returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.6i ; Ne.7. 63). Habakkuk. {hdbhaqquq, doubtless from hd- bhaq, "to embrace," and so probably a term of affection. ' kix^aKovjx, etc.). We know nothing concerning this prophet, but a variety of legends exist of little or no value, as that he was the son of the Shvmammite woman (2K.4). The title of the story of Bel and the Dragon in the LXX. (Cod. Chis., but not Theodotion) runs "from the prophecy of Habakkuk, the son of Joshua, of the tribe of Levi." In the story it is told how Habakkuk was miraculously brought from J udaea to Babylon, to convey food to Daniel in the lions' den. The animating thought of Habakkuk's message is the doom to be brought on Judah by the Chaldeans, in God's wrath for their sins, and next the reckless arrogance of the invader, who sees not that he is merely the rod of vengeance in God's hands. To the pro- phet it is given to see, beyond the awful^havoc, the time when the destroyer, his task accom- plished, falls beneath a mightier ioe.—Date. The only point of external evidence is the position the book occupies among the Minor Prophets, intermediate between Nahum and Zephaniah. The former prophesied probably soon after 660 b.c. (Schrader), and the latter in the earlier part of the reign of J osiah, before the Great Reformation — say, c. 630 b.c. With this agrees the internal evidence, which is de- finite enough, resting on two statements in I.5 — the doofn is to come in the lifetime of many of those who hear the threat, and it will be heard with incredulity. But this would be absolutely impossible after the battle of Carchemish (c. 605 B.C.), when the Egyptian army was shattered by the Chaldeans under Nebuchadnezzar ; for it could not be doubted that the victorious young Titan would in due course march southward, and that Babylon would again become "the lady of kingdoms." But more, when Nabo-polassar, Nebuchad- nezzar's father, assumed a quasi-regal author- ity at Babylon in 625 b.c, it must have been clear to shrewd observers that Babylon was becoming the dominant power in Western Asia, and the incredulity would thus be increasingly unlikely after 625 b.c For the other limit, it was less than 40 years from Manasseh's death to the first Chaldean invasion ; so that many of those living in the last years of Manasseh's reign may well have heard the pro- phecy. The condition of things, too, described in 1.2-4 suits that period. Though the bloody persecution had ceased, a time of deadness and corruption remained. To go further back would make the conditions unsuitable and the time too long. For the former reason we may cast out the short evil reign of Amon. The early years of Josiah's reign would be a pos- sible time, when the boy was powerless in the 21 322 HABAZINIAH HADATTAH hands of his advisers, but inapossible ia the time following the Great Reformation. Thus, our choice lies between the last years of Manas- seh's reign and the opening years of Josiah's. Not a few critics have suggested the reign of Jehoiakim, since then Judah knew much about the Chaldeans; but this would make I.5 meaningless. Incredulity would be out of the question then, and such an antedating of the prophecy would be (in view of 2. 20) so much profane audacity. — Contents. In I.2-4 the prophet bewails the state of social corruption, and appeals to (iod for help. In answer {vv.5-17) the invasion of the Chaldeans is foretold to an incredulous nation. The Chaldeans fail to realize that they are but the rod of God's anger ; but the prophet knows that it is for correction that God has appointed them. As the prophet waits to hear God's answer (2.1-4), he is told that the vision will surely come, and that he must wait by faith. In due time the Chal- deans shall be judged (5-12) for their greed, their cruelty (12-14), their drunkenness (15-17), and (18, 19) their idolatry. Then comes the so- lemn seal of ver. 20. The " Prayer " follows (3), in which the two thoughts of the invasion and the subsequent deliverance are united, till at the end the prophet breaks forth in a jubi- lant strain at the thought of God's love for His people. — Integrity. What has been said above l)resupposes the integrity of the book as it now stands, but a recent theory makes I.2-4 refer to an earlier oppressor, to overthrow whom the Chaldeans are raised up ; and removes I.5-11 so as to follow 2.4. If by the earlier oppressor is meant the Assyrian (though it is hard to see why he should not have been named), it may suffice to say that at no possible date to which we can assign Habakkuk, was Assyria potent for evil ; nor would the description (1. 14-17) suit the Egyptians. Again, I.2-4 are wholly imsuitable as a description of cruel foreign oppression ; and, in view of the unbroken tradition, the theory may unhesitatingly be rejected. Three passages of Habakkuk are quoted in N.T., in every case from the LXX., with minor variations : I.5 in Ac. 13. 41 ; 2.3 in Hob. 10.37 ; and 2.4 in R0.I.17, Gal. 3. 11, Heb. 10.38. DeUtzsch, Der Proph. Hab.ausge- Icgt (not translated) ; Ewald, Prophets of the O.T. ; Pusey, Orelli, and G. A. Smith, in their commentaries on the Minor Prophets ; Kirkpatrick, Doctrine of the Prophets; A. B. Davidson, in The Camb. Bible for Schools and Colleges ; Baumgartner, Le Prophcte Habakuk ; Sinker, The Psalm of Habakkuk. [r.s.] Habaziniah', apparently the head of a family of the Kkchabites (Je.35.3). Habbacuc' (Bel 33-39) = the prophet Hahakki'k. Habepg-eon. [Arms, Defensive, (2).] Habop, the "river of Gozan " (2K.I7.6, 18.11 ; iChr.5.26), is identified beyond all reasonable doubt with the famous affluent of the luiphrates, which is called Aborrhas by Strabo, and Chaboras by Pliny and Ptolemy. The stream in question still bears the name of the Khabur. It Hows from several sources in the inovmtain-chain, which in about the 37th parallel flanks the valley of the Tigris on W. — the Mons Masius of Strabo aud Ptolemy, now thf" Karcj Ddgh. Hachaliah', father of Nehemiah (Ne.1.1, lO.i). Hachilah', Hill of (Heb. gibh'ath ha- hakhild, " dusky hill " ), in "the S. part of the J e- SHIMON," near Ziph (iSam. 23. 19,26. 1,3), where Saul camped, seeking David. Probably the ridge el Kola, 6 miles E. of Tell Zif. [c.r.c] Hachmoni', Son of, and The Hach'- monite (iChr. 27. 32, 11. 11), both renderings — the former the correct one — of the same Heb. word. Hachmon was no doubt the founder of a family to which these men be- longed ; the actual father of Jashobeam was Zabdiel (iChr.27.2), and he is also said to have belonged to the Korhites (iChr.12.6), possibly the Levites descended from Korah. Hadad'( Heb. hddhddh, Bab. a^Ww, "father " or " chief " ; from Akkadian ad, Turkish ad). the name of the sun in Syria, mentioned as early as 15th cent b.c. in the Amarna letters of Rib-adda {child of Hadad), king of Gebal. It was also a personal name for a " chief." — 1. For Hadar (in iChr. 1.30,46) ; the son of Ishmael(Gen.25.i5).— 2.ThekingofEdom(36. 35) and — 3. A king of Edom rather later (iChr. 1.50), also Hadar in Gen. 36. 39. — 4. An Itdomite prince (iK. 11. 14-22) who fled to Egypt, but returned home with a royal bride. The LXX. (ver. 25) understands that this Hadad (Gk."A5ep) ruled " over Edom," but the Heb. refers to Rezon in Damascus, [c.r.c] Hadade'zep (2Sam.8.3-i2 ; iK.11.23) = Hadarezer ; both forms are found in R.V. as well as in A.V., but an inscriptit. province, and lost much of its importance. Antiochus Epipha- nes changed its name to Epiphaneia ; but the natives still called it Hamath, even in Jerome's time ; and it is from this that its present name, Hantah, has come. Several inscriptions in re- lief, in the hierogl^'phic character known as Hittite, have been found on the site, [t.g.p.] Hamath'-zobah' (2Chr.8.3) has been con- jectured to be the same as Hamath ; but the addition of Zobah would seem rather to point to another Hamath, which was thus distin- guished from " Great Hamath." One of the Gk. forms of the name is Baisoba, suggesting Beth-zobah, and consequently a diflcrent locality. Assyriologists have identified with the second element, Zobah, the city .S'm6j7 of an Assyrian geographical list (where it is immediately followed by Hatndtu or Hamath). This is probably the ciiy^ Sub iti in the neigh- bourhood of which ASSur-bani-apli defeated the Arabians. [t.g.p.] Hammath', one of the cities of Naphtali (Jos. 19. 35). The name means "hot spring." The Jerusalem Talmud (Erubin v. 5) places it near Tiberias [ Rakkatii ] — that is, at the Ham- mam, or " hot bath," to the S. This is the Enunausof Josephus(i8 Ant. ii. 3 ; 4 Warsi. 3). The springs (144° to 132° Fahr. ) are 3 in number, at a spot rather more than a mile S. of Tiberias. In the list of Levitical cities of Naphtali (Jos. 21. 32) the name of this place seems to be given as Hammoth-dof*. and in iChr.6.7f) it is further altered to Hammon. It is prohablv the Hanuit of the list of Thothnies III. (No. 16). [c.R.c] Hammedatha', the Agagite, father of Haman ( i;stli.3.i,i(),8.5,9.24). Hamme lech, rendered in A.V. as a proper name (10.36.26,38.6); more properly = " the kiiiK," as K.V. |Mai.( miah. 8.] Hammep. Four Heb. words for this ^JXJSt : htilmuth (only J ud^. 5.26) ; miuf(fcbheth HAN AN (only Judg.4.2i), maqqdbhd (iK.6.7), from the same root ; so called because by means of it a hole was made by driving in a nail; patjish. Mus.) a forge-hammer, and therefore made of iron (Is. 41. 7) ; in Je.5O.23 used figuratively of Babylon. [w.o.e.c] Hammoleketh {= the queen), daughter of Machir and sister of Gilead (iChr.7.i8). Hammon'. — 1. A city in .'\sher (Jos.l9. 28) ; probably 'Ain Hamiil, a place with ruins between Accho and Tyre. — 2. A city allotted out of the tribe of Naphtali to the Levites (iChr.6.76). [Hammath.] [c.k.c] Hammoth'-dop', a city of Naphtali, al- lotted with its suburbs to the Gershonite Levites (Jos.2i.32). [Hammath.] [c.r.c] Hammupabi [Amraphel; Chronology; Syria], Code of. [Law in O.T.] Hamonah' (//;t;mH//j/i(d; (Ps.23.5), a drinking-cup. (5) Of f^lass-tc'ork only the scantiest notices are to 1)C found in O. T. Babylonians, Phoenicians, and I'^gyptians were all acquamted with the art before 2000 n.c, so that tiie Israelites must iiave known of it. though tliey evidently did not understand its manufacture until late in their history. Glass (z'klnikhlth. R.V. crystal), mentioned with gold, hence clearly regarded as very precious, occurs in Job 28. 17 ; this is the only reference to it, for the " hand-mirror " spoken of by the prophet (Is. 3. 23) was of polished metal. The words in Pr.33.31, " Look PLATE XV ASSYRIAN POTTERY. (Brit. Mus.) EGYPTIAN POTTERY. (Brit. Mus. p. 330] PHOENICIAN POTTERY, DISCOVERED BY CESXOLA IN CYPRUS. HANDICRAFTS HANDICRAFTS 331 not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth its colour in the cup, "have beensupposed to imply that the cup was of glass ; there is no sufficient ground for the supposition, but even were it so, it would not necessarily mean that the cup had been manufactured in Palestine. (6) One of the most important handicrafts among the Israelites was that of the weaver. This, which concerned itself almost exclusively with the manufacture of clothing apparel, was originally practised by the women alone, though later by men too. As at the present day in Palestine, so, no doubt, in very early times, a handloom of the horizontal type was used. The frame in which the warp (i.e. a num- ber of parallel threads) was fixed was of wood, and the woof (i.e. a number of threads running at right angles to the warp) was worked with the hand ; but it is clear, from the large num- ber of references to weaving, etc., in O.T., and the many kinds of words used, that much more elaborate methods must have come into vogue in comparatively early times. It must suffice here merely to mention the chief of these. Women spun (tdwd) wool, flax, goats' and camels' hair, and sheep's wool ; the spindle (pelekh) is mentioned, e.g. aSam.S.ag (Heb.), Pr.3i.19 ; that which was spun (?'.£. the yarn) is called matwS (Ex. 35. 25) ; the word for " to weave " is 'dragh (Judg.S.is)'; the loom is called 'eregh (16. 14) ; massekhd and masse- kheth (Is. 25. 7 [Heb.] ; Judg.l6.13) are both used for the web ; sh'thi (Lev. 13. 48) is the warp ; dalld (Is. 38. 12) the loom; the weaver's beam (nftior '6r''ghim) is mentioned in iSam. 17.7, 2Sam.2i.19 ; and the rather difficult expressions bottim I'bhaddifn (lit. " houses for the rods") and bottim labb'-rihlm (lit. " houses for the beams "), both of which are explained by being called " rings " (tabba'oth), are also evidently connected with weaving (Ex. 25. 27, 26.29), judging by the context. The woof m d i fe ^ m^fy^ ffil^^lh'^^^^^^ l« ^m W i 1 I^HK^^^RHfe^l^^l^BH B^^a ^SSB^^^ ^^^^^'J \^ ^ ^^ ^^^fSa^^&^BB^^^ sss^w^g^^sbgf ^jy\\ ^ 'XJUH^kM^Jwi w ^ 4^^^^i& ^w ^^•(V • "» • l^^s. • -X^^ "^ J ■^^^.-s^ ^i&C • ^^ ■^^-I3S^_ 5jv^ 0 "^^^^^^^^ :!^S -"'-'"• ' tr * - '"'~~ ^'~^ i ^ 0 . ^ -—J) • ^^ "•»-.•«■.• - . - '^ ^^ ■ — ** • 0 - AN AKAB TENT, 332 HANDKERCHIEF, NAPKIN i'erebh) is several times referred to in Lev.l3. 47-59, together with some others of the techni- cal terms already enumerated ; see also Judg. 16.13,14. Although it is thus clear that the Israelites were very familiar with the art of weaving, they did not supply all their own requirements in this respect, but, especially for articles of more luxurious fabric, relied also upon imports from Babylon, Damascus, and Egypt (c/. Pr.7.i6). (7) Tanning must also have been a familiar handicraft among the early Israelites, the art being required in the preparation of sandals (Gen.i4.23), water- and wine-skins (Gen. 21. 14), coverings (Ex.26. 14), girdles (Deut.l.41 ; 2K.I.8), and leather being mentioned (2K.I.8 ; Mt.3.4 ; and prob. Lev. 11.32,13.48, Num.31. 20, where A.V. has skin). In N.T. three references are made to Simon the tanner, who dwelt in Joppa, and with whom St. Peter stayed for " many days." His house was by the seaside, nearness to water being a necessity to him for carrying on his tanning operations (Ac.9.43, 10.6,32). The Gk. word for "tanner," (ivpaivs, means literally one who dresses skins which have been stripped off (c/. fivpaa). (8) Although ^ye^wg, like tanning, is never mentioned as a handi- craft in O.T., it must nevertheless have been well known and practised, and there are refer- ences to it. The word used is 'ddhdm, which has the root signification of " red " (Ex. 25. 5, etc., of rams' skins dyed red). In Ezk.23.i5 a dif- ferent word occurs {(dbhal), which means liter- ally " to dip." The various colours in con- nection with cloth, etc., mentioned in O.T. also prove the common knowledge of the art (Ex. 39.ifT. ; 2Chr.2.7 ; Esth.1.6, etc., etc.). For N.T. see Ac.l6.14. (9) The art of Embroidery (riqmd), both by hand and loom (see Weaving, above), was extensively practised by all na- tions of antiquity, including, evidently, the Israelites (Ex. 35. 35, 38.23), though it was not of a very elaborate character, consisting of interwoven pieces of variegated cloth (see J udg. 5.30; Ezk.18. 18, 26.16, etc.). (10) The trade of fuller consisted in cleansing and whitening garments. The Heb. word means lit. " to wash " {kdhhas). Garments were washed by being trodden down in water together with alkali or other whitening substance (Ex.19. 10,14; Je.2.22; Mai. 3. 2). (II) Itwasonlyin later days that /c«/-wa/:/»g became a handicraft, as each man could make the simple nomad's tent for himself. In N.T. reference is made to St. Paul and Aquila — and probably to Priscilla also — as being tent-makers by trade (Ac.l8. I-3)- [W.O.K.O.] Handkerchief, Napkin, Appon. The two former of these terms, as used in .A-V. = aovSdpiov, the latter = aiiuKlvOiov. Both are of Lat. origin : hdn 'dghdld), or "wheel" (Pr.20.26), refers rather to a "roller." Iron li.irrows .ire not used in the East. [c.r.c] Hapsha'. Sons of Harsha were Nethinim will) came back from Babvlon with Zerub- babel (Ezr.2.52 ; Nc.7.54). HASHMANNIM Hapt. The hart is reckoned among the clean animals (Deut.l2.i5,14..5,15.22), and seems, from the passages quoted as well as from I K. 4.2 3, to have been commonly killed for food. The Heb. masc. noun 'ayydl certainly refers to some kind of deer, and perhaps todeer generally. Thefallowdeer (Cervtis datna)occuTS in Asia Minor and N. Palestine, and the.Mesopo- tamian fallow deer (C. mesopotamicus) in Lur- istan, NT. Persia ; while the maral or eastern red deer (C. elaphus maral) is found in N . Persia, Transcaucasia, and probably Asia Minor. [Fallow Deer ; Hind ; Roe.] [r.l.] Hapum', father of .A.harhel, in an obscure genealogy of Judah (iChr.4.8). Hapumaph, fatherof Jedaiah,2(Ne.3.io). Hapu phite, The, the designation of Shephatiaii, 6 (iChr.12.5). [Hariph.] Hapuz', a man of J otbah ; father of MeshuU lemeth, the queen of Manasseh (2K.2I.19). Hapvest. [Agriculture ; Year.] Hasadiah', a man in the royal line of Judah (iChr.3.2o), apparently a son of Zerubbabel. Hasenuah' (i.e. the Senuah), a Benja- mite, ancestor of Sallu, i (iChr.9.7). Hashabiah'. — 1. A Merarite Levite, and ancestor of lithan the singer (iChr.6.45[3o]).-^ 2. Another Merarite Levite (8.14). — 3. A son of Jeduthun (25-3), who had charge of the twelfth ward of the Levite musicians (19).^ 4. A Hebronite officer, in the time of David, on the Ws (R.V. beyond) of Jordan (26.30). — 5. Son of Kemuel, and prince of Levi in the time of David (27.17). — 6. .A. Levite leader, who made offerings at king Josiah's great passover- feast (2Chr.35.9). — 7- A Merarite Levite, who accompanied Ezra from Babylon, to serve as one of the "ministers" (iEsd.8. 46-48, "priests") in the house of God (Ezr.8.19). Perhaps the same as — 8- One of the chief of the priests in the same caravan who had charge of the sacred vessels (8.24). — 9. Ruler of the half part of Keilah. He repaired a portion of the wall of Jerusalem under Nehemiah (Ne.3.17). — 10. One of the Levites who sealed the coven- ant of reformation after the return from the Captivity (10. 11). Probably this is the chief of the Levites named in Nehemiah's time (I2.24 ; cf. 26). — 11. A Levite, ancestor of Shemaiah (11. 15). — 12. A Levite, ancestor of Uzza, the overseer of the restored Levites (11. 22). — 13. .A. priest of the family of Hilkiah, in the days of Joiakim, son of Jeshua (12.2i). Hashabnah , one of the leading laymen who sealed the covenant (Ne.lO.25). Hashabniah . — 1. Father of Hattush (Ne.3.10). — 2. One of the Levites who officiated at the great fast under Ezra and Nehemiah, when the covenant was sealed (9.5). Hashbadana', one of the men (probably Levites) who stood on Ezra's left hand, while he read the law to the people (Ne.8.4). Hashem'. Sons of Hashem the Gizonite were members of David's guard (1Chr.ll.34). For a suggested emendation of this passage, see J ASHEN. Hashmannlni' (Ps.68.31, Heb.), "fat ones " ; in V'nig. legali. A.V. is probably cor- rect in rendering " Princes shall come out of Egypt." Is.35.6 has sh'^mannlm, " fat things." The idea that Hashmannim wasa proper name, HASHMONAH derived from Hermopolis Magna, can hardly be maintained. [a.h.p.] Hashmonah', a station of the IsraeUtes, next before Moseroth (Num. 33. 29). Hashub' (R.V. correctly Hasshub). — 1. A son of Pahath-moab, who assisted in the repair of the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.3.ii). — 2. Another assistant in the repair (3.23). — 3. One of the heads of the people who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah (10. 23). Possibly the same as i or 2. — 4. A Merarite Levite, father of Shemaiah, 5 (11. 15). Hashubah', the first of a group of five men, apparently the latter half of the family of Zerubbabel (iChr.3.20). Hashum'. — 1. Bene-Hashum (Ezr.2.19; Ne.7.22) came back from Babylon with Zerub- babel. [Arom.] Seven of them had married foreign wives, from whom they had to separate (Ezr.10.33 ; called Asom in iEsd.9.33). Their chief was among those who sealed the covenant (Ne.10.i8). — 2. One of the priests or Levites who stood on Ezra's left hand, while he read the law to the congregation (8.4). Hashupha'. [Hasupha.] Hasmonaeans. [Maccabees, The.] Haspah' (2Chr.34.22) = Harhas. Hassenaah'. The Bene-has-senaah re- built the Fish Gate in the repair of the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.3.3). [Senaah.] Hasshub' (iChr.9.14) = Hashub, 4. Hasupha'. Bene-Hasupha(Ne.7.46, Hash- upha) were Nethinim who returned from Baby- lon with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.43). Hat. [Head-dress.] Hatach', a eunuch of Ahasuerus, and per- sonal attendant of Esther (Esth.4.5ff.). Hathath', son of Othniel (iChr.4.13). Hatipha'. Bene-Hatipha were Nethinim who returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.54; Ne.7.56). Hatita'. Bene-Hatita were " porters " (i.e. the gate-keepers), who returned from the Captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.42 ; Ne.7.45). Hattil'. Bene-Hattil were among the " children of Solomon's slaves " who returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.57 ; Ne.7.59). Hattush'. — 1. A descendant of the kings of Judah, in a confused genealogy (iChr.3.22). A person of the same name accompanied Ezra (Ezr.8.2), or Zerubbabel (Ne.12.2), from Baby- lon to Jerusalem. Probably it is the name of a family. — 2. Son of Hashabniah ; he assisted in the repair of the wall of Jerusalem (3. 10). Haupan', a province of Palestine twice mentioned by Ezekiel (47. 16, 18), identical with the Gk. province of Auranitis, and the xaodiQTnHaurdn. Josephus frequently mentions Auranitis in connexion with Trachonitis, Batanea, and Gaulanitis, which with it consti- tuted the ancient kingdom of Bashan. Havilah'. — 1. A son of Cush (Gen.lO.7) ; and — 2. Ason of Joktan (IO.29). [Arabia.] It is thought that the district of Khauldn, in the Yemen, preserves a trace of this ancient people. It lies between the city of San'aa and the Hijaz. It took its name, according to the Arabs, from Khaulan, a descendant of Qahtan [Jok- tan], or, as some say, of Qahlan, brother of Himyar. It is a fertile territory, embracing a large part of myrrhiferous Arabia ; mountain- ous, with plenty of water, and supporting a con- HAZAEL 335 siderable population (see Gen. 25. 18 ; iSam.15. 7). — 3. Another Havilah appears to have been on the Persian Gulf (perhaps that of Cush), in the present district HawUah, the XauXoraiot of Strabo (xvi.). The word may mean " sandy." — 4. Havilah in Gen.2.ii was apparently W. of the Caspian Sea (Pison being the Araxes River) near the gold-bearing region of Colchis in the Caucasus. [Eden.] [c.r.c] Havoth'-jaip', certain villages in Gilead and Bashan, taken by J air, i, and named after him (Num. 32.41 ; Deut.3.14). In Jos.i3.30 and iChr.2.23 the Havoth-jair are reckoned among 60 " cities." In iChr.2.22 they are specified as 23,but in Judg.10.4, as 30 in number. Those in Argob (Deut.3.14) are called " Bashan-havoth- jair" (see 1K.4.13). Apparently some were in Gilead and some in Bashan. [c.r.c] Ha\vk (Heb. nee). Both the translation and the Heb. term '(Lev. 11. 16 ; Deut.i4.15 ; Job 39.26) are to be regarded as used in a wide sense, as appears from the expression in Deuteronomy and Leviticus," after his kind." They may denote, in fact, any or all of the smaller diurnal birds of prey, such as the kestrel (Tinnunculus alandarins),i\\e gregarious lesser kestrel (T. cenchris), and the hobby (Falco subbuteo), which are common about ruins in the plains of Palestine, and were doubtless known to the ancient Hebrews. The passage in Job (I.e.) appears to allude to the migratory habits of hawks, and it is noteworthy that of the 10 or 12 lesser birds of prey found in Palestine, nearly all, except the kestrel, are summer migrants. In addition to the smaller kinds, the lanner falcon (Falco feldeggi), the laggar falcon (F. jugger), andthe Babylonian falcon (F. baby- lonicus) visit Syria and Palestine in summer. [Kite ; Glede.] [r.l.] Hay (Heb. hd(-ir ; Pr.27.25 ; Is.15.6). The Heb. term occurs frequently in O.T., and de- notes "grass" of any kind. It was cut, as it still is, to feed beasts (see Ps.37.2), and dried up by the sun (Is. 5. 24, 33. 11). [Chaff.] The word hdcir (Arab, khudr) means " green," and hay is never made in Palestine, nor represented on the monuments. [c.r.c] Hazael', king of Damascus (c. 886-840 B.C.), seems to have been previously a person of position at the court of Benhadad who sent him to Elisha to inquire whether he (Ben- hadad) would recover from the sickness from which he was suffering. Elisha's answer led to the murder of Benhadad by Hazael, who forth- with mounted the throne (2K.8.5-15). He was soon at war with Ahaziah king of Judah and Jehoram king of Israel for the possession of Ramoth-gilead (ver. 28), and thereafter made many attacks upon Israel. He was not so suc- cessful against AssvTia, however ; for Shalman- eser II., renewing the conflict begun in the time of Benhadad, defeated Hazael in Lebanon, when the Syrian king lost 1,600 men. Another attack on the part of the Assyrians took place later. Towards the close of the reign of Jehu (c. 860 B.C.), Hazael led his forces against the Israelites, whom he smote in all their coasts (IO.32), thus fulfilling Elisha's prophecy (8.12). At the close of his life, having taken Gath (12. 17 ; of. Am. 6. 2), he proceeded to attack Jeru- salem, when Joash bribed him to retire (2K.12. 18). He seems to have died c. 840 B.C., and was 336 HAZAIAS succeeded by his son Benhadad III. (I3.24), having reigned 46 years. [t.g.p.] Hazaiah' (Ne.ll.5), an ancestor of Maasciah, of the family of the Shilonites. Hazar-addah, etc. [Hazer, 1-7.] Hazanmaveth, the third, in order, of the sons of Joktan (Gen.lO.26). [Arabia.] The Arab. Hadramaut (dead region) exactly represents the Heb. word. It is the province E. of the Yemen. [c.r.c] Hazazon-tamap— Hazezon-tamar. [Engedi.] Hazel. [Almond-tree.] Hazelelponi', the sister of the sons of Etam in the genealogies of Judah (iChr.4.3). Hazep' (Heb. Mfcr, Arab, hasr, " en- closure "), in the plur. Hazerim (Deut.2.23). The Arabs still call the great stone circles of Moab by this name. — 1. Hazar-addar, on S. border of the land of Israel (Num.34.4), answers to Hezron and Adar (Jos. 15. 3). The name probably survives at Jebel Haiireh, in the Tih plateau N.W. of Petra. — 2. Hazar- ENAN (Num.34.9,10 ; Ezk. 47.17,48.1), the N.E. boundary of the land of Israel, on the high road W. from Zedad (Sudud). It was the N.W. border of Damascus, and on S. border of Hamath, on the Shepham (or " lip ") of the Anti-Lebanon, about 6 miles E. of Riblah. The name, however, has not sur- vived.— 3. Hazar-gaddah (Jos. 15. 27), a city in S. of Judah, the site of which is unknown. — 4. Hazar-hatticon (the middle village), in the Hauran (Ezk.47.i6), is also unknown. — 5. Hazak-shual (Jos.15.28,19.3), near to Beer-sheba, is perhaps S'awi, a ruin on a hill 8 miles E. of Bir es Seb'a. It was inhabited after the Captivity (iChr.4.28 ; Ne.ll.27). — 6. Hazar-susah (Jos.19.5), or Hazar-susim (iChr.4.31 ; the village of horses), may have been at Siisin, 10 miles S. of Gaza. — ?■ Hazarma'veth (Hairamaut). [Arabia.] — 8- Hazor, a royal city of the Canaanites (Jos. 11.1,10,13,12.19), probably Hazor of Naphtali (19. 36), near Ramah. The most suitable site is the ruin Hazziir, 3 miles S.E. of Rdmeh, and 2 miles S.W. of Hannathon. Its king had a force of chariots, so that it was probably near the plains (Judg.4.2,17). It is perhaps noticed later (iK. 9.15 ; 2K.15.29). Josephus thought it was in Upper Galilee, which is im- probable. [Merom.] It is noticed in 14th cent. B.C. by the Egyptian traveller (the Mohar), in connexion with towns of Lower Galilee ; and a century earlier two of the Amarna letters may come from this Hazor (Brit. Mus. 47, 48). — 9. Hazor (Jos.i5.23), near Kedesh, in S. of Judah, is unknown. — 10- (Jos.15.25) = Kerioth-hezron. [Kekiotii, 2.] — 11. In Je.49.28,30,33, a kingdom near Keuar. — 12. Hazor of Benjamin (Ne.ll.33), now the ruin Hazziir, 4 miles N.W. of Jerusalem. — 13- Hazor-iiadattah (Jos.i5.25), in S. of Judah, is tmknown. [En-hazor.] [c.r.c] Hazepoth' (Num.ll.35,12.i6.33.i7 : Deut. l.i), the third camp of Israel after leaving Sinai. Now '/I m //Mr/(*ra/j (which correctly re- presents the Hob.), about 30 miles from Sinai, and 60 miles from Tell el Asfar [Siiapher], these distances giving an average daily journey of 10 miles. [c.r.c] IHEATHEN Mazeion'-tamap', Hazazon'-tamaP (Gen.14.7 ; 2Chr.20.2). [En-gedi.] Hazier, a Levite of the younger branch of the Gershonites, in David's reign (iChr.23.9). Hazo', son of Nahor by Milcah (Gen.22.22). Hazop. [Hazer, 8-13.] Head-dpess. (dniph is noticed as being worn by nobles (Job 29.14), ladies (Is.3.23), and kings (Is.62.3), while the p''er was an article of holiday dress (Is.61.3, A.V. beauty ; Ezk. 24.17,23), and was worn at weddings (Is. 61. 10). The former describes a kind of turban or shawl, and its form probably resembled that of the high-priest's mifnepheth, as described by Josephus (3 Ant. vii. 3). p'''er primarily means an ornament, and is so rendered in A.V. (Is. 61. 10 ; see also ver. 3, " beauty "), and is specifically applied to the head-dress from its ornamental character. It is uncertain what the term properly describes, but it may have applied to the jewels and other ornaments with which the turban is frequently decorated. The ordinary Bedouin head-dress is the keffiyeh, a square handkerchief, generally of red and yellow cotton, or cotton and silk, folded so that three of the corners hang down over the back and shoulders, leaving the face exposed, and bound round the head by a cord. It is worn over a felt cap, which is also worn alone, and repre- sented on Syrian monuments. The keffiyeh appears as a Syrian head-dress in Egyptian pictures of Canaanites in 13th cent. b.c. The introduction of the Gk. hat by Jason, as adapted to the gymnasium, was regarded as a national dishonour (2Mac.4.i2). The As- syrian head-dress is described in Ezk. 23. 15 as " exceeding in dyed attire." The word rendered " hats " (R.V. mantles) in Dan. 3. 21 properly applies to a cloak. Heapth. The Heb. 'ah corresponds to our " stove." It was of stone or clay; placed in the centre of a room, slightly sunk into the floor (Je.36.22,23). [w.o.e.c] Heath, Heb. 'dro'er (Je.48.6) and 'ar'dr. Celsius identifies the 'ar'dr (Je.17.6) with the 'ar'ar of .\rab. writers, which is some species of juniper; but there is no true juniper in these " parched places in the wilderness." If a special tree or grove of trees be intended, the Tamar- isk is the proper interpretation. Tamarisk is fond of " salt lands," and the name 'ar'dr [naked) might well be applied to it. " Heath," in our acceptation, is particularly open to objections. [h.c.h.] Heathen. The Heb. goy, from a root meaning " to collect," has properly the signi- ficance of "a mass of people," and so "a nation." But as used by the Israelites, who regarded themselves as separated from all others by their distinctive religion, the word easily acquired a religious meaning, and A.V. rightly translates it " heathen." The " na- tions," as worshippers of their several tribal gods, stand in sharp contrast to the Israelites, as servants of Jciiovah. Yet the fundamental teaching of O. T. shows a considerable breadth of view, in that the heathen are regarded as tiic objects of God's care and the recipients ultimately of His promises (Gen. 12. 3). The settlement in Palestine was accompanied by wars of extermination of the heathen ; and these wars are represented as being the HEAVEN execution of the will of Jehovah (Deut.20.i6) ; for, however far removed from the spirit of Christianity, they are regarded by O.T. as a stern vindication of the law of holiness and as the punishment of wickedness. The prophets aimed at separating the people from the heathen around them, that the spiritual wor- ship of Jehovah might not be degraded. But after the return from exile the spirit thus fostered deepened into a false pride and a narrow exclusiveness. So grew up Pharisaic Judaism, which was quite opposed to the spirit of the prophetic teaching. The struggles of nationalism under the Hasmonaeans, with temporary success followed swiftly by failure, intensified the spirit of proud exclusiveness, and made it very difficult for the Jews to accept the catholic teaching of Christianity, which overleaps all national distinctions. In it the spirit of exclusiveness absolutely dis- appears, and even the policy of isolation, adopted by the prophets to preserve the purity of the religion of Israel, was to be exchanged for one of missionary intercourse, in order that the knowledge of the universal religion might spread through the world (Mt. 28.19). [j.c.v.D.] Heaven. There are three Heb. words thus rendered in O.T. (i) rdqia' (firmament), a solid expanse. Through its lattices (Gen. 7.II ; 2K.7.2,i9) or doors (Ps.78.23) the dew and snow and hail are poured upon the earth (Job 38.22,37). This firm vault, which Job describes as being " strong as a molten mirror " (37.18, R.V.), is transparent, like pellucid sapphire, and splendid as crystal (Dan.12.3 ; Ex.24. 10 ; Ezk.1.22 ; Rev. 4. 6), over which rests the throne of God (Is.66.i ; Ezk.l.26), and which is opened for the descent of angels, or for prophetic visions (Gen. 28. 17 ; Ezk.l.i ; Ac. 7. 56, 10. 11). In it, like gems, the stars are fixed to give light to the earth and regulate the seasons (Gen. 1. 14-19) ; and the whole structiure is supported by the mountains as its pillars (2Sam.22.8 ; Job 26.11 ). (2) shamayim, used in the expression " the heaven and the earth," or "the upper and lower regions" (Gen.l.i). (3) sh'^hdqim, lit. dust; so, thin cloud that looks like powder (Deut.33.26; Job 35.5). A fourth word, mdrommd, (properly = exalted), when used of heaven is translated "on high" (Ps.18.i6; Je.25.30; Is.24.i8). The Jews seem also to have thought of a series of heavens (iK.8.27 ; Eph.4.io), consisting of three (cf. 2Cor.l2.2) or of seven. But of far greater importance than the physical, is the theological conception of heaven, as revealed especially in the Lord's Prayer. " Our Father which art in heaven " : heaven is God's home. In heaven the Omnipresent God is especially present in two ways : (a) as there especially manifested to His angels who behold His face (Mt.18.io) ; (h) as there perfectly obeyed by the angels who do His will. This perfect angelic knowledge and obedience, which is our example and ideal (" Hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, in earth as it is in heaven "), makes heaven the home of pure bliss, to which no ill can come, because there the all-wise and loving will of God is realized as also almighty. The kingdom of heaven is the kingdom of God in power. HEBREW 337 Heaven is far removed from the earthliness of earth, where God's will is disobeyed and there is sin and misery. Yet the kingdom of heaven has been founded on earth also, and as it grows heaven is brought nearer to earth. So St. John, as the crown of his vision, sees earth redeemed, and heaven descending to earth in the New Jerusalem (Rev. 21). The same thought is expressed otherwise in the form that the saints, made perfect, will be taken up into heaven. The description of the " holy city, new Jerusalem" in Rev.21 and 22 suggests the following thoughts about heaven : (i) a " city," i.e. civic and social life, enriched by the " glory and honour of the nations," i.e. the best contributions of all races of the human family ; (2) the " bride of the Lamb," i.e. hearts wedded in faith and love to Jesus Christ ; (3) the walls, gates, etc., i.e. the activities of art ; (4) God is the Light to all and the centre of all. Art. " Heaven," by S. D. F. Salmond, in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904). See also books dealing with the future life — e.g. Salmond, Christian Doctrine of Im- mortality ; and for the Jewish conceptions of heaven, see books on O.T. theology, e.g. those of A. B. Davidson, Dehler, andSchuitz. [s.c.G.] Heave-offeping-, [Sacrifice, 3, v. c. ; Firstlings.] He'ber. — 1. Grandson of Asher and an- cestor of the Hebepites (Gen.46.i7 ; Num. 26.45; iChr.7.31). — 2. A descendant of J udah (iChr.4.i8).— 3. A Gadite (5.13).— 4. A Ben- jamite, of the sons of Elpaal (8.17). — &. A Benjamite, of the sons of Shashak (8.22). — 9. The Kenite, husband of J ael, who had separated himself from his clan and settled in the ex- treme S. of Canaan (Judg.4.ii, 17,5.24). — '/. (Lu.3.35) = The patriarch Eber. Hebpew. To the Semitic group of races (which contains the Babylonians, AssyTians, Moabites, Ammonites, Arabs, and Phoenicians) the Hebrews belonged, and their relation to them is marked by an affinity of language. [Semitic Languages.] Thus the Moabite Stone shows that the Hebrew language was closely akin to that of Moab. Also a com- munity of traditions is found, which marks a common stock. The Creation Tablets of Assur-bani-pal show a conception clearly derived from the same source that underlies the early narratives of Genesis. But this community of origin emphasizes the dis- tinctive characteristic of the Hebrew race. The Hebrews stand apart from all other Semitic races as the servants of Jehovah, Who is holy and requires holiness from His people. With this supreme note of the Hebrew re- ligion we may contrast the cruelty of Chemosh, as represented on the Moabite Stone, and also the entire absence of all moral tone or teaching from the crude narratives of the Amarna tablets. The Hebrew race, alone of the primi- tive Semitic peoples, stands for a lofty morality, however far performance may have lagged behind principle. The origin of the name " Hebrew" is probably to be found in the root Hliy, which as a verb {'dbhar) means to ' ' pass over " or " emigrate. ' ' Their migrations had areligious significance (Gen.l2.i ; Ex. 3.8); and so kindred nations thought of them pre- eminently as " the emigrants." It is notice- 22 338 HEBREWESS able accordingly that the term " Hebrews " is generally used by way of contrast with other nations ; but when there is no thought of other races, these people, who prided themselves on their ancestral covenant, prefer to describe themselves as " sons of Israel." In N.T. " Hebrews " are contrasted with " Hellenists," the former term being used of those who preserved the traditions of Pales- tinian Judaism, as against the admission of ('.reck influence. For the 'Abiri,see Palestine. [Hellenist.] [j.c.v.d.] Hebpewess. The feminine form is thus rendered once in A.V. (Je.34.9). Elsewhere it is given as " Hebrew woman." [j.c.v.d.] Hebrews, Epistle to. (i) Date. From internal evidence, while the Jewish ceremonial was still observed. For this is necessary {a) to his argument (7. 14; cf. 9.9); (b) to the situa- tion of his readers : since their trial consisted in reconciling their Christianity with their views of the permanence of the t)lder covenant. It was also written after the first generation of believers had died — i.e. 60-70 a.d. (2) Author. Variously ascribed to Barnabas (Tertull. Dc Pud. 20), Clement of Rome, and St. Luke (both mentioned by Origen in Euseb. vi. 25), St. Paul, Apollos, etc. This variety emphasizes Origen's remark, " Who the author is, God only knows" (Euseb. vi. 25). Its anonymous character certifies its genuineness; for it does not impersonate an apostle, as a forger might have done, and it shows that the apostolic church possessed another singularly able mind beside St. Paul. (3) Purpose. An apologetic one, to show the finality of the Christian reve- lation, by demonstrating the perfect priestly character of Christ and His sacrificial work — in order to satisfy Jewish-Christian misgivings. (4) Contents. Three main divisions : A. Con- trast between the agents of the two covenants (1-7). A magnificent opening sentence declares that revelations made formerly through created ministers, and characterized by frag- mentoriness of substance and diversity of form, are now completed by a new revelation, the Mediator of which transcends prophets, angels, and Levitical system in dignity, inasmuch as He stands to Cod in a innque filial relation, (a) His Divinity, (l.i) He is the eternally predestined Mediator f>f mankind, iiistrtnnental in crea- tion. (1.2 ) He manifests the dixine attributes, and personally embodies the divine essence. (I.3) Contrasted with the angels, His transcen- dent position is shown from His name as Son ; (I.5) from the adoration which the angels were ordered to pay to Him ; (I.7) and from the eter- nity of His throne (1.8). Moral : the solemn necessity of accepting this revelation, and the perils of rejection ; illustrated in those who rejected an inferior revelation (2.1-4). {b) His humanity (2.5 to end). Now Christ in the Incarnation rcNcals man's destiny. The pro- phecy of mankind's ultimate complete domin- ion (6-8) is in Christ already fulfilled (9). His humiliation in humanity, so far from being incc)mi)atil)Ie with His majesty, is essential to His redemptive work (10). Sanctifier and sanctified (11) must closely reseiiil)le one ano- ther in all i)ossil)lc respects. Thus tiie Son, not- withstanding tiie immensity of the difference between their sonship and His, condescends HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO to incarnation (14), death (14,15), and temp- tation(i7,i8) ; with theresult that Hebecarae qualified through sympathy acquired by ex- perience for His high-priestly work. More- over, his conscious experience of death was (in virtue of His sinless perfection) absolutely unique in its character and effects (9). Thus the difficulties to faith, presented by the humilia- tion of Christ, are (on profounder reflection) converted into proofs of His claims. Already then (in 2.17) the writer has introduced his central theme — the high-priesthood of Christ. This he leaves for a time to show Christ's superiority to Moses (3.1-6), and to urge again the seriousness of neglect (8.7-4.13). Then the idea of jiriesthood is resumed (4. 14-6. 10) and defined (5. 1 ). The two essential qualifications are (a) human sympathy (5.2,3), ^^^ i^) divine vocation (ver. 4). Both these our Lord fulfilled {vv. 5-8). Thus, Son though He was. He learned obedience, and became (not in His filial, but in His mediatorial capacity) perfected in His humanity (vv. 9,10). With these high- priestly qualifications. He was divinely pro- claimed high-priest after the order of Melchise- dek (5.10 ; Ps.llO). But here again comes a digression, caused by the reader's unreceptive- ness (5.1 1-6.8), after which begins the exposi- tion of the priesthood of Melchisedek, which is affirmed to characterize the priesthood of Christ (7). Ps.llO was recognized as Mes- sianic; cf. Mt. 22.44 ; Lu.20.42. Thus the writer begins with an idea originating in the psalm. What did the Psalmist mean by this reference to the narrative in Genesis ? The writer gives a mystic exposition based on the psalm. Both the affirmations and omissions in Genesis are held suggestive of great ideas. Positively, Melchisedek suggests a priest whose personal characteristic is righteousness, and whose work is peace. Negatively, the omission of any reference to antecedents and transmitted authority, to birth or death, sug- gests the idea — not, of course, historically true of Melchisedek, but true of the scriptural ac- count of him — of simple permanence : " abideth a priest continually." The superiority of this priesthood over tiie Levitical is suggested by Abraham paying him tithes (7.4-10), and confirmed by the Psalmist's ascription to the Messiah of a Melchisedekian rather than an Aaronic character (7.i i ). And whereasthe Levi- tical succession replaced its temporary ofticials as death removed them, the Melchisedekian conception of permanence is realized in the jiriesthood of Christ. B. Contrasts between the two covenants (8-10. 18). The difficulty sug- gested by the removal of the ancient covenant is here discussed (8). A new covenant was anticipated under the old (Je.31) — a fact im- possible had the old possessed comjileteness. The superiority of the new covenant to the old is tiius demonstrated in two aspects : (a) In the sanctuary (Heb.9). The old covenant had a sanctuary of this world — i.e. locally and essentially earthly and transitory (9. i) — mani- festly inadequate for inward i)erfection (9.()). Whereas the new has for its sjihere the heavenly sanctuary, which is the si)iritual (■ountTia (41 b.c), he appointed Herod and his elder brother Phasael tetrarchs of Judaea. Herod was forced to abandon Judaea the next year by an invasion of the Parthians, who supported the claims of Antigonus, the representative of the Hasmo- naean dynasty, and fled to Rome (40 e.g.). At Rome he was well received by Antony and Octavian, and appointed, by the senate, king of Judaea, to the exclusion of the Hasmonaean line. With the help of the Romans, he took Jerusalem in 37 b.c, and completely estab- lished his authority throughout his dominions. After the battle of Actium he visited Octavian at Rhodes, and his noble bearing won for him the favour of the conqueror, who confirmed him in the possession of the kingdom, 31 B.C., and in the next year increased it by the addi- tion of several important cities, and afterwards gave him the province of Trachonitis and the district of Pancas. The remainder of the reign of Herod was undisturbed by external troubles, but his domestic life was embittered by an almost uninterrupted series of injuries and cruel acts of vengeance. Terrible acts of bloodshed were perpetrated by Herod both in his own family and among his subjects. He is said to have ordered the nobles whom he had summoned in his last moments to be executed immediately after his decease, so that that event might be attended by universal mourn- ing. It must have been at the time of his fatal illness that he ordered the slaughter of the infants at Bethlehem (Mt.2.i6-i8) ; and from the comparative insignificance of the murder of a few young children, in an unimpor- tant village, it is not surprising tliat Josephus does not mention it. In dealing with the re- ligious feelings of the Jews, Herod showed no regard for public opinion. But while he thus alienated the affections of the Jews, he adorned Jerusalem with many splendid monuments ; above all, the temple, which he rebuilt with scrupulous care. This restoration was begun 20 B.C., and completed in a year and a half. But fresh additions were constantly made in succeeding years, so that the temple was "forty and six years in building" (Jn.2.2o), from the commencement of Herod's work to the completion of the latest addition then made. — 2. Herod A.\tip.\s was son of Herod the Great by Malthace, a Samaritan. His father had originally destined him as his suc- cessor in the kingdom, but by the last change of his will appointed him " tetrarch of Galilee and Peraea " (Mt.l4.i ; Lu. 8.19,9.7 ; Ac.lS.i ; cf. Lu.3.i). He first married a daughter of Aretas, " king of Arabia Petraea " ; but after some time made overtures of marriage to Hero- dias, wife of his half-brother Herod Philip, which she received favourably. Aretas, in- dignant at the insult offered to his daughter, found a pretext for invading the territory of Herod, and defeated him with great loss. This defeat, according to the famous passage in Josephus (18 Ant. v. 2), was attributed by many to the murder of St. John Baptist, which had been committed by Antipas shortly before, under the influence of Herodias (Mt.i4.4ff. ; Mk.6.i7ff. ; Lu.3.19). Eventually the ambi- tion of Herodias proved her husband's ruin. She urged him to go to Rome to gain the title of king (cf. Mk.6.14) ; but he was opposed at the court of Caligula by the emissaries of .Agrippa, and condemned to perpetual banishment at Lugdunum, 39 a.d. Herodias voluntarily shared his punishment, and he died in exile. Pilate took occasion (from our Lord's residence in Galilee) to send Him for examination (Lu.23. 6ff.) to Herod Antipas, who came up to Jeru- salem to celebrate the Passover. The city of Tiberias, which .-Vntipas founded, and named in honour of the emperor, was the most con- spicuous monument of his long reign. — 3- Herod Philip I. {Philip, Mk.6.17) was son of Herod the Great and Mariamne, and must be carefully tlistinguishcd from the tetrarch Philip, He married Herodias, sister of .•\grippa I., by whom he had a daughter Salome. Herodias, however, left him. and made an infamous mar- riage with his half-brother Herod Antipas (Mt. HERODIANS 14.3 ; Mk.6.17 ; Lu.3.19). He was excluded from all share in his father's possessions in con- sequence of his mother's treachery.^-4. Herod Philip II. was son of Herod the Great and Cleopatra. He received as his own government Batanea, Trachonitis, Auranitis, Gaulanitis, and some parts about Jamnia, with the title of tetrarch (Lu.S.i). He built a new city on the site of Paneas, near the sources of the Jordan, which he called Caesarea (Mt.l6.13 ; Mk.8.27), and raised Bethsaida to the rank of a city, under the title of Julias, and died there 34 a.d. He married Salome, daughter of Herod Philip I. — 5- Herod Agrippa I. was son of Aristobu- lus and Berenice, and grandson of Herod the Great. Brought up at Rome with Claudius and Drusus, after a life of various vicissitudes, he was thrown into prison by Tiberius, where he remained till the accession of Caius (Caligula, 37 A.D.), who gave him the governments for- merly held by the tetrarchs Philip and Lysa- nias, and bestowed on him the title of King (Ac. 12.1), and, on the banishment of Antipas, received his dominions also. Afterwards Agrippa, for important services to Claudius, received (41 a.d.) the government of Judaea and Samaria. Unlike his predecessors, Agrippa was a strict observer of the law, and success- fully sought the favour of the Jews. It was probably with this in view that he put to death St. James, the son of Zebedee, and imprisoned St. Peter (12. iff.). But his sudden death inter- rupted his ambitious projects. In the foiurth year of his reign over the whole of Judaea (44 A.D.) he attended some games in honour of the emperor at Caesarea. There (12. 21) his flat- terers saluted him as a god ; and he was sud- denly seized with terrible pains, and (being carried from the theatre to the palace) died after five davs' agony. — 6. Herod Agrippa II. was son of Herod Agrippa I. and of Cypros, a grand- niece of Herod the Great. When his father died (44 A.D.), he was at Rome. Not long afterwards, however, the emperor gave him (c. 50 a.d.) the tetrarchy of Chalcis, which had belonged to his uncle ; and then transferred him (52 a.d.) to the tetrarchies formerly held by Philip and Lysanias, with the title of King. His re- lations with his sister Bernice (25.13) caused suspicion of grave evil. In the last Roman war Agrippa took part with the Romans, and after the fall of Jerusalem retired with Ber- nice to Rome, where he died in the third year of Trajan (100 a.d.). The appearance of St. Paul before Agrippa (60 a.d.) offers several charac- teristic traits — e.g. the " pomp " with which the king came into the audience chamber (25.23) ; and the cold irony with which he met the im- passioned words of the apostle (26.27,28). Hepo'dians. The Herodians were scarcely a distinct party. They were rather men of various parties, who from various motives — longing for national independence, hatred of a heathen rule in Jerusalem, sympathy with Herod's compromise between Judaism and Hellenism — hoped for a restoration of Herod the Great's kingdom under one of his sons, per- haps Antipas. The bond uniting the Herod- ians was a political aspiration. That aspira- tion Christ opposed, not merely by His warning against the leaven of Herod (Mk.8.15), or His condemnation of Antipas as "that fox" (Lu.l3. HESHBON 345 32), but by the whole tenour of His teaching. And so the Herodians joined the Pharisees, in Galilee plotting His destruction (Mt.22.i6ff. ; Mk.3.6), and in Jerusalem, by the question of the tribute money (Mk.i2.13ff.), trying to force Him either to discredit Himself with the people, or else embroil Himself with the Roman authorities, and so secure His own condemna- tion. [CD.] Hepodias, daughter of Aristobulus, one of the sons of Mariamne and Herod the Great, and so sister of Agrippa I. She first married her uncle, Herod Philip I. ; then she left him and married his half-brother and her step- uncle, Herod Antipas, whose wife then living with him was the daughter of Aeneas, or Aretas, king of Arabia. For the injury done to his daughter, Aretas made war upon Herod and routed him with the loss of his whole army. The head of St. John Baptist was granted to Herodias' request (Mt.l4.8-ii ; Mk. 6. 24-28). According to Josephus, the murder was committed in the fortress Machaerus, which looks down from the E. upon the Dead Sea. Herodias went with Antipas into exile at Lugdunum. Hepo'dion, a "kinsman" of St. Paul dwelling at Rome ; perhaps of Aristobulus' household (Lightfoot). Late tradition makes him bishop of either Tarsus or Patra (Ro. 16.11). Hepon. The Heb. 'dndphd (= nose or beak) appears in an Assyr. list of birds as anpu, and as an unclean bird, or rather perhaps a group of birds, in Lev.ll.19 and Deut.li.i8, but whether it really denotes the members of the heron tribe (Ardeidae) is uncertain. Many members of the group, such as the grye heron (Ardea cinerea), purple heron (.4. purpurea), egret {A. garzetta), buff-backed heron {A. biibiilcus), and the squacco heron (A. ralloides) inhabit Palestine. [r.l.] He'sed. The son of Hesed was ruler for Solomon in the district of " the Arubboth, Socoh, and all the land of Hepher " (iK.4.io), i.e. in the tribe of Judah. [Palestine.] Heshbon', the capital of Sihon, king of the Amorites, who expelled the Moabites (Num.21. 25-28; Je.48.45). It was rebuilt by the Reubenites (Num. 32.37), and is noticed in 7 passages of the Pentateuch in connexion with king Sihon. It was given to the Levites (Jos.21.39 ; iChr.6.8i), and was held for 300 years by Israel (Judg.ll.26). It was in the mishor, or " plateau " of Moab, and near the S. border of Gad (Jos. 13. 17,26). It had corn- fields near it (Is. 16. 8, 9), and " pools " beside the gate of Bath-rabbim (Can.7.4). It is now the ruined city Hesbdn, on the plateau of Moab due E. of Jericho. The remains are those of the later Roman town ; the site is strong, standing on high ground with plains roimd it. The road from W. ascends a steep slope, and passes through a rock cutting called el Bu- weib (the little gate), which may be that of Bath-rabbim. On the W. slope a fine brook, 3 yds. wide, with pools full of small fish, flows S. and W. from 'A in Hesbdn. To these brown fishpools the Song of Songs perhaps refers. A few oleanders and grassy plots flank the stream ; the plain above is fit for com lands. There is a remarkable group of rude stone 346 HESHMON monuments on a spur W. uf the town {Surv. E. Pal. pp. 104-109, i5q). [c.r.c.] Heshmon', a place named, with others, as lying in the extreme S. of Judah (Jos.15.27). Nothing further is known of it. Heth, the forefather of the Hittites. In the ethnological tables of Gen. 10 and iChr.l, Heth is a son of Canaan. Hethlon', on the N. border of Palestine (Ezk. 47.15,48.1). "The way of Hethlon as one goethto Hamath" is apparently the "entrance to Hamath " (Num. 34.8) or gorge of the Eleutherus River. [c.r.c] Hewep. [Handicrafts.] Hexateuch, The {six-fold-hook), the name given in the critical schools to the first five books of O.T. [Pentateuch] and the book of Joshua, which together are supposed to have formed originally one large work. The documents alleged to run through the first five books (J, E, P), are believed to run through the book of Joshua also. This theory is not so entirely in favour as it was. Great difficulties attend it on closer analysis. It is pointed out, as by Cornill, that the sources are quite differ- ently worked up in the book of Joshua from what they are elsewhere. Others question the existence of the documents. Wellhausen and Steuernagel, e.g., contend that J is not present in the book at all. Wellhausen thinks that the P of Joshua is not the P of the older books. The older P, he supposes, " ceases al- together at the death of Moses." In Joshua " the priestly code," he says, " is simply the filling up of the Jehovistic-Deuteronomic nar- rative." The Deuteronomic hand also is not that of the author of Deuteronomy. It would seem, then, that the book of Joshua must, after all, be treated as a distinct work. In favour of this is the fact that the Samaritans, who accepted the Pentateuch, have always re- garded Joshua as distinct, and possess an in- dependent book of Joshua. [Samaria.] [j.c] Hezeki', a Benjamitc (iChr.S.i?)- Hezekiah. — 1. The famous king who came to the throne of Judah at a most critical period of IsraeUte history. His father Ahaz, in order to ward off a hostile combination of the kings of Syria and Israel (see Is.7), had invoked the aid of the Assyrian, and made his kingdom tribu- tary to that great power, which was destined soon to sweep away the kingdom of the Ten Tribes and to reduce J udah to the very verge of ruin. Moreover, as always, national weakness went hand in hand with religious decline. .Ahaz introduced many foreign innovations into the temple service (2K. 16. 10-18), and he is the first king of whom it is recorded that " he made his son to pass through the fire according to the abomination of the heathen " (I6.3). To this evil heritage Hezekiah succeeded at the age of 25, according to the chronology of the book of Kings (I8.2) — he may have been even younger (cf. I6.2) ; but, unlike his father, he allowed himself to be guided by the wise counsel of the pro))het Isaiah. "He trusted in the Lord the God of Israel " and " the Lord was with him " (18.3,7). The accounts of his reformation of the religion and worship arc given in 18. 3-6 and more fully in 2Chr.29-81. The reforms mentioned in A'lwgs were the re- moval of the high places, the destruction of the HEZEKIAH pillars and the Asherim, and the breaking in pieces of the brazen serpent to which the people had burned incense. In the narrative of Chronicles great prominence is given to the co-operation of the Levites in those reforms (29.34), and it is to be remembered that the high-priest Uriah had been too compliant a tool in the heathen innovations of Ahaz. Special mention is also made of a great Passover, to which the king invited not only the people of Judah, but all Israel from Beer-sheba to Dan (30.5). Though the invitation was scoffed at by some, yet it was accepted to a degree which shows that the sense of national unity was not entirely lost, and that Jerusalem was taking its place as a rallying-point for the national religion when national independence was passing away. The great Passover was fol- lowed by an outburst of iconoclastic zeal on the part of the crowd gathered at the feast, venting itself in a wholesale removal of idolatrous objects throughout the whole country (31. i). Some have questioned the statement that the " high places " were removed by Hezekiah, seeing that they are found existing at the beginning of Josiah's reign. But there seems no good reason for rejecting one part of the narrative and accepting another ; and we must remember the awful relapse into idolatry that followed in the reign of Hezekiah's son Manasseh. In the cases of other pious kings whom he commends, the historian is careful to mention that, in their reigns, the high places were not taken away (iK. 15. 11-14,22. 43 ; 2K. 15.3,4) ; and he must have had good reason for giving such distinction to Hezekiah, who shares with David and Josiah the place of highest regard in the national tradition (2K.I8. 5,23.25 ; Kcclus.49.4). The Biblical record of the political events of Hezekiah's reign is strik- ingly confirmed and illustrated by the Assyrian inscriptions, although there remains some un- certainty as to the precise order of some of the incidents. The kingdom of the Ten Tribes, humbled by the Assyrians and worm-eaten by corruption, hastened towards decay ; and in the sixth year of Hezekiah's reign Samaria, after a siege of three years, was taken by Sargon and the kingdom swept away. It is probably in this time of weakness or collapse of authority in the northern kingdom that we should place the invitation to the Ten Tribes to join in cele- brating the Passover. And, since the Assy- rians do not appear in Palestine for several years (from 720 to 711 b.c), this may also have been the time of prosperity referred to in 2Chr. 32.27ff., when the king gathered all kinds of store and treasure ; the time also of his war- like undertakings in the Philistine country (2K.I8.8). Here, too, in the opinion of many, comes the embassy of Mcrodach-baladan (20. 12) ; for it was about a year after the fall of Samaria that that king seized the throne of Babylon, and it was his interest to secure, if possible, any alliances that would assist him in liis struggle with .Assyria. By this time there was a growing uneasiness among the Western nations at the encroachment of .Assyria, and their eyes were turned to EgN-pt as the great power most fitted to head a confederacy for re- sistance. Hezekiah must have been to some extent involved in the movement, for, in an HEZEKIAH inscription of Sargon, the king of Judah is mentioned among the persons plotting sedition and bringing gifts to Pharaoh, king of Egypt. He continued, however, to pay tribute during the reign of Sargon ; but, on the accession of Sennacherib, he threw off the yoke (18. 7), and formed an alliance with Egypt and Ethiopia. Sennacherib, having first conquered Babylon and pacified his eastern dominions, was not long in turning his attention to the disaffected states in the W. He came with a large army ; and it may have been then, if not before, that Hezekiah set about those preparations for defence and precautions against a siege which are related in 2O.20 and 2Chr.32.3-8,3o. Sidon and the Phoenician cities were sacked by the victorious Assyrians ; Ashdod, Ammon, Moab, and Edom sent tribute ; and Ashkelon and Ekron, refusing, were captured. An Egyptian force, which had marched out from the Delta, was met and defeated at Elteku, and Judah, thus isolated and bereft of allies, was swept by the invaders, till the daughter of Zion was left as a booth in a vineyard, as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers " (Is.1.8). In alarm Hezekiah sent to the king of Assyria, who was besieging Lachish, offering to pay any tribute that might be imposed upon him (2K.I8.14). But, though he emptied his treasury and despoiled the temple to furnish the tribute imposed, Sennacherib sent an immense army which surrounded the city and demanded its surrender (18.i7ff.). Hezekiah, in his distress, was encouraged by the prophet Isaiah to resist, and assured that the city would be saved (19. 1-8). Sennacherib was besieging Libnah when his officers returned from Jerusalem ; and, hearing that Tirhakah was in motion with a large force to meet him, he determined to make another effort to reduce Jerusalem, so as not to leave a powerful enemy in his rear. The threatening letter which he sent was spread before the Lord by Hezekiah in prayer, and again the prophet Isaiah assured him in God's name that the city would remain inviolate. And then, by some mysterious and awful visitation, there was such a mortality in the camp of the Assyrians that the survivors hastily left the country, and Jerusalem was saved. The sacred historian says the angel of the Lord smote them. Some suppose it was an outbreak of plague ; and Herodotus and Josephus have a tradition that the army had advanced as far as the pestiferous region of Pelusium to meet the Egyptian force when the disaster occurred. That it was a great disaster is plain from the silence of the Assyrian annals on the sequel of the campaign, for, after all his boasting, Sennacherib never claims to have taken the city. With this signal deliverance, which was treasured in memory as ranking with the wonders of the Exodus, Hezekiah dis- appears from the sacred page. Up to the time of his illness it would appear he was childless ; and, as fifteen years were added to his life, and Manasseh was twelve years at his accession (21.i), we might place the sickness in the fourteenth year of Hezekiah's reign, for the time is vaguely indicated in the expression " in those days" (20. i). A casual mention of Hezekiah's name in Pr.25.i is particularly interesting. If learned men in his time oc- HIERONYMUS 347 cupied themselves in copying out proverbs, we may infer that other existing national writings were not overlooked. [Isaiah.] — 2. An ancestor of the prophet Zephaniah (Zeph.l.i ; A.V. Hizkiah). — 3. A descendant of the royal family of Judah (iChr.3.23). — 4. For " Ater of Hezekiah," see Ater. [J-R-] Hezion, jVm, mentioned in iK.15.i8 as father of Tabrimon, and grandfather of Ben- hadad, king of Syria. The fact that the name only occurs here has led to the generally ac- cepted supposition that it is a corruption of Rezon, or even of Hazael. The former is pre- ferable. It would make the generations of the kings of Judah and S)T:ia roughly contempo- raneous, and has the additional merit of being readily deducible from the Heb. consonants. Some suppose that " Rezon " itself should be read with a prosthetic PI and metathesis JHTn [cf. 'EapuifM, iK.11.23, LXX.). [B.F.S.] Hezip'. — 1. A priest in the time of David, leader of the 17th monthly course in the service (iChr.2'1.15). — 2. A leading layman who sealed the solemn covenant (Ne.lO.20). Hezpai' (2Sam.23.35) = Hezpo (iChr.ll. 37). the Carmelite ; one of the heroes of David's guard. Hezpon', Hezponites. — 1. A son of Reuben (Gen.46.9 ; Ex. 6.14 ; Num. 26.6). — 2. Son of Pharez and ancestor of David (Gen. 46. 12 ; Num.26.2i : Ru.4.18,19 ; iChr.2.5ff.).— - 3. (Jos.15.3.) [Hazer, I.] Hiddai' "of the brooks of Gaash " (2Sam. 23.30), one of the heroes of David's guard. Kennicott {Dissert, p. 194) prefers the form Hurai (1Chr.ll.32). Hidde'kel, the third of the four rivers of Eden, " which goeth in front of Assyria " (Gen. 2.14, R.V.), called by Daniel " the great river " (Dan. 10.4), and is rightly rendered in the LXX. by Tigris. The Heb. form is derived from the non-Semitic (Sumerian) Idigna, from which also comes the Assyro-Babylonian Idiglat (or Diglat) and the Arab. Dijlah, by the common change from n to /, and the addition of the fem. ending. The classical form Tigris shows t for d, and r for /. It rises S. of lake Goljik, and joins the eastern branch, the Bohtan-su, a little S. of Sert. After passing the ruins of Nineveh, Calah, Seleucia, and Ctesiphon, it unites with the Euphrates at Kurna. The stream thus formed (the Shatt al-'Arab) did not anciently exist, and the Tigris flowed directly into the Persian Gulf. [t.g.p.] Hiel', a native of Bethel, who rebuilt Jericho in the reign of Ahab (1K.I6.34) ; and in whom was fulfilled the curse pronounced by Joshua (Jos. 6. 26). Hiepa'polis. Mentioned only once in Scrip- ture (Col. 4.13), with CoLOSSE and Laodicea. Such association is natural ; for the three towns were all in the basin of the Maeander, and within a few miles of one another. Its modern name is Pambiik Kalessi. Hiep'eel (iEsd.9.2i) = Jehiel, ii. Hiep'emoth. — 1. (iEsd.9.27) = Jere- MOTH, 4. — 2. (iEsd.9.30) = Ramoth. Hiepielus (iEsd.9.27) = Jehiel, 10. Hiep'mas (iEsd.9.26) = Ramiah. Hiepon'ymus, a Syrian general in the time of Antiochus V. Eupator (2Mac.l2.2). 348 HIGOAION Higr^raion. [Psalms, Titles of.] Hig-h place, the rendering in A.V. of five different words in the orginal. Of three of these R.V. gives a modified rendering, translat- ing rdmd (in 4 passages) " lofty place," sh^phi (in 9 passages) " bare height," and (drrah (once) " hold." The remaining two words, translated in both versions " high place," arc mdrom (in 6 passages) and bdmd (in above 100 passages). This last word, though used in a few passages, chiefly poetical, in the general sense of elevated place, as, e.g., " high places of the earth," has acquired a special meaning in connexion with the worship of Israel. It was an ancient and widespread custom to worship on sacred mountains or elevated spots ; and the character of the " high place " would de- pend upon the deity worshipped and the na- ture of the worship. It is mentioned without reprobation that Abraham built an altar on a mountain to the E. of Bethel (Gen. 12.8) ; by divine command Gideon built an altar and offered sacrifice on the top of a stronghold or rock (Judg.6.26), and so did Manoah (13. 19). The towns of Palestine were very often built on eminences or hill-slopes, and the bdmd or high place above the town was the place for worship or social concourse (see iSam.9. 11-14). At Gibeon, in the beginning of Solomon's reign, was the great " high place " at which the king offered sacrifice (iK.3.4) ; and the sacred writers give it to be understood that, till the erection of the temple, the worship of Jehovah on the high places was not improper (8.2). At their entrance into Canaan the Israelites no doubt appropriated for this purpose the places hallowed in the patriarchal tradition. More- over, they found on every side high places, at which the Canaanites rendered worship to the local deities or baalim ; and as this worship was chiefly associated with the agricultural life upon which they had entered, it insidiously gained influence over them even when they persuaded themselves they were doing honour to their own God. [Baal.] At each of these high places there seems to have been an altar for sacrifice, with the usual accompaniments of Asherim (E.V. groves) and Pillars; and the worship, as described by tlic prophet Hosea, was riotous and corru|5t in the extreme. Hence the pro- phets never cease to protest against it, and in the books of Kings, up to the time of Hezekiah, it is carefully noted, even in the reigns of the best kings, that the worship of the high places was not put down. The book of Deuteronomy, which contemplates the occupation of Canaan and worship at a central sanctuary (Deut.12.5), warns the people against the danger and evil consequences of conformity to the worship of the Canaanites f4.25,12.2,3). It docs not, in referring to this worship, employ the word bdmd, but another word, mdqdm, which simply means " place " ; and it is significant that, at the present day, there are innumerable sacred places throughout Palestine and Syria, usually on elevated spots, to which are given the same name in its Arab, form mdqdm. These bear the name of some wely or saint who may be buried in the place, and who is supposed to liave the power of conferring special benefits. Though the local deities have thus given place to these saints, the HIGH-PRIEST " places " are held in great veneration, and MusHms and Christians alike, just as Canaan- ites and Israelites of old, make visits and pay vows at them. From its association with wor- ship, the bdmd came to be so named, though it was not on a high place, and might even be in a valley, as those in the valley of Hinnom (Je.7.31). Ezekiel speaks of " high places decked with divers colours" (Ezk.l6.i6, R.V.), made of " garments," which may have been hangings or carpets, such as are used for the adornment of Muslim tombs or sacred places at the present day. Hezekiah in his reform is said to have removed the high places (2K.I8.4), but they reappear under his successors Manas- seh and Amon (21.3,21). J osiah's reformation was more thorough ; and there is no express mention of high places under the kings who followed him. Yet the prevalence of such places and the veneration paid to them b)' the modern fellahin of Palestine show how deeply rooted they are in the soil ; and, though we hear nothing of this form of worship among the Jews after the Exile, it may well be believed that the superstition lingered on even after that time among the " people of the land." Hoonacker, Le lieu du culte dans la legislation rituelle des Hebreux (1894) ; Baudissin, Studien II. ; Vincent, Canaan d'apres V exploration ricente ; Mem. We^t Pal. Surv., vol. Special Papers, 1881, pp. 259-273. [Bamah.] [j.r.] Hlg-h-ppiest (hakkohcn haggadhol ; Lev. 21.10; Num. 35.2.';, 28), the head of the priestly body. After the Exodus, until the appoint- ment of Aaron and his sons to the priesthood, the priestly authority culminated in Moses himself, who acted as mediator between God and the people (Dcut.5.5,27 ; cf. Ex.2O.19 ; Gal. 3.19,20), and officiated as priest at the great covenant sacrifice, sprinkling the sacrificial blood upon the altar and upon the people (Ex. 24.6,8). This priestly authority, he, at thedirect command of God, delegated to Aaron and his sons (28. i), to whom it was God's gift (" I have given your priest's office unto you as a service of gift," Num.18.7; cf. Ecclus.45.6,7 ; iSam.2. 28), in such an exclusive way that no one not of the seed of Aaron might " come nigh," i.e. to act as priest (Num. 16. 40,18.7 ; Heb.5.4). Both brothers were recognized to have been priests (Ps.99.6), and as Moses had inaugurated the covenant, so, when he had consecrated and invested Aaron, it became Aaron's duty, and that of his successors in their hereditary tenure of the office, to maintain the covenant, by per- forming year by year the ceremonial of the Day of Atonement (q.v.). The office of high-priest chieflyexisted for that cleansing and atoning for the sanctuary year by year on which depended the religious services of the whole year (Lev. 16. 16,32-34). " The Jews had no right or tenure in God's house but what was renewable from year to year ; and therefore, at the return of every day of expiation, their term exi^red, and if they expected to enjoy tliis jirivilege for the year now coining they must renew their ser- vices and devotions by which tliey held this privilege of appearing before God. The virtue of the sacrifices oflered on the last day of ex- piation was spent ; and priest, people, taber- nacle, and altar must be reconciled before they could have any claim or pretence to the honour of appearing, or being used, before the Divine Majesty in the ensuing year ; and therefore the apostle truly observes that ' these sacrifices could not consecrate him that did the service,' i.e. the high-priest himself, ' as pertaining to conscience ' (Heb.9.9) ; that is, they could not consecrate him ' for ever,' or for a perpetuity, as the apostle explains himself. The high- priest knew in his own conscience that his re- consecration was but for the term of one year, and that the whole system of their worship and polity must at the end of that term be reconciled again" (John Johnson, Works, i. p. 189; Anglo-Catholic Library). The contrast between the Old and New Covenant drawn out in the Ep. to the Hebrews turns just upon this point : that whereas the Jewish sanctuary had to be thus reconsecrated year by year, on the Day of Atonement, with the blood of the sin- offerings of atonement, the Christian Church has been consecrated once and for ever by the Blood of Christ. As therefore the high-priest was typical in his chief work, so was he typical in the anointing, which he alone of the priests received (Ex. 29.7 ; Lev. 8. 12; Ps. 133.2), and by which he became " the priest Messiah " (Lev.4.3, 5, 16,16.32, 21. 10,12 ; Num.35. 25). The oil employed was " the holy anointing " oil (Ex. 30. 22-33), manufactured by certain priests called " apothecaries " or " perfumers " (Ne. 3.8), which indicated the bestowal of the Holy Spirit for the purpose of qualifying the person anointed for the office upon which he was about to enter (iSam. 10. 1,16.13), and it was poured, to show that for the dis- charge of the duties of his office he needed, and would receive, the Spirit of God in richest fulness, upon his head as the noblest part of the body and true centre of the spiritual life. (C/. Kurtz, Sacrificial Worship, p. 330 : T. & T. Clark.) This anointing took place after the bathing (Lev. 8. 6, 10 ; cf. Is. 52. 11) and investiture, in whicli Aaron was clothed with a pecuUar dress (Lev. 8. 7-9), which passed to his successor after his death {Num.20.28). Of this dress four articles — the breeches, the coat or tunic, the girdle, and the turban (= the mitre) were the same as those of the ordinary priests ; but special to the high-priest, and, according to Josephus, only worn on the Day of Atonement, were : (a) The robe of the ephod (Ex. 28. 31-35, 39. 22-26), woven of one piece without seam or join, and all of blue ; it was not so long as the coat, which was visible below it, and round its hem were pomegranates of blue, purple, or scarlet alternated with bells to give a sound when he went in and came out of the Holy Place " that he might not die " (Ex. 28. 35), or to keep the people who could not see him mindful of what he was doing on their behalf (Ecclus.45.9). (b) The Ephod consisted of two parts, of which one covered the chest, the other the back, confined by " the curious girdle " of similar materials, and clasped together on the shoulder with two large onyx stones, each having engraved on it six of the names of the tribes of Israel (Ex. 28.6-14). "As a shoulder dress, the ephod was, par excellence, the official dress of the bigh-priest. The burden of office rested upon the shoulder, and the insignia of the office were also worn upon it (Is.22.22). The duty HlaS-PRIESl? 349 of the high-priest was to enter into the pre- sence of God and make atonement for the people as their mediator. To show ^ that, as mediator, he brought the nation to God, the names of the twelve tribes were engraved A HIGH-PRIEST. W.D.A. upon precious stones on the shoulders of the ephod. The precious stones, with their rich- ness and brilliancy, formed the most suitable earthly substratum to represent the glory into which Israel was to be transformed as the pos- session of Jehovah (Is. 62. 3 ; Rev.21.ii-2i) ; whilst the colours and materials of the ephod, answering to the colours and texture of the hangings of the sanctuary, indicated the ser- vice performed in the sanctuary by the person clothed with the ephod, and the gold with which the coloured fabric was worked, the glory of that service " (Keil on Ex.28. 12). (c) To the shoulder-pieces of the ephod was fastened by gold chains a pouch made of similar materials, which contained the Urim and Thummim, and was called " the breastplate of judgment " (Ex.28. 15-30). It was really a square of a span's length each way, doubled together so that two corners were suspended from each shoulder, and had arranged on it, in four rows of three, twelve gems engraved with the names of the twelve tribes of Israel, so that they were near to the high-priest's heart, indicating the relation of love and personal interest which should exist between the priest and the people. {d) To the turban or mitre worn by all priests the high-priest had attached a plate of gold, called " the holy crown " (Ex. 28. 36, 39. 30), engraved with the words " Holiness to the Lord. . . . That Aaron may bear the iniquity of the holy things, which the children of Israel 350 HIOH-PRIEST HiaH-PRIEST shall hallow in all their holy gifts ; and it shall be always upon his forehead, that they may be accepted before the Lord" (Ex. 28.38). Per- haps because of this mystical and official con- cern with the atonement for the people, the high-priest had a peculiar place in the law of the manslayer and his taking sanctuary in one of the cities of refuge : the refugee might not leave his sanctuary during the lifetime of the existing high-priest (Num. 35. 25). It was for- bidden to the high-priest to follow a funeral or rend his clothes for the dead (Lev. 10.6). — The other respects in which the high-priest exercised superior functions to the other priests were simply the consequence of his position and opportunities, and varied with personal ability and character. The usual age for entering on the functions of priesthood was twenty years (2Chr.3i.17), though before reaching that age the office might be exercised by one who had attained to puberty, as in the case of Aristo- bulus, who at the age of 17 won such admira- tion in his ministry as to provoke the treacher- ous jealousy of Herod (J osephus, 15 Ant. in. 3). The history of the high-priests embraces a period of about 1,370 years and a succession of about 80 high-priests, beginning with Aaron, and ending with Phannias (20 Ant. x. i : cf. also 8 Ant. i. 3 and 10 Ant. viii. 5). They are divided into four groups by the organization introduced by David, the captivity in Babylon, and the persecution of Antiochus Epiphanes, as may be seen from the following table : — CIVIL RULER. Moses Joshua Othniel . Abishua . HIGH-PRIEST. Aaron (Ex.28. 3). Eleazar (Lev. 10. 12 ; Num. 20.28). Phinchas(Jos.22. 30,24. 33). Abishua (iChr.6.4,50 ; Ezr. 7.5)- Eli Eli (iSam.l.g). Samuel Ahitub (iSam. 14.3,22. 9, 20). ggyj fAhimelech (iSam.21.i, or " \ Ahijah, iSam.14.3). Solomon Abijah . . Asa Jehoshaphat Jchoram Ahaziah Jehoash . . Amazi;ih Uzziah . . Jotham . . Ahaz Ilezekiah Manasseh )_ Amon ( Josiah . . Jehoiakim Zcdekiah Evll-merodach , Zadok and Abiathar (2 Sam.i5.3i). Azariah (ik.4.2 ; iChr.6. 10). Johanan (iChr.6.9,io). Azariah (do.). Amariah (iChr.6.11). Jehoiada (2K.II.4). (do.). Do. and Zechariali (2Chr. 24.20). ? Azariah (2Chr.26.17). ? Urijah (2K.I6.15). Azariah (2Chr.3i.10). ( vShalUim (iChr.6.12,13, or ■^ Mesluillam, 9.11). Ililkiah (2K.23.4). Azariah? ( iChr.6.13,14). Scraiah (2K.25.i8). Jchozadak (iChr.6.13). Zcrubbabel (Cyrus and Darius) Mordfcai ? (Xerxes) . . Ezra and Nehcraiah (Ar- taxcrxcs) Darius Nothus . . Artaxcrxcs Mneniou Jeshua (Ne.l2.io). Joiakim (do.). Eliashib (do.). Joiada (do.). Jonathan (Ne.l2. CIVIL RULER. Alexander the Great . . Onias I. (Ptolemy Soter, Antigonus) . . Ptolemy Soter . . Ptolemy Philadelphus . . HIGH-PRIEST. Jaddua (do.). Onias I. Simon the Just. Eleazar. End of direct Aaronic line. 0. Ptolemy Philadelphus . . Ptolemy Euergetes Ptolemy Philopator . . Ptolemy Epiphanes and Antiochus Antiochus Epiphanes . . Demetrius • • Alexander Balas Manasseh. Onias II. Simon II. Onias II. {(Joshua, or) Jason. Onias, or Menelaus. Jacimus, or Alcimus. Simon (Hasmonaean) . . John Hyramus (do.)... King Aristobulus (do.) . . King Alex. Jannaeus (do.) Queen Alexandra (do.) . . King Aristobulus II. (do.) Pompey the Great Pacoru's the Parthian Jonathan, brother of Judas Mace. (Hasmonaean). Simon (do.). John Hyrciinus (do.). Aristobulus (do.). Alex. Jannaeus (do.). Hyrcanus II. (do.). Aristobulus II. (do.). Hyrcanus II. (do.). Antigonus (do.). .\nanelus. Aristobulus (last of Has- monaeans), murdered by Herod. Ananelus restored, rjesus, son of Faneus. I Simon, son of Boethus, I father-in-law to Herod. Matthias, son of Theophi- lus. ozarus, son of Simon. /■Eleazar. li I, J ozarus (second time). Cyrenius, governor of Syria, second time. . . Ananus. Valerius Gratus,procura- fl^i^ael, son of Phabi. t„. „/ T..J "V"'" . i^ieazar, son of .\nanus. Herod, K. of Judaea Herod the Great tor of Judaea Vitellius, Syria . Herod .\grippa Herod, king of Chalcis ■ .Appointed by the people Do. (Whiston on 4 Wars iii- 7) Chosen by lot . . ■ \. Simon, son of Kamith. (Caiaphas, called also Jo- seph. Jonathan, son of Ananus. Theophilus, brother of Jo- ( Simon Cantheras. [nathan. Matthias, brother of Jona- than, son of .\nanus. Elioneus, son of Cantheras. 'Joseph, son of Camei. Ananias, son of Nebedeus. Jonathan. Isniael, son of I'abi. Joseph, son of Simon. Ananus, son of .\nanus, or .\nanias. Jesus, son of Gamaliel. Matthias, son of Theophi- lus. Phannias, son of Samuel. Of the first group the Biblical records are fairly full and only two points need to be noted : (i) the transfer, at some unexplained date, of the succession from the line of Eleazar to that of Ithamar, perhaps through Eleazar's represen- tative being too young to succeed to the vacant office, to which therefore Ithamar's represen- tative, Eli, was appointed by the elders ; (ii) J osephus implies that Abiezcr (.\bishua), the father of Bnkki, was the last high-priest of Phinehas' line before Zadok (8 AnI. i. 3, but cf. 5 Ant. xi. 5). This gives eight high-priests for the period, as against the seven of the Bible. Of the second group there is more to be said, (i) There is no explanation of the apparently joint priesthood of Zadok and Abiathar in the reign of David. Saul may have made Zadok priest after Abiathar's secession to David, and then David let both hold office together for their own lifetime, Abiathar retaining the ephod with Urim and Thummim, of which nothing is heard after Solomon deposed him (iK.2.27), when the succession passed to the sons of Za- dok. It was Azariah, the descendant of Zadok, who officiated at the dedication of Solomon's temple (iK.4.2 ; iChr.6.io). (ii) There are great difficulties in harmonizing the genealo- gical list in iChr.6.8,15 with the notices of the high-priests in the sacred history, and with the list given by Josephus. The pedigree, in its first six generations from Zadok inclusive, exactly suits the history, but there is a great gap in the middle, only two names occurring between the reigns of Jehoshaphat and Josiah, while the historical books giv^e us during this interval Jehoiada (2K.II.4 ; 2Chr.22.11), Zechariah (2Chr.24.20), Azariah (26.17), Urijah (2K.I6. 15), Azariah (2Chr.3i.10j. (iii) The civil power preponderates all through the period. The monarch arranges for the central sanctuary (1Chr.29.1-4; 2Chr.3,4,5), dedicates it (6.12, 13,7.7), organizes the temple service under the high-priest (8. 12-15), spoils the temple to pay tribute (iK.15.i8), presumes to offer in- cense (2Chr.26.16), defiles the temple with idolatries (33.4,5), cleanses it and reforms wor- ship (34.33). To this period also belong the revolt of the Ten Tribes and their abandonment of the temple worship (iK. 12. 26-28), and the successful revolt of the ecclesiastical head of the nation against the usurping foreigner and idolater, Athaliah (2K. 11. 4-16). The priests of this series ended with Seraiah, who was taken prisoner by Nebuzar-adan, and slain at Riblah by Nebuchadnezzar, together with Zephaniah the second priest (or ? Sagan ; 2K.25.i8). Seraiah's son Jehozadak was at the same time carried away captive (iChr.6.15), and died in Babylon. With his son Jeshua we are intro- duced to the third group. In the third group we have, after Jeshua's zealous co-operation with Zerubbabel in rebuilding the temple, only five names in the O.T. period, the last, Jaddua, being distinguished for repelling Alexander the Great from the temple. He was succeeded by his son Onias I., and he again by Simon the J ust, the last of the men of the great synagogue, whose ministry is described with such enthu- siasmin Ecclus.5O.5-11. He was succeeded by his brother Eleazar, in whose time the LXX. version of O.T. was made. Then came a period of apostasy, out of which the people were roused by the persecutions of Antiochus Epiphanes, and a new and glorious succession of high-priests arose in the Hasmonaean family, who united the dignity of civil rulers and (for a time) of independent sovereigns to that of the high-priesthood. They belonged to the course of Joiarib (iChr.24.7,9.io ; Ne.ll.io), and their line lasted from 153 b.c. to the mur- der of Aristobulus by Herod in 35 b.c. From Herod's reign to the destruction of the temple, a period of 107 years, there were no less than 28 high-priests, of some of whom we read in N.T. — e.g. Annas, Caiaphas (Jn.l8.13, 19, 24), Ananias (Ac. 23. 2). The high-priest from whom Saul received letters to go to Damascus (Ac. 9. i, HIRAH 351 14) was Theophilus, son of Ananus, and the last high-priest was Phannias, appointed by lot by the Zealots from the course of priests called by Josephus Euiachim (? =Jachim). [c.r.d.b.] Hilen'. [Holon.] Hilkiah'. — 1. The father of Eliakim, who was " over the household " in Hezekiah's time (2K.I8.37 ; Is.22.20,36.22).— 2. The high-priest in the reign of Josiah, who found the law-book in the temple at the time of the great reforma- tion in that king's reign (2K.22.3ff., 2Chr.34. 8ff.). The " book " in question is now gener- ally supposed to have been Deuteronomy ; but there is nothing in the narrative to indicate that it was that book alone {cf. Lev. 26 with Deut.28). The reformation that followed its discovery certainly carried out the principle of centralization of the worship which is parti- cularly emphasized in that code. The narra- tive makes it clear that Hilkiah, and the others concerned, sincerely beheved it was the ancient law-book of the nation, and there is no reason to suppose that he had any hand in its com- position. Even among those who believe that Deuteronomy was composed about this time, it is admitted that it does not express what would have been the aims and views of the priests of Jerusalem. — 3, 4. Levites of the family of Merari (iChr. 6.45,26.11). —5. One of those who stood on Ezra's right hand when he read the law to the people (Ne.8.4). — 6. Father of the prophet Jeremiah (Je.l.i). — 7. The father of Gemariah, who was one of Zede- kiah's envoys to Babylon (Je.29.3). [j-R-] Hill (Heb. gib'd, a "rounded" hill-top). The " hill of God " (iSam.lO.5,10), or " hill," was GiBEAH (Jeb'a), Saul's home. The A.V., however, sometimes renders the word hdr {mountain, or mountain region) by "hill" (Ex. 24.4 ; Deut.1.7 ; Jos. 9. 1, 10. 40, 11. 16) ; and the " hill " where Elijah was found (1K.I.9; 2K. 4.25) was perhaps mount Carmel. In iSam. 9. II the Heb. ma'dle (ascent) is also rendered " hill." In N.T. " hill " is the Gk. ^ovpos ; but in Lu.9.37 theGk. 6pos (mountain), sorendered, refers to a high "momitain "(ver. 28) apparent- ly Hermox. [Caesarea Philippi.] [c.r.c] Hillel', a native of Pirathon in Mt. Ephraim, father of Abdon the judge (Judg.12.13,15). Hin. [Weights and Measures.] Hind (Heb. 'ayydld), properly the female of the red deer (Cervus elaphus), but also used for female deer generally. Hinds are frequently noticed in the poetical parts of Scripture as emblematic of activity (Gen. 49. 21 ; 2Sam.22. 34 ;Ps.l8.33;Hab.3.i9), gentleness (Prov. 5. 19), modesty (Can. 2. 7,3. 5), earnest longing (Ps. 42.1) andmaternalaffection(Je.l4.5). Their shyness and remoteness from the haunts of men are alluded to (Job39.i), and also their timidity, causing them to cast their young at the sound of thunder (Ps.29.9). For the various kinds of deer inhabiting Palestine and the neigh- bouring country, see Hart ; Roe. [r.l.] Hingre. The doors of Heb. buildings (Pr. 26.14) moved on hinges, fitting into sockets in flat lintel and threshold stones. [Gate.] The temple doors (1K.7.50) had hinges of gold — or, more probably, covered with gold, [c.r.c] Hinnom, Valley of. [Gehenna.] Hipah', an Adullamite, the friend (LXX. and Vulg. shepherd) of Judah (Gen. 38. 1,12). 352 HlBAM Hipam', or Hupam'. — 1. The king of Tyre who sent workmen and materials to Jerusalem (aSam.S.ii ; iChr.l4.i) to build a palace for David, whom he ever loved (iK.S.i), and again (5.10,7.13; 2Chr.2.3ff.) to build the temple for Solomon, with whom he had a treaty of peace and commerce (iK.5.11,12). The contempt with which he received Solo- mon's present of Cabul (9.i2) does not appear to have caused any breach between them. He admitted Solomon's ships, issuing from Joppa, to share the profitable trade of the Mediter- ranean (10.22) ; and Jewish sailors, guided by Tyrians, brought the gold of Ophir (9.26-28) to Solomon's two harbours on the Red Sea. Dius, the Phoenician historian, and Menander of Ephesus state that Hiram reigned prosper- ously 34 years; and that his father was Abibal, his son and successor Baleazar. Josephus conjectures that Hiram supplied timber for the temple, and gave his daughter in marriage to Solomon. — 2. The name of a man of mixed 1 race (rK.7. 13,40), the principal architect and 1 engineer sent by king Hiram to Solomon. j Hipca'nus, " a son of Tobias," who had , money deposited in the temple treasury at the t time of the visit of Heliodorus (c. 187 B.C. ; 2 Mac.3.ii). The name appears to be simply a local appellative. Hiped sepvant. [Servant.] Hittites, or sons of Heth, a leading people in Canaan according to Gen. 10. 15. So important an element in the population of the country were they at the time when the Assyrians first became acquainted with it, that whereas the Babylonians called it " the land of the Amorites," it was known to the Assyrians as that of the Hatta or Hittites. The Hit- tites were, however, immigrants there, their original seat being in Cappadocia and the mountain-region of the Taurus. But as early as the age of Abraham they had descended up- on S>Tia, and c. 1900 b.c. Babylonia itself was invaded by them in the reign of the last king of the dynasty to which Hammurabi [Am- raphel] belonged. In the" Mosaic period we learn from the Tel el-Amarna tablets that Hittites served as mercenaries at the courts of the petty princes and Egyptian governors of Palestine, as well as in the Egyptian army itself, and that from time to time the leaders of these " free lances " seized a principality for themselves, and established a line of kings. One of the Hittite principalities in Canaan was probably that of Jerusalem. The dominant military caste throughout the country was Hittite, thus justifying the posi- tion to which Heth is assigned in Genesis among the sons of Canaan. In the rear of the mercenaries followed the regular Hittite army, and after the fall of the i8th Egyptian dynasty the Hittite kings of Cappadocia seized the Egyptian province of Syria and made Kadesh on the Orontes, near the lake of Horns, their southern capital. The revival of Egyptian power, however, under the 19th dynasty checked their further advance, and Ramses II., after a twenty-one years' war, made a treaty with the Hittite king Khata- sil II., which fixed the boundary between the Egyptian and Hittite empires pretty nearly where the nothera limit of the Israelitish filTTlTES tribes afterwards ran. Here was " the land of the Hittites " in which the refugee from Beth- el built the city of Luz (Judg.l.26). Hittite monuments have been found throughout the region over which the Hittites were spread — in Asia Minor as far W. as the neighbourhood of Smyrna and E. to Armenia, in the moun- tainous district of the Taurus, and in northern Syria, more especially at Carchemish (now Jerablus) on the Euphrates, which remained a Hittite stronghold until its capture by Sargon of Assyria 717 B.C. The monuments are cha- racterized by a peculiar style of art, borrowed originally from Babylonia, but modified in. Asia Minor, and they are frequently accom- panied by inscriptions in a peculiar hiero- glyphic script. The hieroglyphics were em- ployed only for monumental purposes ; in place of a running hand cuneiform characters were used. Hundreds of clay tablets in- scribed with cuneiform signs and written partly in the Hittite, partly in the Assyrian, language have been discovered at Boghaz Keui, the Hittite capital N. of the Halys. Here was the centre of the empire which in the age of the 19th Egyptian dynasty extended from the Aegean to Palestine. On both the Egyptian and their own monuments the Hittites are represented as a thick-set people, with protrusive upper jaws, large rounded noses, oblique eyes, beardless faces, and yellow skins. They wore a sort of pig-tail, and were shod with the snow-shoe, or buskin of the mountaineer, with turned-up end. They were armed with bow, dirk, and spear, but not sword. The priests and upper classes wore over their tunics a long robe, reaching to the ankles, but opening at the side. Their religion was a nature-worship, the supreme object of which was the earth-goddess, who was ad- dressed as " the Great .Mother." Before their contact with Babylonian culture, theobjectsof their worship had been fetishes — bull-heads, the sacred dirk, trees or stones, and the like ; but they afterwards adopted the Babylonian conception of a god or goddess in human form, the fetishes and sacred animals becoming merely symbols. A sort of trinity, consisting of the earth-goddess and her son who was also her husband, was created, and the chief cities became deities by the side of whom stood the sun-god. By eating and drinking at a table before the image of the deity the worshipper was believed to participate in the divine na- ture. The " asylum," to which the homicide fled for protection, was a Hittite institution. The Hittite empire brok'" into fragments, each of which became a separate tribe. Hence in tK.10.20 and 2K.7.6 reference is made to " the kings of the Hittites." Ezekiel (16. 3) describes Jerusalem as born of a Hittite mother ; and at Hebron .Abraham bought the field of Mach- pelah from " the sons of Heth " (Gen. 23). In tlie age of the Tel el-.\marna tablets a baud of Hittites from Cilicia made themselves masters of this district, and at a much earlier period an Egyptian inscription states that the founder of the I2th dynasty had overthrown "the houses of the Hittites" in southern Palestine. The painted pottery found in the pre- Israelitish strata at l.achish and Gezcr was of Hittite importation, and has been traced to the HIVITES neighbourhood of Boghaz Keui. The Hittite wives of Esau (Gen.26.34,36.2) would be takeu from this southern brauch of the advance guard of the Hittites ; and to the latter also " Uriah the Hittite " (2Sam.23.39), the hus- band of Bathsheba, would have belonged, as well as Ahimelech (iSam.26.6), another member of David's body-guard, [a.h.s.] Hivites. In Heb. always in the sing, " the Hivite." He was a son of Canaan (Gen. 10. 17 ; iChr.1.15). The LXX. identifies the people with the AviTES, rendering both names Evaioc The name has been connected with the Arab. hawa = a tent or dwelling, and has been said to imply that those who bore it were villagers (cf. Havoth-jair). But it is probable that in several places " Hivite " is an erroneous read- ing. Thus in Gen. 36. 2 it should be " Horite," and in Jos.ll.3, "Hittite." The Hittites and Hivites are mentioned together in the lists of the inhabitants of Palestine. The Gibeonites who obtained a treaty from Joshua by craft are called Hivites (Jos. 9. 7,11. 19) ; and so is Hamor, the father of Shechem, in the ac- count of the violated treaty between the She- chemites and the sons of Jacob (Gen.34'.2). In 2Sam.24.7 Joab, in numbering the people in the neighbourhood of Tyre, visits the cities of the Hivites ; and a northern settlement of Hivites is also mentioned in Jos.ll.3 (Heb., not LXX.). Otherwise the Hivites were probably the neigh- boursof the J ebusites of Jerusalem, [f.j.f.-j.] Hizkiah', an ancestor of Zephaniah (l.i). Hizkijah' (Hezekiah, R.V., Ne.lO.17). [Ater, 2.] Hobab', the son of Raglel (Num.lO.29) who was the father-in-law (hdthdn) of Moses. Hobab himself is so called in E.V. (Judg.4.ii), but the word apparently only means "a con- nexion by marriage" (cf. /iafl.); (3) the angels' song at the Nativity, Gloria in excelsis (2.14) ; and (4) Simeon's song. Nunc dimittis (2. 29ff.). Besides these there are often thought to be traces or fragments of early liturgical hymns in N.T. writings, e.g. Eph.5.14, iTim.3. 16, and perhaps iCor.2.9. And in the apoca- lyptic visions of St. John the life and worship of heaven is conceived of as being brightened with the voice of song and melody, e.g. 5.9.14.3,15. 3, cf. 4.8,5.12, etc. See Lock's art. " Hymns " in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), and Box's in Christ and the Gospels ; Lightfoot's note on Col. 3. 16 ; and Trench, Synonyms of N.T., pt. ii. § xxviii. The rise and development of Christian hymns in post-Biblical times lie outside our scope. [c.i-.f.] Hyssop (Heb. ezohh ; Arab, udhdb), a word borrowed by the Greeks (with many others) as (/, Addo.) Grandfather of the prophet Zechariah (Zech.l.1,7), returned from Babvlon with Zerubbabel and Jeshua (Ne. 12.4).— 6.' ('nX, Eddo\ called Loddeus, iEsd.8. 45,46, R.V.) The chief of those who assembled at Casiphia at the time when Ezra sent a depu- tation of chief men from .\hava to him to bring him ministers for the house of God (Ezr.8.17). —7. (n*, 'ladaijeddu, R.V. Iddo =Jadau in A.V.) " [G.M.V.] Idol, Image. There are about twenty different words rendered in our version " idol " or " image," but these are not specific names of so many different idols. I. One set of ex- pressions, all of similar sense, simply express the fact that the idol is an " image " or " like- ness." Thus : (i) relem, the word occurring in Gen. 1.26, and rendered " image " in all its occurrences, except in Ps.39.6, " vain shew " (R.V. marg. " as a shadow "). (2) semel, ren- dered " image " (Ezk.8.3), " figure " (Deut.4. 16), and " idol " (2Chr.33.7). (3) t'mimd, usually rendered " likeness " (Ex. 20. 4, etc.) or " similitude " (Num. 12. 8, etc.), and in R.V. " form," except in Ps.i7.15, " likeness" (marg. " form "). (4} rlr (plur. (Irim), probablymeaning form, once only in this sense (Is. 45. 16), when it is rendered "idols." II. Another set of ex- pressions denotes the material, particular form, or mode of fabrication : (i) pesel, from a root meaning " to hew," rendered a " graven image" by R.V. in all occurrences, and also by A.V., except twice, "carved image" (Judg.18.i8; 2Chr.33.7). (2) />'>'«/, a variant form of the preceding, only in the plur., and also rendered by R.V. " graven images," except in Judg.3. 19,26, "quarries" (marg. " graven images"). [GiLGAL.] The A.V.agreesexcept in2Chr.33.22, 34.3,4, " carved images." (3) nesekh, from a root "to pour out," is the standing w(jrd for a drink-offering, and so rendered in the great majority of instances. But it is also used of a molten image, and so rendered bv both A.V. and R.V. in Is.41. 29,48.5, Je.l0.i4,51.i7- Frf)m the same root we have (4) massckhd, the usual word for a molten image, e.g,. the molten calf (lix. 32. 4, 8). (5) 'fl(a66i»i (only in jilur.), probably derived from a verb meaning " t(j shape," as in Job 10.8, "Thine hands have framed me " (K.V.); almost always trans- lated " idols " in E.V., and in 2Sam.5.2i, " images." In Je.50.2 A.V. has " idols," while R.V. has " images." A shorter form, 'ofebh, IDOL is in one passage (Is. 48. 5) rendered " idol"- and another form, 'ccebh (Je.22.28), is "idol" in A. v., but " vessel " in R.V. (6) gillulim, apparently froma root " toroU," is generally re- garded as meaning " blocks," and is translated by both R.V. and .\.V. " idols," everywhere, except in Je.50.2, when A.V. has " images." (7) 7naftcbhd, from a root " to set up," always in R.V. " pillar," with " obelisk " in marg. The A.V. also has " pillar " in many places, but in others " image," with " standing image " or "statue" in many. [Pillars.] (8) maskith is variously rendered. When joined with " stone " it is in R.V. " figured stone," and in A.V. " image of stone." In Pr.25.ii, A.V. has " pictures " and R.V. marg. " filigree work " ; in Ezk.8.12, both A.V. and R.V. have " imagery." Some suppose it rejiresented the winged sun-disk. [Pictuke.] (9) liammnnim, always in R.V. " sun images " ; in A.V. "images" andmarg."sunimages." Inoneplace (2Chr.34.7) A.V.has"idols." [Teraphim.] III. A number of other wt)rds express the feelings of detestation with which the idol was regarded : (i) 'dven, meaning " trouble," " sorrow," is applied to idolatry in general {e.g. Is. 41. 29), and in one passage (66.3) is rendered " idol." (2) 'i'lil, probably having the primary sense of weakness, has usually the meaning of vvorth- lessness, as e.g. in " physicians of no value " (Job 13.4) ; then apiplied to heathen divinities or idols as things of nought, and usually ren- dered "idol" in E.V. (3) 'hnd, "terror," " dread." once (Je.5O.38) rendered " idols." (4) miphlefelh, a horrid thing, from a root " to shudder," used only of the idol made by Asa's mother Maacah (1k.i5.13 ; 2Chr.l5.i6), " an idol in a grove " A.V., " an abominable image for an Asherah " R.V. (5) shigquf, an abomin- able thing, only once, in the plur. (2Chr.l5.8), "abominable idols" A.V., "abominations" R.V. A shorter form, sheqec, is used of animals ceremonially unclean. — It is possible that some of these names may have been imitations or modifications of more distinctive names of the respective idols. We know, e.g., how bosheth, " shame," was substituted for ba'al (cf. 2Sam. 2.8 with iChr.8.33) ; Hosea also uses Beth-aven for Beth-el (Hos.4.i5,5.8,10.5) ; and Israel was admonished to " make no mention of the name of other gods" (Ex.23. 13) and to "destroy their name " (Deut.12.3). Some of the words seem purposely framed or chosen to suggest contempt. Thus 'drabbim and its cognates would call up the verb " to hurt, pain, grieve " ; gillulim is akin to a word meaning " dung " ; (ir hasalso the meaning of "pangs"; and 'ciilitn may have been felt to suggest the negation (hing in the first two letters) of 'clim, " gods," a word which indeeii in one place (Is. 57. 5) is rendered " idols" in A.V., but in R.V. " oaks." There seems to be an intended plav upon words in I's.96.5 : "AH the gods ['iloliim] of the peoples are idols ['i-lilitn]." The sacred writers do not furnish suflicient details of the form of the various idols. Since the Decalogue forbids the making for worship of any likeness of any- thing in the heaven above or on the earth be- neath or in the water under the earth, we may infer that images or symbols of these v^arious classes were known. The forms, human or otherwise, which were given to the idols would IDOLATRY no doubt, by the accentuation of some feature, suggest the attribute which was supposed to distinguish the idol ; the bull, e.g., suggests strength, and images, supposed to be of As- tarte, which have been found in recent exca- vations, seem to emphasize the idea of fertility. Dagon of the Philistines had a face and head and hands (iSam.5.4), and some suppose it had the tail of a fish. From Ps. 115. 5-8 we may con- clude that idols were more or less of human form ; and the same inference may be drawn from Isaiah's sarcastic description of the mak- ing of an image (Is. 44. 12-19). We also gather from 40.19,20,41.7 that the core of the idol might be of wood, while it was coated with metal and adorned with ornaments. But when idolatry was universally practised, as among the Canaanites, many of the idols would be rude enough, and recent excavations at Taanach and Gezer, e.g., have brought to light forms which, whether intentionally or from want of artistic skill, fully justify the contemp- tuous expressions used of idols by the Biblical writers. Qtly. Statement of Pal. Expl. Fund from 1902 onwards ; Vincent, Canaan d'apres I'expl. recente (Paris, 1907). [j-R-] Idolatry, a word signifying in its literal sense "worship of images," is used six times in the Bible (only once in O.T., 1Sam.i5.23, A.V.) as a general term for all kinds of worship other than that of the true God. It is the offence against which the first two of the Ten Com- mandments were directed (Ex. 20. 2-6). The Gk. term is not, however, found before the time of St. Paul, and mav have been coined byhim(Gal.5.2o; iCor.lO.'i4; Col.3.5). With- out using the term in either case, the great apostle of the Gentiles states two different, complementary rather than contradictory, views of idolatry, in his addresses to the two capitals of western heathenism — Athens and Rome. At Athens (Ac. 17. 2 2 -3 1 )he gives a careful philosophical sketch of natural religion, and of mankind groping upward through superstition to the true, though unknown, God. To Rome (Ro. 1.20-32) he writes the analysis of man's declension from primitive revelation to the penal state in which, with abominable accom- paniments, they worshipped the likeness of their fellows, and of various lower creatures. There is, however, in St. Paul no mention of that particular idolatry with which the early Church was most brought into conflict, that worship of the emperor which led St. John to describe Pergamum, where it was pre-eminently practised, as " Satan's throne " (Rev. 2. 13). Yet that idolatry, through the deification of the state in the person of its chief ruler, throws light on the political power of idolatry in the period covered by the Bible record. It shows us the state preserving its political integrity by requiring a unity of worship from all its mem- bers. Hence the complaint made at Thessa- lonica — " these all act contrary to the decrees of Caesar, saying that there is another king, one Jesus " (Ac. 17. 7), where the situation is exactly parallel with that at the courts of Ne- buchadnezzar and Darius (Dan. 3. 12, 18, 6. 5, 13). Each state had its own deity — e.g. Chemosh of Moab, Moloch of Ammon — and it was in har- mony with this general conception that Israel should have its own God (Mi. 4.5), although He IDOLATRY 363 was deemed to be the Most High God (Deut.32. 8), and has for a title, connected with the entry into the Promised Land, " the Lord of all the earth" (Jos. 3. 11, 13). So intimate was the connexion between the state and its deity judged to be, that the conquest of a country was considered to involve the conquest of its gods (Is. 46.1), whose subjugation was symbol- ized by the use of their implements of worship for the religious banquets of the conquerors (Dan. 1.2, 5. 3 ; c/. Ezr.l.7-11). The same idea was illustrated by the conqueror changing names compounded with that of the deity of the conquered race for names compounded with that of his own deity. Thus Daniel be- comes Belteshazzar (Dan. 4.8), Hananiah Shad- rach, Mishael Meshach, and Azariah Abednego (Dan. 1.7). In this connexion there is signi- ficance in the omission from the name of the renegade Ahaz, in the Heb. text, of that prefix Jeho invariably found on the monu- ments (Sayce, Fresh Light, etc., p. 112). The king of Assyria boasts that the gods of no country or city have been able to deliver their people out of his hand, and that therefore it is imprudent of Judah to trust to its covenant God (2K. 18. 30,33-35, 19.9-19). It is possible that this conception of national tutelary gods sprang from the prowess and subsequent prestige of such representative heroes as Nimrod (Gen. 10. 8-10), who appears to have been worshipped in later days as a deity, under a variant from his own name — Merodach (Je. 50.2). Two events connected by tradition with Nimrod, in spite of their chronological im- probability, bear on the Biblical history and conception of idolatry : (i) He is thought to have been the builder of the tower of Babel, and the different names for the same God, con- sequent upon the confusion of tongues, may have led to polytheism; while (2) Abraham, threatened with punishment by Nimrod for re- fusing to worship his gods, restates the primeval doctrine of the unity of God. To Abraham we owe that strange name of plural form and singular meaning — Elohim — which suggests that he saw that " whatever were the names of the Elohim worshipped by the numerous clans of his race, all the Elohim were meant for God. Thus, Elohim — comprehending by one name everything that ever was or ever could be called divine — became the name by which the monotheistic age was rightly inaugurated " (Stanley, Jewish Church, lect. i.). The idola- try of the ancestors of the Jewish race is re- cognized in their own sacred writings (Jos. 24. 2) ; it is recognized, too, that it was so en- grained in their nature, and they were so prone to it, that for ten centuries it was not purged out of them, and then only a remnant remained pure. Abraham, called out from his tribes- men and their false worship, extracts from his servant Eliezer a promise that he will not take Isaac back to that seductive atmosphere (Gen. 24.6). Yet Isaac's son, Jacob, has to cleanse his household from the possession of strange gods (Gen. 35. 2). In spite of the covenant made at mount Sinai, the Israelites promptly set up a golden calf (Ex. 32.2, 4, 35), and were otherwise, during their wilderness wanderings, openly idolatrous. Not only had they, as Amos (5.26) taunts them, " Sakkuth your king and 364 IDOLATRY Kewan your godstar, your images," but they made no resistance to the allurements of Moab (Num. 25. 2). This was the worse, as not only had they received the Ten Comnaandments, but they had been shown (through the direc- tions given for furnishing the tabernacle) how the likeness of cherubim could be made on ark and veil without their becoming objects of worship (E.\.25.i8,26.3i). It was clear, too, that objects and usages familiar in the Egyptian religion were meant to be adapted for the pure Israelitish worship without neces- s.arily involving any risk. During the wars of settlement under Joshua, the temptation to idolatry was kept at bay, only to recur with overwhelming force in the succeeding genera- tions, when the grandson of Moses himself con- sented to act as the priest of an idol set up at Dan by Micah (Judg.l8.30) ; and each succes- sive lapse was punished by an oppression from which deliverance was effected by the various judges. Yet the sons of Eli brought Israel into the deepest degradation of all by treating the ark of God as if it were itself a mere idol, and causing it to be so considered by the Philis- tines (iSam.4.3,8), who, however, found the difference to their cost when they captured it ; so that they were only too thankful to be rid of its presence (iSam.S.ii). The Philistines, however, still maintained their supremacy over Israel, and (with a view to the recovery of their independence) the Israelites, at Samuel's instigation, renounced their idolatries (iSam. 7.3,4); and this renunciation was maintained, at least publicly, until the time of Solomon, who allowed each of his own wives to have a sanctuary for her national deity on the mount of Olives (rK.ll.7,8). This apostasy was pun- ished by the division of the kingdom, and Jero- boam, the ruler of the northern portion, in order to maintain its religious as well as political in- dependence, prohibited his subjects from going to worship at Jerusalem, providing them in- stead with golden calves at Bethel and Dan (iK. 12. 26-28). Thenceforward he was known as the sinner " who made Israel to sin " (iK. 14.16,15.30,16.26), for the ten tribes never re- covered their complete allegiance to Jehovah, in spite of the extirpation of Baal prophets and Baal worshippers by lUijah and Jehu (1K.I8. 40; 2 K. 10. 18-28) ; and their concpiest by the Assyrians only led to a deeper pollution of the land by the introduction of fresh idolatries (2K. 17. 22, 23, 32, 33 ; Ezr.4'.2,3). In the small southern kingdom there were three reforma- tions, carried out respectively by Asa (iK.15. 12), Hezekiah (2K.I8.4), and Josiah (2K.23.4- 14); yet its punishment was inevitable (2K.23. 26,27 ; c/. Je.2.28 ; Ezk.8.3,io,i4,i6), and in the time of Nebuchadnezzar the whole of the nation, with some inconsiderable exceptions, was re- moved to Bal)yliin (jChr. 36. 14-23), whence a remnant returned (at the edict of Cyrus) only to fall again inti) idolatry, from which they were cut away by the drastic measures of Ezra (Ezr. 9.1,2,10.14). The spread of Gk. influences — through the conquests of Alexander — led first to the toleration and then to the practice of Gk. idolatries by the Jews (iMac. 1. 43-50, 34) ; but the attempt of Antiochus Ivpijihanes to en- force this form of worship h-d to the vigorous fesisUace of the liasmoaaeaasi uud by that IDOLATRY time the Jewish nation was utterly purged from all taste for idolatry. The idea current in some quarters, that Israel itself believed that Je- hovah could be worshipped in idolatrous em- blems and with idolatrous accompaniments, cannot be maintained, because theO.T. writers all represent such conduct as a decline — e.g. (J udg. 8. 27) Gideon's ephod "became a snare," and it is with a note of horror that the author of Judges records (18. 31), " and they set them up Micah's graven image, which he made, all the time that the house of God was in Shiloh." The books of Joshua, Judges, Sam- uel, and Kings are reckoned by the Jews themselves among " the prophets," and it is therefore only natural that their point of view should be similar to that which we get in the prophetical denunciations. Phases of idolatry found among the chosen people are the wor- ship on " high places " and in " groves," where the altar had as its adjuncts the sacred pillar maccebhd and wooden post 'dshcrd. There is also evidence of such worship of the reproductive forces of nature as led to the con- secrated harlotry of both sexes (Deut.23.i8 ; H0.4.13 ; iK.15.i2), though " fornication " is often used in a metaphorical sense for idolatry, as being unfaithfulness to the covenant God of Israel (Ezk.l6.i5-43 ; Ho.2.7,8 ; Ps.l06. 39) ; and shortly before the Captivity we find the chariot and horses of the Sun-god stabled in the temple at Jerusalem (2K.23.ii). So far as externals were concerned, there was no difference between the covenant worship and idolatry as to Sacrifice, which was re- garded as the provision of food for the deity (Lev.3.ii ; Is.65.ir ; cf. the gross imposition described in the story of Bel and the Dragon), and took the forms of animal sacrifice (1K.I8. 23), drink offerings (Je.7.i8; Is. 57. 6), and pre- sentation of tithes and first-fruits (Ho.2.8-io). One ceremonial rite, kissing, is adapted from the general P^astern custom of proffering hom- age and service (iSam.lO.i). It is found in the worship of the calves (Ho.13.2), and of* Baal (iK. 19.18), and in sun-worship — "My hand hath kissed mv mouth" (K.V. marg.) — i.e. thrown a kiss (Job 31.27). A more subtle form of idolatry than the worship of images took possession of the Jewish race, after the grosser forms of it had lost their attraction — viz. that love of money which is a root of all kinds of evil, the covetousness which is idolatry (iTim.6.10; Eph.5.3 : Col.3.5)- This covet- ousness is connected with " over-reaching," and that, again, with the viler temptations of such a seaport town as Thcssalonica (iTh.4.6) ; so that idolatrv is ranked as a work of the flesh (Gal. 5. 20), and excludes from salvation (iCor. 6.0). Because of the lascivious associations of idolatrv. Christians were warned against shar- ing in idol feasts (iCor.8.10); for though in itself an idol is nothing, a " no-god " (iCor.lO. 20), vet it stands for all practices which tend to dethrone God in favour of His creatures. Hence " the Canon of the New Testament closes with a shudder: Little children keep vourselves from the idols" (ijn.5.2i). At- tention may be drawn t(5 a remarkable sermon bv Dean IChurch. which deals with " the idols of refined _and civilized men " (Cathedral Sermons, pp. 154-157). [c.r.d,b.^ IDTTEL Iduel' (iEsd.8.43) = Ariel, i. Idumaea (Mk.3.8), Idume'a, for Edom in Is.34.5,6 ; Ezk.35.15,36.5; iMac.4.15, 29,61, 5.3,6.31 ; 2Mac.i2.32. Idumeans, 2Mac.lO. 15,16. R.V. reads Idumaea in N.T. and Apoc, but Edom elsewhere. In 2Mac.i2.32 the read- ing should probably be Jamnia ; cf. iMac.5.58, 59 and Josephus, 12 Ant. viii. 6. Igrar. — 1. One of the spies, son of Joseph, of the tribe of Issachar (Num.13.7). — 2. A hero of David's guard, son of Nathan of Zobah (2 Sam.23.36). called Joel "brother" of Nathan (iChr.11.38). Igrdaliah', " the man of God," the father of Hanan (Je.35.4 only). Ig-eal' (R.V. I gal), son of Shemaiah ; in the royal line of Judah (iChr.3.22). Km' {ruins: Num. 33. 45), or Ije-abapim (ruins of the places beyond; 21. 11,33.44). — 1- A place " in the desert facing Moab towards sun-rise," and " in the border of Moab." The probable site is 'Aimah, a place 2 miles N. of ToPHEL, and 4 miles S. of the border stream Zered, which was the ne.xt stage in the Heb. march to Moab. — 2. A town belonging to Judah near Beer-sheba (Jos. 15. 29), of which the site is unknown. [c.r.c] Ijon' (of springs), a town in Upper Galilee attacked by Benhadad I. of Damascus (iK.15. 20; 2Chr.l6.4), and by Tiglath-pileser in 734-732 B.C. (2K.I5.29). The name may survive at the Merj 'Ayun {meadow of springs), W. of Hermon, as the place is noticed with Dan and Abel. [c.r.c] Ikkesh', father of Ira, 3 (2Sam.23.26 ; iChr.ll. 28,27.9). Ilai', an Ahohite, a hero of David's guard (i Chr.11.29). lUyp'icum, an extensive district lying along the E. coast of the Adriatic from the boundary of Italy on the N. to Epirus on the S., and contiguous to Moesia and Macedonia on the E. (R0.I5.19). Imag'e. [Idol.] Imla', Imlah', father or progenitor of Micaiah the prophet (iK. 22.8,9; 2 Chr.18.7,8). Immanruel. All exposition of Is.7. 14 must ultimately determine two points : the Mother, the Child, (i) The Child is to receive the name Immanuel = God- with- us. " The name is evidently part of the sign, and has to be ex- plained in connexion with it. Why call a child God-with-us who is not going to act greatly or to be highly honoured, who is only going to suffer, for whom to come to years of intelligence shall only be to come to a sense of his country's disaster and his people's poverty ? " (Prof. G. A. Smith, i. 116). Accordingly Prof. Smith's conclusion is that " it seems quite impossible to dissociate so solemn an announcement by Jehovah to the house of David of the birth of a chUd, so highly named, from that expectation of the coming of a glorious Prince which was current in this royal family since the days of its founder." Immanuel, then, is to be identified with the Messiah. In His activities the people will have a wonderful experience of the presence of God {cf. Orelli, Der Prophet Jesaia, p. 35, and Orr, Virgin Birth, p. 135). It is thought that the whole prophecy refers to some traditional idea of the Messiah which would be intelligible to the hearers. {Cf. Gressmann, INCARNATION 365 Der Ursprung der Israelitish-jildischen Eschato- logie, pp. 276, 277 [1905] ; cf. Mi. 5.2.) More- over, it is evident that " a recently bom human child cannot help his people ; only a divine child could do this." {Cf. Gunkel, Zum religiose geschichtlicher V erstdndnis des Neuen Testaments, p. 24 [1903].) It certainly seems that the prophet anticipated a realization of this prediction within the hfetime'of his contem- poraries. The primary prophetic reference to an immediate deliverance does not obscure or exclude the thought of a remoter deliverance, in a deeper sense and on a vaster scale. (2) The Mother is described as the Virgin. " There are signs that the view that Isaiah was using cur- rent mythological terms, and intended his no'l'yn to carry with it the sense of supernatural birth, is rightly regaining ground" (Allen on St. Matt. p. 10). " As a matter of fact, there is no conclusive evidence to show that the word was ever used in the O.T. except with reference to a virgin " (Matthew's Sweet Birth and Infancy, p. 69, where cf. his criticisms on Gesenius ; Orr, Virgin Birth, p. 133). " If men had realized the old Oriental circle of ideas they would never have doubted that in the mind of the writer of Is. 7. 14 an actual son of a virgin was intended" (Jeremias, Bahylonisches in Neuen T. p. 47) ; and, in any case, the Gk. translators rendered the word by " virgin" in this passage, instead of "young woman." To say, as Arno Neumann does, that they did so wrongly, merely ex- presses the critic's personal preference, and cannot alter the fact. Moreover, as he acknow- ledges, " Matthew (I.23) accepted this render- ing, as others also did " (Neumann, Jesus, p. 50). The rendering by the Gk. translators is significant of the interpretation current in their time. A valuable note on 17 vapdevos will be found in R. R. Ottley's Book of Isaiah ace. to the LXX. vol. ii. [w.j.s.s.] Immep'. — 1. The founder of a family of priests (iChr.9.i2 ; Ezr.2.37,10.20 ; Ne.7.20, 11.13) w'hose was the sixteenth course of the service (iChr.24.i4). [Amariah, 4.] — 2. Ap- parently the name of a place in Babylonia (Ezr.2.59 ; Ne.7.6i). Immoptality. [Future Life.] Imna', son of Helem, an Asherite (iChr.7. 35 ; cf. 40). Imnah'. — 1. [J imna.] — 2. Father of Kore, 2 (2Chr.3i.14). Impah', a descendant of Asher, of the family of Zophah (iChr.7.36). Impi'. — 1. A man of J udah, of the family of Pharez (iChr.9.4). — 2. Father of Zaccur, 4 (Ne.3.2). Incapnation. (1) Apostolic Doctrine. The final outcome of Christian reflection in the Apostolic age may be instanced in four groups, (i) Pauline (see esp. Ph.2.5ff.), which affirms the personal pre-existence of Christ ; His original existence in the form of God ; and His deliberate assumption of the form of man, with all that such an assumption included. Cf. 2Cor.8.9, where He Who once had the riches of the heavenly life is asserted to have chosen instead, out of love to man, the poverty of an earthly condition. Cf. Col. 2.9, where the permanent indwelling in Christ of the full plenitude of the substance (not the mere 366 INCARNATION resemblance) of the Godhead is asserted. (Cf. Holtzmann.) (ii) Johannine (Jn.l.14). In the beginning was the Word — so called, says St. Basil, as proceeding from God's mind : His mental Image. The Word was with God. This emphasizes the distinction of personality. It will not allow us to confuse the Persons. The Word was God. This declares His divine equality with the Father. (Cf. St. Basil Caes., Horn, in Principio erat Verbum; Gaume, ii. 190 ff.). And the Word became flesh ; that is, says St. Cyril, became man. The evangelist does not say, " came to the flesh," which might suggest a relation of the Word to Jesus similar to that with the prophets or the saints, but actually " was made flesh " — that is, human. (St. Cyril Alex., in S.J. i. 14, Migne, vi. 157-160.) [John, Gospel ago. to.] (iii) St. Peter's testimony, as we might anticipate from his character, is simple, unreflective. He implies Christ's pre-existence in iPe.l.ii ; seems to call Him the living Word in I.23 ; describes His mediatorial work in 3. 18. (Cf. sermons in Acts.) (iv) In Hebrews. It is one and the same Person Who has been constituted or declared heir of all things, Who was the Agent in Creation, Who was the Splendour of divine Glory and express Image of the divine Substance, and Who also appeared in human history. The Person Who pre-existed in heaven, Who was sacrificed on earth. Who was exalted to high-priestly entrance into heaven, is one and the same. These are successive stages in one personal ex- perience. (2) Its Relation to the Trinity. All belief in the Incarnation requires as its logical basis the distinctively Christian conception of God — i.e. the affirmation of inner distinctions within the divine Personality. Hence the Incarnation has emphasized the Fatherhood of God, and filled that term with new and profounder contents than it ever possessed before, or can otherwise possess. For father- hood now appears as an essential characteristic of Deity, and not merely a temporal attribute relative to the Creation. Even if the Creation had never been, the Son is He in Whom the divine Fatherhood is eternally realized. (Cf. Kph.3.15, K.V. marg., and Dean Robinson's Commentary.) The distinction between a Trinity of manifestation and an essential Trinity is not apostolic nor compatible with Christianity. The N.T. conception is that God reveals what He is ; that Fatherhood and Sonship denote permanent distinctions within God Himself. (See also lUingworth, Trinity, 147- ) (3) The Idea of Incarnation. It means self-investiture by a divine Person in the constituent elements of the nature of man. The Son of God, eternally pre-cxistent, as- sumed human nature before that human na- ture came to possess any personality of its own. Tluis He united, in indissoluble unity, with His di\ine Self, human l)<)dy, mind, heart, and will. In .Mary's Ciiild — so close is the similarity between Go 1 and man created in God's Image — a divine Person actually took the place occupied in every other hmnan birth by a created person. In f)ther words, the personality of Jesus is divine and not human. Thus, whereas at every other human birth an increase is made to the sum-total of existing INCARNATION persons, this was not the case at the birth of Jesus Christ. By His human birth the number of persons existing in the universe was not in- creased—«o« augelur nitmerus personariim. (St. Augustine, Ep. 140, ii. 655.) (4) The Purpose of the Incarnation is twofold : enlightenment and strength (illuminatio, adjutorium ; St. Aug., Ep. 137 to Volusian), increase of know- ledge and increase of power : corresponding to man's deepest defects, which are ignorance and weakness, (i) Viewed in the aspect of en- lightenment, it is the self-revelation of God in the most adequate way, i.e. in person. (Cf. OtUey, Incarnation, p. 25.) God's self-revelation is (a) through Nature, which, being imper- sonal, cannot adequately reveal the personal (Ro.1.20); (6) through mankind, which reveals Him imperfectly because of its moral imper- fections; (c) through Incarnation, which alone is adequate, because here alone moral per- fection is displayed. C/. Heb.l.i. (ii) Viewed as strength. " Jesus introduces into the heart of humanity a new regenerative force" (Ottley, p. 21). The Incarnation is the neces- sary basis for reconciliation. The ideally per- fect Man presents the perfect homage to divine Righteousness. But the ultimate purpose is to invigorate weak mankind by the infusion of the spiritual principle of His own glorified hu- manity. (5) The Preparation in History. The necessity for preparation ought not to be sur- prising. A priori objections against delay are worthless, men being incompetent to judge, although able to discern a providential process afterwards in history. Cf. .•\.C.14.I7. (i) In the world at large. The comparative study of religions shows endeavours to effect the union of God and man in two directions : either by bringing down God to man, or by elevating imperfect man to divinity. Neither achieved success. The former degraded God, the latter retained man's imperfections. Vet both in- tended well. Incarnation alone consummated this union. The intellectual preparation is seen at its height in the Greek thought and expression which provided a competent instru- ment for the magnitude of the idea. (Cf. Lux Miindi ; Godet, Bibl. Stud., O.T.. p. 18 ; Harris, Self-revelation, p. 68.) (ii) In the nation. The selection of Israel was not to the exclusion of the world, but for its sake. (Cf. Gwatkin, Knowledge of God, i. 131 ; Robinson, Ephe- sians, p. 23.) In no nation but Israel were the conditions such as would provide for the Son of God a natural religious human development, (iii) In the home. The selection of the nation is consummated in the selection of the Virgin Mother. (6) The Relation to .Modern Thought. Incarnation presents a ditficulty to those who regard the theory of development as involving continuous progress and excluding the notion of breaks or crises or the introduction of new elements from without. The doctrine must remaiiui ifficult, if isolated from God's comiexion with the unixerse. The relation of (iod to Nature is not identical with His relation to mankind, nor His relation to mankind with that to Christ, (i) God's relation to nature is Immanence. Deistic alooii ess must he dismissed, (iod per- vades the rrcation, which exists in Him. This truth c)f Immanence must be balanced by that of His personal transcendence, (ii) God'srela- INCENSfi tion to mankind is moral and natural, a relation of Will to will, of benevolence, of resemblance, of adoption. It begins with creation in His Image, a constitutional resemblance capable of conversion into a moral resemblance increas- ingly closer and very intimate. Nevertheless, the difference between Creator and creature is absolute, (iii) God's relation to the Incarnate Christ is prepared for by the fact of man's creation in the divine Image, the supreme achievement consisting in the actual replace- ment of a created personality by an uncreated. This is a relation of equality. Hence Incarna- tion, although unique, is not an unprepared event, but the crown of a process. Moreover, self-communication is the essential character- istic of Deity. To nature He imparts exist- ence, to mankind adoption, to Christ equality. The last, which is really the first, is the eternal self-communication of God within His own Personality. The modern tendency to substi- tute Immanence for Incarnation is an unfortu- nate confusion of two terms by no means equivalent. [Temptation (7) (ii).] [w.j.s.s.] Incense. The term has two applications : ( 1 ) The substance which, when burned, exhales an aromatic perfume ; and (2) the odour aris- ing from such compounds when burned as part of the ritual of worship. The use of aromatic perfumes has always been more common in the East than in the West. [Perfumes.] Perhaps the use of incense in sacrifices can be thus ex- plained. " Men believe that what is so grate- ful to themselves is pleasing to the deity." Man offers of his best. There are traces of a survival in popular superstition of a more primitive and unrefined conception of the use of fumigation — viz. to expel demons (c/. Tob. 6.1-7,8.1-3). — An Adjunct of Worship in O.T. Though incense occupies a prominent place in the ritual legislation of the Pentateuch, there is no other certain reference to its use in Israelite worship till the time of Jeremiah (7th cent. B.C.; Je.6.20, cf. 41.5). In E.V. incense is used to translate two Heb. words, (i) I'hhond, most frequently rendered frankincense, a species of gum which appears in the ritual legislation as a concomitant of the meal- offering (Lev. 2. if. ,6. 15, cf. 5. II ; Num. 5. 15). Pure frankincense was also placed (in two golden vessels) on the table of shewbread, and when the loaves were removed on the following sabbath, this was burned as a " memorial " Cazkdrd) on the great altar (Lev. 24. 7-9). (2) q'toreth. This word, however, strictly means the sweet smoke (of sacrifice), e.g. Is.l.13. It is used of the sweet smoke of frankincense and other compounds which made up the q<^t6reth hassamniim, " the incense of aromatics " prescribed in Ex.3O.34. This compound in- cluded among its constituents frankincense, and was offered independently in the form of the incense offering (q<'toreth tamidh, Ex.30. 8) daily, morning and evening. It was burned on the golden altar in the holv place, according to Ex.3O.7ff., by the high-priest himself. The earlier usage presumably was to burn the in- cense in censers, each priest possessing one (cf. Lev.lO.iff.). But in the ritual the golden altar takes the place of the censers, which are merely used for transferring the coals from the great altar. The complicated formula for com- INN 367 pounding the incense is given in Ex.30. 34-38. — Later Usage and Significance. In the Herodian temple the ceremonial of the incense- offering is more elaborately developed. The incense itself is a more elaborate compound, consisting (according to Josephus) of thirteen ingredients. The proper preparation and com- pounding of these was a mysterious art. The secret was carefully guarded in the last period of the temple by the family of Abtinas, who were assigned a special room in the precincts of the sanctuary for this purpose. The duty of burn- ing the incense no longer devolved upon the high-priest, but was assigned daily bj' lot to a priest who had not performed the function before (cf. Lu.l.8-io). The most solemn mo- ment was when the officiating priest (alone within the holy place, his assistants having withdrawn) emptied the incense on the altar fire. At the rising of the smoke the people withdrew from the inner court, and prostrated themselves, spreading out their hands in silent prayer. This was followed apparently by the recitation of the Shema (Deut.6.4f., etc.), and the ten commandments, together with certain benedictions, the whole being concluded with the priestly blessing, pronounced by the officiat- ing priest and his four assistants with uplifted hands from the steps in front of the temple. Incense is regarded in Scripture as a symbol of prayer (a natural idea suggested by the rising of the sweet smoke heavenwards). Cf. Ps. 141.2 ; Rev. 8. 3f., 5. 8. Maimonides, Mishna Tord (Temtdim ii-Musaphim). Older mono- graphs in Ugolini, Thesaurus xl. [g.h.b.] Incest. [Crimes; Marriage.] India. The name of India does not occur in the Bible before the book of Esther, where it is noticed as the limit of the territories of Ahasuerus in the E., as Ethiopia was in the W. (1.1,8.9). The India of the book of Esther is not the peninsula of Hindostan, but the country surrounding the Indus, the Punjab and perhaps Scinde. In iMac.8.8 India is reckoned among the countries which Eumenes, king of Pergamus, received out of the posses- sions of Antiochus the Great. In the 9th cent. B.C. the Assyrians probably traded with India ; for the " Black Obelisk " of Shalmaneser shows the elephant, rhinoceros, and Apes brought as tribute. [Tarshish.] The early notice of Cinnamon and other Indian products in O.T. may thus be explained. [Races.] [c.r.c] Inheritance. [Family.] Ink, Inkhopn. [Writing.] Inn. The Heb. word (mdlon) thus ren- dered lit. signifies " a lodging-place for the night." Inns, in our sense of the term, were, and still are, unknown in the East, where hospitality is religiously practised. Even the khans, or caravanserais, the nearest parallel to European inns, were established but gradually. It is doubtful whether there is any allusion to them in O.T. The halting-place of a caravan was selected originally on account of its proxi- mity to water or pasture, by which the travel- lers pitched their tents and passed the night. Such was undoubtedly the " inn " at which occurred the incident in the life of Moses, nar- rated in Ex. 4.24 (cf. Gen. 42.27). On the more frequented routes, remote from towns (Je.9.2), caravanserais were in course of time erected, 368 INSOLVENCY often at the expense of the wealthy. The fol- lowing description of one on the road from Baghdad to Babylon is typical : " It is a large and substantial square building, in the distance resembling a fortress, being surrounded with a lofty wall, and flanked by round towers to de- fend the inmates in case of attack. Passing through a strong gateway, the guest enters a large court, the sides of which are divided into numerous arched compartments, open in front, for the accommodation of separate parties and for the reception of goods. In the centre is a spacious raised platform, used for sleeping upon at night, or for the devotions of the faithful during the day. Between the outer wall and the compartments are wide vaulted arcades, extending round the entire building, where the beasts of burden are placed. Upon the roof of the arcades is an e.xcellent terrace, and over the gateway an elevated tower containing two rooms — one of which is open at the sides, permitting the occupants to enjoy every breath of air that passes across the heated plain. The terrace is tolerably clean ; but the court and stabling below are ankle- deep in chopped straw and filth " (Loftus, Chaldea, p. 13). The -rravdoxi^ov (Lu.lO.34) probably differed from the KaraXv/j-a (2.7) in having a " host " or " innkeeper " (10. 35), who supplied some few of the necessary provisions, and attended to the wants of travellers. Insolvency. [Loan.] Inspiration. [Scripture, Holy; Spirit, Holy.] Interest. [Loan.] Iphedeiali', a Benjamite chief, one of the Bcne-Shashak (iChr.8.25; cf. 28). Ip (iChr.7.i2). [Iri, i.] Ira'. — 1. " The Jairite," named in the list of David's chief officers (2Sam.2O.26) ; possibly the same as — 2. A hero of David's guard ; an Ithrite (2Sam.23.38 ; 1Chr.ll.40). — 3. Ano- ther of David's guard, a Tekoite, son of Ikkesh (2Sam.23.26 ; iChr.ll. 28,27.9). Ipad', son of Enoch ; grandson of Cain, and father of Mchujacl (Gen. 4. 18). Ipam', a leader of the Edomites (Gen. 36. 43; iChr.1.54). Ir-lia-lie'pes (A.V. the City of Destruc- tion), a city in Egypt (Is. 19. 18). There are various explanations, (i) "The city of the sun," a translation of On. (2) "The city Heres," the Egyptian sacred name of Heliopolis (Kha-Ra), "the abode of the sun." (3) "A city of destruction," i.e. that one of the five cities mentioned should be destroyed. (4) "A city preserved," i.e. that one should be pre- served. [BliTH-SHEMESH, 4.] IpI'. — 1. Or Ir; a Benjamite, son of Bela (iChr.7.7,12). — 2. (iEsd.8. 62) = Uriah, 3. Ipijati', son of Shelemiah, a captain of the ward, who arrested Jeremiah at tlie gate of Benjamin, on the charge of being about to desert to tlie Chaldeans (Je. 37. 13, 14). Ip-nahash' (iChr.4.i2), a town (men- tioned in the genealogy as if a personal name) apparently of J udah. Perhaps Deir Nakhkhds, 2 miles N.E. of lieit-J ibrin, the modern Dcir (convent) having taken the place of the Hcb. 'ir (city). It is a small village. [c.r.c] Iron', one of the cities of Napbtali (Jos.l9. ISAAC 38) ; now Ydrun, a village 7 miles S.W. o^ Kedesh. [c.r.c] Ipon (Heb. barzel ; Aram, also parzeJ), mentioned with Brass as the earhest of known metals (Gen. 4.22). As it is rarely found in its native state, but generally as an oxide or car- bonate, the knowledge of the art of forging iron, which is attributed to Tubal-cain, indicates that the difficulties attending the smelting of this metal had been overcome. The natives of India and Africa employ an extremely simple and very ancient method, which though rude is effective, and suggests the possibility of similar knowledge in an early stage of civilization. The natural wealth of the scjil of Canaan is indicated by describing it as " a land whose stones are iron " (Deut.8.9), which, however, is not strictly true of Palestine proper. The book of J ob contains passages which indicate that iron was well known. Of the manner of procuring it, we learn that " iron is taken from dust" (Job 28.2). The " furnace o{ iron" (Deut.4.2o; 1K.8.51) is a figure which vividly expresses hard bondage, as represented by the severe labour of smelting. Sheet-iron was used for cooking utensils (Ezk. 4.3 ; r/. Lev. 7. 9). That it was plentiful in the time of David appears from iChr.22.3. The market of Tyre was supplied with bright or polished iron by the merchants of Dan and Javan (Ezk. 27. 19). The Chalybes of the Pontus were celebrated as workers in iron in very ancient times. The produceof their labour issupposed tobe alluded to in Jc.15.i2, as being of superior quality. Iron was known to the Egyptians at a very early date, the first instance of its occurrence being in a tomb of the 6th dynasty (c. 3400 B.C.), but it had not become common, either here or in (Ireece, in Mykcnian times {c. 1500 B.C.), so the allusions to it in the Pentateuch are no anachronisms. During the next five centuries it gradually became common. There are some mines in Egypt, others in the S. of the Lebanon, and the ores are of frequent occur- rence. That ancient iron articles are so rarely found may be partly accounted for by the fact that iron is easily destroyed by moisture and exposure to the air. The Egyptians obtained their iron almost exclusively from Assyria Proper in the form of bricks or pigs. Speci- mens of AssjTian iron-work overlaid with bronze were discovered by Mr. Layard, and are now in the British Museum. Iron weapons of various kinds were found at Nimrud, but fell to pieces on exposure to the air. Iron knives found at Tell Loh in Chaldea may be as old as 2800 B.C. ; and iron is mentioned in the Amama tablets (15th cent. B.C.). Malleable iron was in common use, but it is doubtful whether the ancients were acquainted with cast-iron. The rendering given by the LXX. of Job 40.18 seems to iin])ly that some method nearly like casting was known, and is sup- ported by a passage in Diodorus (v. 13). In Ecclus. 38.28 we have a picture of the interior of an ironsmith's (Is. 44. 12) workshop. Ippeel .acityof Benjamin (J os.l8. 27). Pro- bably the village Rd-fdt near Gibeon. [c.r.c]. Ir-she mesh. [Beth-shemesh, i.] Ipu', eldest son of Caleb, son of Jephunneh (iChr.4.15). Isaac was the son of the old age of .\bra- ISAIAH ham and Sarah, given in accordance with the repeated promises of God some years after Abraham had become the father of Ishmael by Hagar, Sarah's bond-maid. It was he whom Abraham believed himself called upon to offer up to Jehovah on mount Moriah, and Isaac's acquiescence in the sacrifice is but typical of the meekness which he appears to have dis- played all through life. His wife Rebekah was brought to him from the kinsmen of his father by Eliezer, Abraham's steward. He became the father of twins, J acob and Esau, by Rebekah, when at last, in accordance with his prayer, God granted her children. He assisted his half-brother to bury Abraham, and settled in the S., by the well Lahai-roi. Driven by famine to Gerar, he practised on Abimelech the king a stratagem similar to that of Abra- ham on account of his wife. The narrative is now concerned with the wells which he made, only to be dispossessed by the Philistines. He appears to have lived in peaceful and wealthy security, marred possibly by domestic trouble if we may judge from the incident of the stra- tegy practised by his wife and younger son. He died at the age of i8o, and was buried by his two sons. The name of Isaac seems cer- tainly connected with " laughter," and several possible explanations are recorded in the inci- dents connected with his birth. Little is told about him, not sufficient for us to form a dis- tinct impression of his personality, and we are left with the idea of a quiet, restful, meditative, good-natured, not too energetic temperament, a picture enhanced by his strong desire for savoury meat such as his soul loved. There are in the narrative signs of independent tra- ditions which may account for such facts as that he gave his dying blessing to his sons some forty years before he actually expired. The only incident upon which the memory fixes is the one theologically important, viz. the in- tended sacrifice on momit Moriah. Whether viewed as literal history or as edifying story, this incident is of immense importance. On the one side it is typical of the sacrifice on Calvary, on the other it is evidence of a time when human sacrifice was giving way to the slaughter of animals. There can be little doubt that human sacrifice was by no means an objectionable idea to the early Hebrew (c/. the story of Jephthah). The story of the sacrifice of Isaac points to the time when the religious consciousness was beginning to see that Jehovah could be satisfied with something less than the human firstborn as a proof of devo- tion, that a beast could be used to redeem the son. The story must have stopd as a perpetual warning to the Israelites against any tendency to lapse into this awful practice. Viewed from the more conservative position, the trial of Abraham's faith became a crucial factor of much of later Judaistic and even Christian theology, and the faith of father Abraham is one of the cardinal points in the Pauline system. [b.f.s.] Isaiah. In all "the goodly fellowship of the prophets " no one holds a more conspicuous place, for nobleness of character, clearness and steadiness of prophetic vision, or historical significance, than Isaiah. He lived through a most critical period of Israelite history, having ISAIAH 369 seen the two kingdoms at the height of their prosperity, the ruin of the one, and the mira- culous deliverance from ruin of the other ; and in the eventful times of his own kingdom he took, in his own person, a great part. Of his father Amoz we know nothing ; the name is different in the original from that of the pro- phet Amos, and there is nothing to support the Jewish tradition that he was a near relative of king Amaziah. Yet, from the prominent position which he occupied, the intimate terms on which he seems to have stood with the royal family, and the emphasis he lays on the influ- ence of the aristocratic party, it is not un- natural to conclude that he was of noble par- entage or high social position. As " Judah and J erusalem " are uppermost in his thoughts, it is beUeved that he was a native of, and resident in, the capital; and, from the fact that his wife is called by him " the prophetess " — the only wifeofaprophet so designated in O.T. — we may conclude that he gave himself entirely to the prophetic work. He had at least two sons, to whom he gave sjmibolic names ; and it would appear that he regarded his own name also ( = salvation of Jehovah) as symbolical (Is. 8.18). These are all the particulars we know of his personal history. He disappears entirely from the sacred record after the deliverance of J eru- salem from Sennacherib's invasion in Heze- kiah's reign in 701 b.c. By that time he had exercised the prophetic office for forty years ; and there is a very persistent tradition that he suffered martyrdom by being sawn asunder in the reign of Hezekiah's son and successor Manasseh. But his life was led in public during a period regarding which we are fairly well acquainted. He lived in the reigns of four kings of Judah — Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah ; and the book which bears his name contains prophecies falling presumably within the four reigns, bearing on the religious, po- litical, and social condition of his own country, as well as others relating to peoples and cotm- tries with which Judah came into contact. The prophetic word, during such a long minis- try, must have been spoken at sundry times and in divers manners ; and, though there are references to certain things that the prophet himself wrote (see 8. 16, 30. 8), we have no grounds for concluding that the book, in its present form, came from his hand. In all pro- bability the single prophecies, or small collec- tions of his prophecies, would be written from time to time after the addresses were delivered, and from these smaller collections the book, in its final form, was no doubt compiled by those who collected the prophetical writings. The book follows, in the main, the course of the history. Yet we cannot take the order of the chapters as the precise order of the events to which they relate : the prophet's call, e.g., is not recorded till ch. 6. And, since we are fairly well informed as to the sequence of the events of the period, it will be convenient, for the purpose of gaining an intelligent view of the book, to take the history as our guide, and to mark the chief prophetic addresses which either plainly declare their reference, or by fair inference can be referred to definite events and episodes. The year of the prophet's call, " the year that king Uzziah died," marked an 24 370 ISAIAH era in Israelite history. Uzziah of Judah and Jeroboam II. of Israel were almost contempor- aneous, and under them the kingdoms had en- joyed about half a century of prosperity. The borders of the northern kingdom were greatly extended (2K.I4.25); and, in the southern kingdom, the army had been strengthened and organized {2Chr.26.ii-i5), trade and com- merce extended (26.2), and under improved husbandry the land brought forth plentifully (vcr. 10). But prosperity had bred luxury, and with luxury set in decay. It may be that Isaiah, living in the midst of this, and brooding over the danger, was thus prepared for the vision by which he was consecrated to his life's work (Is. 6). The temple and its service are to his inner gaze etherealized, and a house of another building rises before him. The mercy- seat becomes God's throne, the cherubim are transformed into majestic seraphim, veiling their faces with their wings, and adoring Him Whose train fills the temple. Two things were revealed to Isaiah, the boundless holiness and glory of God and the imperfection and sinful- ness of himself and his people ; and the call ad- dressed to him and willingly accepted was to speak in the name of such a God to such a people. It was a hard task, for his word would not be listened to ; yet his work, being God's work, would not be in vain ; though the many should harden their hearts and perish, yet a remnant should return. These became cardinal points in Isaiah's teaching, which he was soon called upon publicly to enforce. Jotham, who had acted as regent during the closing years of Uzziah's reign, had not been long seated on the throne when an ominous sign appeared on the horizon. The great Assyrian empire, which a century before had made its power felt as far W. as Palestine, began a new course of conquest with the accession of Pul, or Tiglath-pileser III. (745 B.C.) ; and the small states in the W., too weak singly to bear the brunt of the in- vasion, saw it to be their policy to combine for resistance. Already in the reign of Jotham we have intimation (2 K. 15. 37) of a league of this kind between the kings of Syria and Israel, into which, apparently, they endeavoured to draw the kingdom of Judah, and, faihng in this, they conspired to dethrone the king of Judah and to set in his place one who would be in sym- pathy with their pnUcy (Is. 7. 1,2). The pro- phet, reading God's purpose aright, saw in the Assyrian advance the preparation of the rod for the chastisement of his people's sin. At tliis time, accordingly, we may place those dis- courses (in Is. 2- 4) in which Isaiah appears in the usual prophetic attitude of reprover of sin and denouncer of judgment. Very soon there- after he has also to act the part of national political adviser. For in the reign of Ahaz the league of Syria and Israel took shape in the Syro-Ephraimite war, in which Judah was in- vaded, and its territory curtailed (2K.I6.6 ; 2Chr.28.5). The small northern states that lay on the westward marcli of the Assyrians had been swept away or made tributary; and to a merely worldly policy the teni])tation was strong, if not to combine with Israel and Da- mascus for resistance, then to make terms with the advancing Assyrian so as to beat off the attack of the confederates. Ahaz was not ISAIAS the man to look to a Higher Power, and his heart " was moved and the heart of his people, as the trees of the forest are moved with the wind " (Is. 7. 2). At this juncture Isaiah comes forward with a better policy. He has with him his son Shear-jashub (a remnant shall return) ; and the burden of his message is that, though there will be affliction for a time, God will be the defence of His own. " Take heed and be quiet. ... If ye will not believe, surely ye shall not be established " (Is. 7. 4, 9). It was on this occasion that he delivered the first of those mysterious and lofty pro- phecies of Immanuel {dod with ns, 7.14); and apparently not long after that he gave to another son the name Maher-shalal-hash-baz {Haste-booty, sf^eed-prey). in which, through the gloom of deep national distress, shines the promise of final deliverance and lasting peace (9.6,7). To this period may also belong 17. i- II, announcing the downfall of Damascus and Ephraim, and ch. 1 describing the devastation produced by the invaders, unless, perhaps, this refers to the later invasion of the Assyrians. The prophet's advice and warning were in vain. Ahaz made terms with the Assyrians(2K.16.7), and, though the immediate effect was the weakening of the two confederate kingdoms (15.29,16.9), his own kingdom became tribu- tary to Assyria, and in this condition it passed into the hands of his son and successor Heze- kiah. There is a prophecy dated " in the year that king Ahaz died " (Is. 14. 28), which gives an indication of the situation of the time and the prophet's outlook on the future. Tiglath- pileser was succeeded by Shalmaneser IV., and the Philistine princelets would seem, as was customary, to have seized the occasion of the change of ruler to meditate revolt, and to have sent niessengers to Jerusalem to seek sym- pathy in their design. But the prophet, in- stead of relief, sees only heavier oppression and trouble " from the north," not only for Philistia but for the whole of Palestine ; and ere long the heavy blow, predicted in 28.1, fell, in the invasion of Palestine, the siege and capture of Saniaria, the ruin of the northern kingdom, and the affliction of the country of the Philis- tines. Political statecraft now assumed a new phase. The smaller states, too weak even in combination to cope with Assyria, turned their eyes towards the other great world-power Egypt, hoping by concerted action and an Egyptian alliance to resist the AssyTians. Isaiah, who had before opposed the Assyrian alliance, but had acquiesced in it when it was an accomplished fact, was now as strenuous in his opposition to the Egyptian alliance, de- nounced such refuges of lies (28.17), and coun- selled his people to trust in their own God : " In returning and rest shall ye be saved ; in quietness and in confidence shall be your strength" (28. 12,16,30.15). -Again, however, he was overborne : Hezekiah refused to pay his tribute to Assyria, an 1 cast in his lot with the disaffected states, thus bringing upon himself the invasion of Sennacherib. [Hezkkiah.] To this period may belong 14. 24-27, expressing the certainty of the overthrow of the .Assyrian ; 10.5-34, describing the march of the invader ; 18, referring to the negotiations with the Egyp- tians for concerted resistance ; 22.i5fi., the ISAIAH prophecy against Shebna, the leader of the Egyptianizing policy ; 28, the prophet's insist- ence, in the face of opposition, on a policy of "rest"; and 30-33, directed against the Egyptian alliance and its advocates. 22.1-14 seems to describe the commotion in Jerusalem as the invading host surrounded the city ; and 37.22-35 is the proud defiance, by the prophet, of the Assyrian who had impiously defied the God of Israel. It will be observed that, whereas ch. 1-12 are concerned with " Judah and Jerusalem," the following chapters from 13-23 relate more particularly to the various nations whose fortunes were of chief concern to Israel. These prophecies are no doubt the written deposit of discourses pronounced from time to time, as these nations came more directly in contact with Judah, to whose for- tunes there is throughout a more or less pro- nounced reference. Some of these prophecies, either explicitly or by obvious reference, date themselves ; others are more vague in this respect, and in some of the chapters the pro- phet rises to a world-wide outlook. 36-39 are historical, and correspond closely with 2K.I8. 13-2O). They relate to the invasion of Sen- nacherib, and gather up details of the life of Hezekiah, who, as well as the prophet, dis- appears from the record after that event, and they were evidently placed there to round off the series of preceding prophecies. The re- maining chapters of the book, 40-66, are now almost universally believed to be not the work of Isaiah. The reasons for this conclusion are various and weighty. The prophecies are not, as in the earlier portion, ascribed to him ; the situation is not Jerusalem, but the land of exile, from which deliverance is promised in the near future ; the victorious progress of Cyrus is described as going on (41.1-7), and he is indicated as the instrument by whom Baby- lon will be overthrown and God's people de- livered (45.1-7). Though prophets foresee and foretell events of the future, there is no in- stance of a prophet transferring himself en- tirely and continuously to a distant future time, and taking no note of the present. To take these chapters as the work of Isaiah, we should have to regard them as written and laid away against a time distant and unknown. Read as an outbiurst of prophecy in the Exile, they are intelligible as a message of comfort to the exiles, to give them courage for the coming in of the new age. At the same time we are to bear in mind that, to Isaiah, Assyria was simply the rod of God's anger (10. 5), which would be broken and cast away when God's time came, and that he had good cause to forebode evil to his own unfaithful people when the conquering power of Babylon should take the place of the old oppressor (see 39.6-8). Words spoken by him with this in view would be treasured in the minds of his " disciples " (8.16), and would come home with force to their successors when the disaster of the Exile took place. To such words we may see reference in the repeated mention in these chapters (41. 22, 42.9,43. 18, 48. 3) of " former things " that had come to pass when the prophet of consolation was inspired to declare " new things " which were about to appear in the great Deliverance. Again, just as Isaiah saw the majestic and mysterious il§CAH Stl figure of Immanuel looming through the dimness of the Assyrian trouble, so the pro- phet of the Exile discerned, beyond the downfall of Babylon, the august figure of the " Servant of Jehovah," who by suffering and death was to bring in everlasting righteous- ness and peace. There has been endless speculation as to the precise meaning and primary reference of this expression. It is evident that in some places {e.g. 41.8,42.i9lf.) the whole of Israel is called the " servant," though a distinction between the mass and the better part of the nation may be dis- cernible. But this explanation will not suffice for other passages, notably 42.1-4, 49.1-6,50.4-9,52.13-53.12. Those who hold a collective sense suppose that the servant here is not even Israel at its best, but Israel in ideal, as it should be. Those who look for an individual reference explain the servant as some pious sufferer of former times, as, e.g., Job or Jeremiah, or some obscure and patient sufferer in the Exile. All are agreed that in the Lord Jesus Christ the descrip- tion of the servant finds a fulfilment in a manner that cannot be asserted of any other individual or of any class ; and there is nothing in the analogy of prophecy or in the words, as fairly interpreted, to forbid the conclusion that the prophet had a glimpse into the mystery hid from ages and manifested in Him. The suffer- ings of the Exile, the widening view of the mis- sion of Israel to the world, and the proved failure of Israel to realize that mission, would be the divine education, by which the prophetic mind was forced to the conviction that God's purpose could only be achieved by one endued with more than human attributes, and by the suffering of an innocent one for the guilty. The view that these prophecies are of Exilian date implies, what on independent grounds is most probable, that the book of Isaiah, as we now have it, was compiled after the Exile. And, if this were so,it is quite conceivable how a post- Exilian prophecy might be inserted even in the earlier part of the book : e.g. the prophecy on Babylon (13,14), placed at the head of the pro- phecies on the nations, is expressed in language that would not apply to the Babylon of Isaiah's time, but describes it as the mistress of the nations, the oppressor of Israel, doomed to im- mediate and utter destruction. So, again, there are chapters in the second part of the book (56-59,63-66) which seem to imply a Palestin- ian background, and the existence of the temple, and may belong to the period after the retiurn, although some would refer them to pre- Exilian times. Such a view of the mode of com- position of the book, however, does not affect the value of the prophecies, nor detract from the claim of Isaiah to be called the Evangelical Prophet. Driver, "Isaiah : his Life and Times" (in Men of the Bible series) ; Skinner, " Isaiah " (in Cambridge Bible) ; A. B. Davidson, "Isaiah" (in Temple Bible); Whitehouse, "Isaiah" (in Century Bible). For a recent defence of the Isaianic authorship of the second part, see Thirtle, Old Testament Problems (1907). [J.R.] Iscah', daughter of Haran, the brother of Abram, and sister of Milcah and of Lot (Gen. 11.29). I^Di Jewish tradition she is identified 372 ISdARIOt with Sarai, but Dillmann points out that this is contradicted by 20.12, and also that Sarah was only 10 years younger than Abraham (17. 17), and could not therefore have been the child of his younger brother. Prof. Sayce {Higher Crit. and the Monuments, p. 160) suggests that Iscah is a misreading of Milcah, as the same cuneiform character may be read indifferently mil and is. "If so, we have in her name direct evidence of the use of cuneiform books on the part of a Biblical writer." Iscapiot. [Judas Iscariot; Sychar.] Is'dael (iEsd.5.33) = GiDDEL, 2. Ishbah', a man of Judah, described as the " father of Eshtemoa " (iChr.4.17). Ishbak', a son of Abraham and Keturah (Gen. 25. 2 ; iChr.l.32). The name suggests the valley called Sabak, in the Dahna, a fertile and extensive tract in the Nejd, or highland of Arabia. Ish'bi-beno'b, one of the race of Philis- tine giants ; he attacked David in battle, but was slain by .Abishai (2Sam.21.i6,i7). [Nob.] Ishbo'sheth, the youngest of Saul's sons. His real name was Esh-baal, altered in accordance with the custom explained under Baal. He alone survived his father, who was slain at the battle of (iilboa, and rightly suc- ceeded to the throne ; but it was only over jiart of the nation, as David had already established himself as king in Hebron and \va= gradually winning over the other tribes. Ishbosheth reigned in Mahanaim for two years, his chief adviser being Abnor ; but he managed to offend the latter, who fortluvith made overtures to David. These resulted in .Abner's own mur- der, and Ishbosheth, being left with no capable minister, fell a victim to two assassins, Baanah and Kechab. Their motive for the murder is not stated, nor is the text quite sound in the description of the slaughter. [It is better to follow the I.X.X.. which states that they entered the house while the porteress was sleeping over her task of cleansing the wheat.] They cut off his head and brought it to David, hoping for a reward, and possibly their act was simply done with a view to ingratiating them- selves with the more powerful monarch. They were evidently imprepared for the retribution meted out to them by David, who ordered their immediate execution and had the head of Ishbosheth honourably buried in the grave of Abncr in Hebron (2Sam.4.i2). [b.f.s.] Ishr. — 1. Son of Appaim (iChr.2.31), of the house of Hezron ; a descendant of Judah, and father of Sheshan. — 2. Another descen- dant of Judah, with a son Zoheth (iChr.4.2o). —3. Ancestor of a warrior-family of Simeon- ites (4.42). — 4. One of the heads of the half- tribe of Manasseh E. of Jordan (6.24). Ishl' {my husband), found only in Ho. 2. 16 : "Thou shalt call Me Ishi ; and shalt call Me no more Baali." The two words mean the sanu3 thing [Baal] ; but the latter term liad become so much associated with the degrading worship of the ba'alim that the prophet, by the use of the other term, suggested a higher and purer c<)n(ej>tion of the relation of Israel to their national God. fj-R-] Ishiah' (R.V. Isshiah), the fifth and youngest son of Izraliiah ; one of the heads of issachar in the time of David (iChr.7.3). tSHMAEL Ishljah', a lay Israelite, of the Bene-Harim who put away his' foreign wife (Ezr.lO.31). Ishma', the name of a person or place in the genealogy of Judah (iChr.4.3). Ishmael (= God heareth). — 1. (Gen. 16. 11.) .Abraham's son, born of Hagar, whom Sarah gave to Abraham to wife, in view of her own barrenness. He became the cause of bad feel- ing between the wife and her bond-maid and, by mocking at Isaac on the occasion of the weaning of the latter, procured his mother's ex- pulsion from the house. With her fifteen-year- old son, whom she is represented as carrying, she wandered in the wilderness of Beer-sheba and would have died from thirst, had it not been for a miraculous interposition. They sub- sequently dwelt in the wilderness of Padan where he took a wife from Egypt. Hav'ing assisted at the funeral of his father, he himself died at the age of 137 (25.9.17). God had promised that he should become a great nation and Ishmael's descendants settled in the wilder- ness and became wandering .\rab tribes. Ish- maelites are several times mentioned in O.T., and some of the names bestowed on his twelve sons are to be found as tribe designations both in Scripture and in Ass\Tian inscriptions. Kedar is the most obvious example and, be- sides constant reference in the Bible, is found in the form of Qidru or Qadru in Assyrian, once with the meaning of -Arabia generally. Nebaioth is also found as Assyrian Nabaitu. It is doubtful whether these tribes had a lan- guage approaching more nearly to Heb. or to Arabic ; but the story of their descent from Ish- mael shows that the Israelites believed them- selves closely related to the nomadic tribes. Mohammed accepted Ishmael as a true pro- phet and reckoned his descent from him. Islani lore regards him as the firstborn and the real object of Abraham's intended sacrifice. Rab- binic writers, on the other hand, have preserved Conversations between Ishmael and Isaac in which the former claims birthright on the strength of his vohmtary circumcision at the age of 13, to which Isaac retorts his own willing- ness for comiiletc sacrifice. — 2- Son of .\zel, anddescendant of Saul, through Merib-baal ; = Mephibosheth (iChr.8.38,9.44). — 3. -A man of Judah, father of Zkbadiah, 9 (2Chr.l9.ii). — 4. Also a man of Judah, son of Jehohanan, one of the captains of hundretls who assisted Jchoi- ada in placing Joash on the throne (23. i). — 5. A priest of the sons of I'ashiir who jnit away his foreign wife (l->.r.l0.2 2). — 6. Son of Ne- thaniah, who slew Gedaliah, the governor appointed by Babylonia (2 K. 25. 23, 23 ; Je.4O.7- 41.15). He was of the seed royal, and his action seems to have been one of revenge for the overthrow of the house of David. He made no secret of his intention, but Gedaliah refused to believe the rumour and invited him to a uumI at Mizpah. The governor and all his attendants were slain by Islunael and his ten companions so secretly that nothing was known in the town for two days. At the end of that time he invited eighty devotees who were bringing offerings to the ruins of the temple to turn into the house of the governor, aiul he there slew all but ten who told him of hidden treasure. The bodies were tlirown into a well. He then descended on the town, carried away ISHMAELITE the daughters of king Zedekiah with their guard, and " all the people of the town," and ran to the Ammonites. He was pursued by Johanan ; two of his companions were slain and his prey was taken from him, but he and the remaining eight escaped. [b.f.s.] Ishmaelite. [Ishmael, i ; Ishmeelite.] Ishmaiah', son of Obadiah ; ruler of Zebu- lun in the time of David (iChr.27.i9). Ish'meelite (iChr.2.17), Ish'meelites (Gen. 37. 25, 27,28,39.1), descendants of Ish- mael, I (R.V. gives the form Ishmaelitels] throughout, as A.V. doesin Judg.8.24 ; Ps.83.6). Ishmepai', aBenjamitechief, of the family of Elpaal (iChr.8.i8 ; cf. 28). Ishod' (i Chr.7.18; R.V. Ishhod = man of renown), a man of Manasseh, and son of Ham- moleketh ( = the queen). Ishpan', a Benjamite chief, of the family of Shashak (iChr.8.22). Ishtob', named with Zobah, Rehob, and Maacah (2Sam.l0.6,8). It is probable that the real signification is " the men of Tob." Ishuah', second son of Asher (Gen. 46. 17). Ishuai'. [Jesui.] Ishui', second son of Saul, by his wife Ahi- noam (1Sam.i4.49 ! cf. 50). Isle (Heb. 'i), a very widely distributed word in many languages for " sea shore." In Job 22.30, A.V. " islands of the innocent " is, however, a mistake (see R.V. and marg.) for " the not innocent." In Is. 42. 15 it refers to dry shores or banks of a river ; other passages refer to the sea shore, not to islands (Gen. 10. 5 ; Is. 20. 6) : but some, perhaps, to an island proper (23.2). In some cases the rendering is doubtful (Is. 11.11; J e. 25. 22), and regions on the mainland of Asia Minor may be intended. See Caphtor, which, as an " island," has been wrongly supposed to be Crete. [c.r.c] Ismachiah', a Levite overseer of offerings during Hezekiah's reformation (2Chr.3i.13). Ismaer. — 1. Jth.2.23 = Ishmaei., son of Abraham. — 2. iEsd.9.22. [Ishmael, 5.] Ismaiah', a Gibeonite ; a leader of the war- riors who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.4). Ispah', a Benjamite chief, of the family of Beriah (iChr.8.i6). Israel. I. The name given to Jacob when he wrestled with the angel (Gen. 32.28, 29), and connected by the sacred writer with the verb used in the narrative " as a prince hast thou power" (R.V. " thou hast striven"). The verb occurs again only in Ho. 12. 4. — II. Applied collectively " children of ") to the tribes de- scended from Jacob (Gen. 46. 8 ; Ex.l.i, etc.). — III. The northern tribes, as distinguished from Judah, even before the schism (iSam.11.8 ; 2 Sam.20.i ; iK.12.i6), and thereafter the king- dom of the Ten Tribes. The name is found on the Moabite Stone and in an Assyrian inscrip- tion ; but in O.T. the name Hebrew is mostly used either by foreigners or by Israelites in addressing foreigners (Gen. 39. 14 ; Ex.1. 16). — IV. After the return from the Exile again used of the whole people (Ezr.6.i6 ; Ne.ll.3). [j.R.] Israel, King'dom of. (i) The prophet Ahijah of Shiloh, who was commissioned in the latter days of Solomon to announce the divi- sion of the kingdom, left one tribe (Judah) to the house of David, and 'assigned ten to Jero- boam (iK.ll. 31,35). These were probably ISRAiiL, KINGDOM OF 373 Joseph (=:Ephraim and Manasseh), Issachar, Zebulun, Asher, Naphtali, Benjamin, Dan, Simeon, Gad, and Reuben ; Levi being inten- tionally omitted. Eventually the greater part of Benjamin, and probably the whole of Simeon and Dan, were included in the kingdom of Judah. Of the conquests of David, Moab appears to have been attached to the kingdom of Israel (2K.3.4) ; so much uf Syria as re- mained subject to Solomon (see 1K.II.24) would probably be claimed by his successor in the N. kingdom ; and Ammon, though connected with Rehoboam as his mother's native land (2Chr.i2.13), and afterwards tribu- tary to Judah (27.5), was at one time allied (20.i), we know not how closely or how early, with Moab. The sea-coast between Accho and Japho remained in the possession of Israel. (2) The population of the kingdom is not expressly stated ; and any inference from the numbers of fighting men rests, it must not be forgotten, upon the numbers in the Heb. text, which are often corrupt. [Number.] Jeroboam brought into the field an army of 800,000 men (2Chr.l3.3). If this number is correct, the whole population would perhaps amount to at least three millions and a half. (3) Shechem was rebuilt as the first capital of the new kingdom (1K.I2.25 ; cf. Judg.9.45). Subsequently the " beautiful " (Can. 6.4) Tir- zah became the royal residence, if not the capital, of Jeroboam (iK.14.i7) and of his suc- cessors (15.33,16.8,17,23). Samaria was built in a commanding position by Omri (16. 24), and remained the capital of the kingdom until captured after a three years' siege by Shalman- eser, king of Assyria (2K.I8.9, 10). Jezreel was probably only a royal residence of some of the Israelitish kings. (4) Chronology. The chronological tables of Archbishop Ussher (d. 1656), as given in the margin of A.V., are incorrect, and have been rightly discarded by R.V. They were made by counting back- wards from the date of the fall of Samaria in 722 B.C., a method only likely to be accurate so long as the synchronisms between Israel and Judah were correct, and the two rival dynasties coincided. This was not the case, and the duration of the Israelitish kingdom was lengthenedby the unauthorizedinsertionof two interregna of 11 and 9 years respectively- The error was (in fact) one of excess, owing to two regencies, those of Jehoram (6 years) and Jotham (14 years) being counted as separate reigns, instead of being included in the reigns of Jehoshaphat and Uzziah. In the case of Jotham, this mistake was committed twice over ; and thus 68 years are reduced to roughly 35 years. The non -recognition of this error has had the effect of putting the history of Israel out of correspondence with the dates revealed by the monuments. In many cases we find Israelitish kings recorded by the monu- ments as having been present on occasions some 20 or 30 years after the date fixed by Ussher for their deaths — e.g. Jehu paid tribute to Shalmaneser II. in 841 b.c, while Ussher puts his death in 856 B.C. A subsidiary cause of inaccuracy has also been introduced by the Jewish habit of counting parts of years as entire years. The whole history has, in fact, been pushed back, and the foundation of the king- 374 ISRAEL, KINGDOM OF doni uf Israel must be brought duwii from 975 B.C. (A.y. marg.) to 930 u.c. The subjoined list will be found sufficiently accurate, and agree- able to the synchronisms recorded in the text, except where they have been altered, though onlv partially, in order to rectify the mistakes of the miscounted regencies. One fact must be mentioned, though it would be more pro- perly considered under the history of Judah — viz. that the whole of the acts recorded of Jotham are recorded also of his father Uzziah, a significant proof that his so-called reign was only a regency. IChronology.] ISRAEL, KINGDOM OF umphs, but deeper humiliation, awaited the kingdom under the dynasty of Jehu. Hazael, king of Damascus, reduced Jehoahaz to vas- salage, and triumphed for a time over both the disunited Heb. kingdoms. .Almost the first sign of their restored strength was a war be- tween them ; and Jehoash, grandson of Jehu, entered Jerusalem as the conqueror of Ama- ziah. Jehoash also turned the tide of war against the Syrians ; and Jeroboam II., the most powerful of all the kings of Israel, cap- tured Damascus, and recovered the whole ancient frontier from Hamath to the Dead Sea. A REVISED TABLE OF THE KINGS OF ISRAEL AND THEIR CONTEMPORARIES Judah. B.C. Israel. Synchronisms. Rehoboam (18) 930 Jeroboam {21). Abijah (2) 912 Asa (41) 910 909 Nadab (i). 908 Baasha (24). 884 Elah (i). 883 Zimri (6 days). Omri and Tibni (5). 878 Omri (6). 872 Ahab (21). 853. Battle of Qarqar. Jehoshaphat (24) 869 Jehoram (reg.) (6) 852 851 Ahaziah (i). 850 Jehoram {7). Jehoram (solus, 2) 845 Ahaziah (i) 843 Athaliah (5) . . 842 Jehu (26). 841. Tribute of Jehu Joash (39) 837 to Shalmaneser II. 816 Jehoahaz (16). c. 804. Submission of 800 Joash (15). Damascus. Amaziah (28) . . 798 785 Jeroboam II. (40). Uzziah {35) . . 770 745 Zechariah (i). 745. Accession of Tig- Jotham, regent, Shallum (i mth.) la th-pileser = Pul. 749-734 Menahem (8). 738. Tribute of Mena- 737 Pekahiah (i) . hem. 736 Pekah (8). Ahaz (9) 734 732. Fall of Damascus. 729 Hoshea (8). 722 Fall of Samaria. [M.S.] (5) The detailed history of the kingdom of Israel will be found under the names of its 19 kings. A summary view may be taken in four periods, (a) 930-883 B.C. Jeroboam had not sufficient force of character in himself to make a lasting impression on his people, and failed to found a dynasty. The army soon learned its power to dictate to the isolated monarch and disunited people. Baasha, in the midst of the army at (libbethon, slew the son and successor of Jeroboam; Zimri, a captain of chariots, slew the son and successor of Baasha ; Omri, the captain of the host, was chosen to punish Zimri ; and after a civil war of four years he prevailed over Tibni, the choice of half the jieople. (b) 883-8.^2 n.c. For some 40 years Israel was governed by the house of Omri. The princes of his house cultivated an alliance with Judah, which was cemented by the marriage of Jehoram and Athaliah. But the adoption of Baal-worshi]) led to a reaction in the nation, to the moral triumiih of the pro- phets ill th(! persons of I^lijah and lilisha, and eventually to the extinction of the house of Ahab. (c) 842-745 B.C. Unparalleled tri- This short-lived greatness ended with the last king of Jehu's line, {d) 745-722 b.c. Military violence, it would seem, broke the hereditary j succession after the obscure and probably con- I vulsed reign of Zechariah. An unsuccessful usurper, Shallum, is folU)wed by the cruel I Menahem, who, being unable to resist the first I attack of .•Vssyria under Pul, became the agent ! of that monarch ior the oppressive taxation of his subjects. The reign of his son Pekahiah was, after one year, ('ut short by a bold usur- I per, Pekah. .•Vbandoning the N. and trans- I Jt)rdanic regions to the encroaching power of .\ssyria uncler Tinlath-pileser, Pekah was very near subjugating Judah, with the help of ! Damascus, now allied to Israel. The irresolute Hoshea, the next and last usurper, became tributary to his invader, Shalmaneser, be- trayed the .\ssyrian to the rival monarchy of ligypt, and was punished by the loss of his liberty, and l)y the capture, after a three years' sicKe, of his strong capital, Samai"ia. Some remnants of the ten tribes yet remained in the I land after so many years of religious decline, ; moral debasement, national degradation, ISRAELITE anarchy, bloodshed, and deportation. Even these were carried to Assyria, never again, as a distinct people, to occupy their portion of that goodly land which their forefathers under Joshua won from the heathen. Is'paelite. [Israel ; Jew.] Issaehap' {Iw brings reward). — 1. Jacob's ninth son and Leah's fifth child, named from her exclamation at his birth (Gen.30.i8). He had four sons at the time of the descent into Egypt (46.13). In the blessing of Jacob (49.14) he is compared to a " bony " (E.V. strong) ass between two burdens, and is said to have been enslaved, with reference (no doubt) to oppression under Sisera (Judg.5.15). In the desert the four clans of Issachar, under Nethaniel, marched with Judah in the van, and the number of the tribe [Palestine] increased by nearly 10,000 men (Num.1. 8, 29,2.5,7.18,10.15,26.25). It furnished Igal as a spy (13.7), and Paltiel as a surveyor (34.26). It stood on Gerizim to respond to the blessings (Deut.27.i2) ; but its lot lay in the plains, where Canaanite chariot forces could act ; and it seems to have remained ITHRITE, THE 375 THE TRIBAL LOT OF ISSACHAR. as a nomadic population in tents, as noticed in the blessing of Moses (33. 18). It joined Barak in the revolt against Sisera, the battle occurring within the border of Issachar. It fur- nished also a judge [Tola; Judg.lO.i] and a king [Baasha ; 1K.I5.27] to Israel (c/. Num. 26.23-25 ; iChr.7.i-5). The foresight of the leaders of Issachar led them to furnish David with supplies at Hebron (iChr.12.32,40), and Omri of this tribe was one of his captains (27. 18); but in Hezekiah's time the tribe was blamed for eating the Passover while unclean (2Chr.3O.18). It is last mentioned in Ezk.48. 25-33; Rev. 7. 7. The Tribal Lot corresponded to Solomon's tenth district in part, and partly to the fifth (iK. 4.12,17). It lay E. of the hills of Manasseh (Jos.l7. 10,11), but some of its cities were occupied by the latter tribe. It included 16 cities in the plain of Esdraelon, and in the hills and Jordan Valley farther E. On N. its border coincided with the S. border of Zebu- LUN and Naphtali, from Jokneam to Shihon near Tabor, and E. of the latter to the Jordan, which formed the E. boundary, while on the W. Taanach and Remeth [Ramoth] were on the border, which ran, from the latter, E. by Rabbith to the Jordan. — 2. A temple-porter, apparently a Levite (iChr.26.5). [c.r.c] Isshiah'. — 1. (iChr.24.2i) = Jeshaiah, 2. — 2. A Levite of the family of Uzziel (24.25). Issue, Running-. (See Lev.22.4 ; Num.5. 2; 2Sara.3.29 ; but specially Lev. 15.) Pro- bably the phrase may be interpreted as a gonorrhoea or syphilis. In Lev. 15. 3 a dis- tinction is introduced apparently between these two, but probably merely means that cessation of the flux does not constitute ceremonial cleanness, but that the patient must bide the legal 7 days (ver. 13) and perform the prescribed purification and sacrifice (ver. 14). It must be remembered that it was only during the last century that these two diseases were clearly differentiated ; yet in the text cited there is an apparent allusion to their distinctive symp- toms, and the whole passage is very suggestive of the elaborate precautions against infection enjoined by the Mosaic law. Assuming it were impossible to distinguish between the two diseases, all the precautions enjoined are equally necessary to-day. Ver. 8 is very in- teresting, as there is no doubt that syphilis can be communicated by the saliva. [f.j.] Istalcu'pus. In iEsd.8.40, " son of Istal- curus " is substituted for " and Zabbud " (marg. Zaccur) of the parallel list in Ezr.8.14. Isuah', second son of Asher (iChr.7.30). Isui'. [Jesui.] Italian Band (Ac.lO.i). [Army.] Italy. This word is used in N.T. in the usual sense of the period — i.e. in its true geographical sense, as denoting the whole natural peninsula between the Alps and the straits of Messina (Ac.lO. 1,18-2 ; Heb. 13-24). Ithai' (1Chr.ll.31) = Ittai, 2. Ithamap', youngest son of Aaron (Ex.6. 23). After the deaths of Nadab and Abihu ( Lev. lO.i), Eleazar and Ithamar were appointed to succeed them in the priestly office (Ex.28. 1,40,43 ; Num. 3. 3, 4 ; iChr.24.2). In the dis- tribution of services belonging to the taber- nacle, and its transport on the march of the Israelites, the Gershonites and the Merarites were placed under Ithamar (Ex. 38. 21 ; Num. 4.21-33). The high-priesthood passed into the family of Ithamar in the person of Eli, but for what reason we are not informed. Ith'iel. — 1. A Benjamite, ancestor of Sallu (Ne-ll.7). — 2. One of two persons to whom Agur delivered his discourse (Pr.SO.i). [Ucal.] Ithmah', a Moabite, one of the heroes of David's guard (1Chr.ll.46 only). Ithnan', one of the towns in the extreme S. of Judah (Jos. 15. 23). No trace of its exist- ence has yet been discovered. Ithpa', an Israelite (2Sam.i7.25) or Ish- maeUte (iChr.2.i7), the father of Amasa by .Abigail, David's sister. [J ether, 3.] Ithpan'. — 1. Son of Dishon, a Horite (Gen. 36.26; iChr.l.41). — 2. A descendant of Asher (iChr.7.37). [Jether, 6.] Ithpeam', son of David by Eglah, the sixth bom in Hebron (2Sam.3.5 ; iChr.3.3). Ith'pite, The, the designation of two of the members of David's guard, Ira and Gareb (2Sam.23.38; 1Chr.ll.40) ; possibly = J airite [Ira], in which case they may have come from Jattir, in the mountains of Judah. 376 ITTAH-KAZIN Ittah'-kazin', one of the boundary-marks of Zebulun (Jos.i9.13 ; R.V. Eth Kazin); be- tween Gath-hepher and Rimmon. [c.r.c] Ittai'. — 1. " Ittai the Gittite," i.e. native of Gath, a warrior in the army of king David mentioned during the revolution of Absalom. On the morning of David's flight he was among, and apparently commanding, the 600 heroes, who had formed David's band during his wanderings in Judah, and had been with him at Gath (aSam.lS.iS.ig ; cf. iSam.23. 13,27.2, 30.9,10). The king besought him not to attach himself to a doubtful cause, but to return " with his brethren," and abide with " the king," i.e. either, sarcastically, Absalom, or his own king Achish (2Sam. 15.19,20). But Ittai is firm ; he is the king's slave, and wher- ever his master goes he will go. When the army was numbered and organized by David at Mahanaim, Ittai again appears, now in command of a third part of the force (2Sam. 18.2,5,12). — 2. Son of Ribai, from Gibeah of Benjamin ; a hero of David's guard (28.29). Itupae'a, a small province on the N. border of Palestine, lying along the S. base of mount Hermon, only mentioned in Lu.3.i. Ituraea, with the adjoining provinces, fell into the hands of a chief called Zenodorus ; but about 20 B.C. they were taken from him by the Roman emperor, and given to Herod the Great, who bequeathed them to his son Philip. Pliny places Ituraea N. of Bashan and near Damas- cus (v. 23) ; apparently the Jedtlr district [Geshur] N. of Argob. It is a table-land with an undulating stirface, and has little conical and cup-shaped hills at intervals. The surface of the ground is covered with jagged rocks. The rock is all basalt, and the forma- tion similar to that of the Lejah. [Argob.] The Jedilr contains 38 villages, 10 of which are now entirely desolate, and all the rest contain only a few families of poor peasants, living in wretched hovels amid heaps of ruins. I vah' or Ava'. The first form is mentioned twice (2K. 18. 34,19. 13 ; cf. Is.37.13) with Hena and Sepharvaim, and the second once (2K.17. 24) with Babylon and Cuthah. Its identifica- tion with the modern Hit on the Euphrates, between 'Anah and Ramadieh, seems improb- able. It is also thought to be Emma, the modern 'Initn, between Antioch and Aleppo ; but this would presuppose the unusual change between v ( = ww) and mm. Perhaps two dif- ferent places. [t.g.p.] Ivopy (Heb. shen, in all passages except I K. 10.22 and 2Chr.9.2i, where shen-habbtm is so rendered). The word shen literally signifies a tooth of any animal, but here denotes the tusks of elephants, this being rendered certain by the passage from iK., where habbim is the equivalent of hab, the Tamil name of the ele- phant. The Assyrians appear to have carried on a traffic in ivory with India, and called the elephant hahba. According to one render- ing of the passage, their artists supplied the Tvrians with carvings in ivorv from the isles of Chittim (Ezk.27.6): and ' on tlic Black Obelisk in the British Museum an elephant is represented (c. 840 n.c). Among the mer- chandise of Babylon, enumerated in Rev. 18. 12, are included " all manner vessels of ivory." The ivory throne of Solomon was overlaid with JAARE-OREGIM gold (1K.IO.18; 2Chr.9.i7). This ivory was supplied either by the caravans of Dedan (Is. 21.13; Ezk.27.15), or was brought, with apes and peacocks, by the navy of Tharshish (iK.lO. 22). [Apes.] The Egyptians at an early period made use in decoration of ivory, which was principally brought from Ethiopia (Herod, iii. 114). Egyptian merchants traded for ivory and onyx stones to Barygaza, the port to which was carried the commerce of W. India from Ozene {Peripl. c. 49). In the early ages of Greece ivory was frequently employed for purposes of ornament. The " ivory house " of Ahab (iK.22.39) was probably a shrine with the walls panelled with ivory, like the palace of Menelaus described by Homer (Odys. iv. 73). Beds inlaid or veneered with ivory were in use among the Hebrews (Am. 6. 4), as among the Egyptians. It is difficult to deter- mine whether the " tower of ivory " of Can. 7.4 is a figure of speech, or whether it is based on an original, such as the ivory throne of Solomon above mentioned (cf. Rev. 20. 11). By the Phoenicians ivory was employed to ornament the boxwood rowing benches (or " hatches," according to some) of their galleys (Ezk.27.6). Ivory is found, by excavation in ruins, in Assyria, Phoenicia [Phenice], and Palestine, and is represented as brought to E:;ypt by Phoenicians. [Elephant ; Tar- SHISH.] Ivy, the common Hedera helix. 2Mac.6.7 refers to the familiar classical custom, " to go in the procession of Bacchus with garlands of ivy " — " in solemnities and high feasts of which god, the people of Thracia even at this day are furnished from this tree, and doe with Ivie set out and garnish the heads of their launces, pikes, and javelins, their mourrons alsri and targuets " (Pliny). [h.c.h.] Izehap', Izeharites (Num.3.19,27) = IzHAR, Izharites, as R.V. Izhap', son of Kohath, grandson of Levi, uncle of Aaron and Moses, and father of Korah (Ex. 6.18,21 ; Num.16. 1 ; iChr.6.2,18), and head of the family of the Izhapites, or Izeharites (Num. 3. 27 ; iChr.24. 22, 26.23,29). Izpahiah', a man of Issachar, of the family of Uzzi (iChr.7.3)- Iz'pahite, The, the designation of Sham- huth (iChr.27.8), probably for Zerahite — that is, of Zerah. Izpl', a Levite leader of the fourth course or ward in the service of the house of God (iChr. 25. 11). In ver. 3 he is called Zeri. Jaakan'. [.Aran.] Jaakobah', a Simeonite chief (iChr.4.36). Jaala' (Ne.7.58), Jaalah (Ezr.2.56). Bene- Jaala were among the descendants of Solomon's slaves who returned from Babylon with Zcrubbabel. Jaalam', a son of Esau by Aholihamah (Gen.36.5,14,18 ; iChr.1.35), and an Edomite phvlarch (A.V. duke). Jaanal', a Gadite chief dwelling in Bashaa (iChr.5.12). Jaape'-opeg-lm'. [Elhanan.] JAASAU Jaasau', one of the Bene-Bani who put away his foreign wife (Ezr.lO.37). Jaasiel', the Benjamite chief in David's reign, and son of Abner (iChr.27.2i). Jaazaniah'. — 1. (2K.25.23) = Jezaniah. — 2. Son of Shaphan (Ezk.8.11). Possibly identical with — 3. Son of Azur ; one of the princes of the people against whom Ezekiel was directed to prophesy (Ezk.ll.i).^-4. A Rechabite, son of Jeremiah, whose fidelity to the precepts of Jonadab, the son of Rechab, was tested by the prophet Jeremiah (Je.35.3). Jaazep' (Num.21. 32, 32.35), or Jazep, a place on the border of Gilead (Num. 32. 1,3 ; 1Chr.26.31) and of Gad (Jos.i3.25), given to the Levites (21. 39 ; iChr.6.8i). Itwas by the " river of Gad " (2Sam.24.5), and had a "sea" or "lake" (Is.16.8,9; Je.48.32), not far from Sibmah, norfromthelandof AMMON(iMac.5.8). In the Onomasticon (4th cent, a.d.) it is placed JABNEEL 377 WATERFALL AT NA'AUR (? RIVER OF GAD). W.D.A. (From an original sketch by Col. Conder.) at Sir, 12 miles W. of Rabbath-ammon ; but this seems too far N., as it was apparently near Heshbon. The most likely site is a ruin on a high hill 4 miles N. of Hesbdn, which is called Sd'aiir. A mile to its N., at 'Ain Na'aur {the spring of irrigation), there is a fine perennial stream, forming a large pool, and falling over a precipice 50 ft. high, as it descends a steep gorge to the plain of Shittim, falling into the Jordan finally. This may represent the "river of Gad." [c.R.c] Jaaziah', a descendant of Merari the Levite (iChr.24.26,27). Jaaziel', a Levite musician of the second order appointed by David for the service before the ark (iChr.15.i8). Jabal', son of Lamech and Adah (Gen.4.2o) and brother of Jubal. He is described as the father of such as dwell in tents and have cattle. Jabbok' (perhaps " gurgling," but con- nected with "wrestling"; Gen. 32. 22, 24), a torrent (nahal. ver. 23) in Gilead, which was the border of the Ammonites (Num. 21. 24 ; Deut.2.37,3.16 ; Jos.12.2 ; Judg.ll.13,22). It is now the stream of Wddy Zerqa, rising at a spring by Rabbath-ammon, and flowing N., thus separating the land of Ammon from that of Gad. It then turns W. and flows into the Jordan, dividing Gilead into two regions N. and S. Jacob appears to have retreated N. across it on the approach of Esau. [Succoth ; Mahanai.m.] The torrent dries up in autumn, but in spring is full of water, and is bordered by oleanders. [c.R.c] Jabesh'. — 1. Father of Shallum, the 15th king of Israel (2K. 15. 10,13, 14). — 2. The short form of Jabesh-gilead (iSam.ll.iff.,31.i2, 13 ; 1Chr.lO.12). Jabesh'-g'ilead', or Jabesh in the terri- tory of Gilead (Judg.i2.8-14). Being attacked by Nahash the Ammonite, Saul had an oppor- tunity of displaying his prowess in its defence (i Sam.ll.1-15). The site of thecity is not de- fined in O.T., but Eusebius places it beyond Jordan, 6 miles from Pella on the mountain- road to Gerasa : where its name is probably pre- served in the Wddy Ydbis, which, flowing from the E., enters the Jordan below Beth-shan. Jabez'. — 1. Apparently a place at which the Kenite families of the scribes resided (iChr.2. 55). — 2. The name occurs also (4.9,10) in the genealogy of Judah, again connected with Bethlehem (ver. 4), where we read that Jabez was " more honourable than his brethren," though who they were is not ascertainable. Jabin' (intelligent). — 1. (Jos.ll.) King of Hazor. He commanded the Northern Con- federacy with forces like the samd for multi- tude. Joshua fell on them by Merom, houghed the horses, and burnt the chariots. The fugitives fled E. and W. to Mizpeh and Zidon, leaving Hazor to be burnt with fire. — 2. The " king of Canaan that reigned in Hazor " (Judg.4.2,23). Some critics confuse him with i, but he had nothing to do with Joshua, did not command troops, was not defeated at Merom, and his capital was not biurnt. From Jos.ll. 13,17.12,13,18.3, Judg.l. 27,30-33 it is evident that the northern power was broken, but not destroyed. [Deborah; Sisera.] [h.m.s.] Jabneer ( = God built). — 1. A town on the N. border of Judah, near the sea (Jos. 15. 11), noticed with Gath and Ashdod (2Chr. 26.6) as Jabneh, the walls of which king Uzziah of Judah broke down. It was famous later as the seaport called Jamnia, which the Greeks held against the Hasmonaeans as late as 135 b.c. (iMac.4.15,5.58,15.40; 2Mac. 12.8,9,40). It was the seat of the Sanhedrin from 70 to 135 A.D., and celebrated for its Rabbis. It is now the village Yebna, on a low 378 JABNEH hill 13 miles S. of Joppa, and immediately S. of the Xahr Riibin (the lower part of the valley of Sorek). It has au artificial port (Minet Rubin) about 4 miles to N.W. The village includes a church converted into a mosque. — 2. A town of Naphtali, said to have been called later Kaphar Yama (Tal. Jer. Megilla, i. i), near Jordan {Jos.i9.33). It is now the village Yemma, on a hill slope 7 miles S. of Tiberias. [c.r.c] Jabneh' (2Chr.26.6). [Jabneel, i.] Jachan', one of seven Gadite chief men (iChr.5.13). Jachin'. — 1. Fourth son of Simeon (Gen. 46.10 ; Ex. 6. 15) ; founder of the family of the Jachinites (Num. 26. 12). — 2. Head of the 2ist course of priests in the time of David (iChr.9.10,24.17). Possibly it is the course of this priest which is referred to in Ne.ll.io. Jachin' (he shall establish), one of two pillars set up "in the porch" (1K.7.21) or " before " the temple (2Chr.3.i7) of Solomon. Jacinth, a precious stone, forming one of the foundations of the walls of the new Jeru- salem (Rev. 21. 20), applied to a breastplate in Rev.9.17, and substituted in R.V. for Ligure in Ex. 28. 19 and 39.12. The name jacinth or hyacinth is now applied to a reddish variety of zircon (a silicate of zirconia), good examples of which, when cut, make beautiful gems, and are sometimes of other colours. But the hyacinth of Phny (xxxvii. 40) is apparently a different stone, for he speaks of it as less violet in colour than the amethyst. King {Precioits Stones, p. 194) maintains that Pliny referred to the sapphire (also included as one variety of his adamas) ; and as the Historia Naturalis was published c. 77 a.d., the jacinth of the Apo- calypse may also be the sapphire. [t.g.b.] Jacob. The name is derived in Scripture from ''dqcbh, the word for a heel, and is ex- plained by the narrative of his birth, which relates that he caught the heel of Esau as if in an early desire to rob him of his birthright. The corresponding verb is found in the sense of tripping up, deceiving, but the etymology of the Heb. text is, as usual, founded upon simi- larity of sound, rather than on modern prin- ciples. Attempts are now made to refer the name to an original Jacob-El, and some sup- port may be given to this by the discovery of the name Y'aqub-ilu in an Assyrian inscription which appears to belong to the third mil- lennium before Christ. J acob was the younger son of Isaac and Rcbekah. He bought Esau's birthright for a plate of pottage and com- pleted the usurpation by obtaining his father's blessing by means of a subterfuge suggested by his mother. To avoid his brother's anger, he was obliged to flee to her kindred in Padan- aram, though another motive seems to have been his desire to obtain a wife among his relatives. As he passed through Bethel on his journey, the first theophany occurred and he consecrated the place as a sanctuary. The de- tails of his life with I.aban, whom he served for 21 years, are very familiar. Vexed with the ! constant cunning of his uncle, he at length I steals away with his tw<» wives and their maids together with his children and possessions. Overtaken by I.aban, he comes to an agree- ment with him and is allowed to proceed JADDHA unmolested. Being warned (jf his brother's approach, he divides his party up into small sections, and himself brings up the rear. On crossing the Jabbok, he spends the night wrestling with an angel (the second theo- phany) and as a sign of his persevering struggle his name was changed to Israel. His meeting with Esau was quite peaceable and he settled down in Shechem until a revengeful attack upon the men of the place, made by his sons on account of the violation of their sister Dinah, caused him to renaove to Bethel. Subsequently we meet with him at Hebron assisting with Esau in the last rites for their father. The next period of his life is passed in the " land of his fathers " and becomes practically identified with the narrative of Joseph's career. He passed into Egypt for his last few years, where he blessed all his sons before his death at the age of 146. His body was embalmed and carried with great pomp to Canaan, where it was buried in the tomb of Machpelah. There are constant references to Jacob in N.T. His life is of great importance, as it was from him, and not from Abraham or Isaac, that the children of Israel derived their name, and the twelve sons of whom he became the father by his twowives and two concubineswcre thetraditional origin of the tribes of the Hebrews. In addition to this, his nature and temperament seem, in many ways, to reflect the characteristics of his nation. Like the other patriarchs, his life was a pastoral one and he shared in their authority and functions. He stands betw^een Abraham on the one hand, who moves through the narra- tive rather as a demi-god, and Joseph on the other, who possesses the greatest distinctness of human personality. Theologically he is of great interest as a type of the improvement which the human character is capable of undergoing. While there may be a fair amount of tradition as to tribal origins and relations enshrined in the story, there does not seem anv real reason to doubt the existence of Jacob. In fact, the very imperfections of his character and the naturalness and pathos of the narrative are great evidences of an underlying historicity. The blessing of Jacob is a long poem which clearly describes the position and prospects of the tribes when they were fully established. Any diflSculties as to its attribution to Jacob will largely depend upon individual prepossessions as to prophecy and as to ("rod's special guidance of the chosen people for the instruction of mankind. The struggle of Jacob by the ford Jabbok is of special inter- est, partly as having given rise to an Israelite custom, partly as being the traditional origin of the religious name of the people and also because of the mysterious nature of the whole incident. [b.f.s.] Jacob's Well. [Shechem.] Jacu'bus. [Akkud, 4.] Jada', son of Onam and father of Jethcr and Jonathan, in the genealogy of the sons of Jerahmeel by his wife Atarah (rChr.2.2S,32). Jadau', one of the Bene-Nebo who had taken a foreign wife (E,zr.l0.43). Jaddu a. — 1. One of those who sealed the covenant (Nc.lO.21).— 2. St)n, and suc- cessor in the high-priesthood, of Jonathan or JADON Johauan. He is the last high-priest men- tioned in O.T., and his is, probably, altogether the latest name in the canon (Ne. 12. 11,22). From ver. 22 we gather that he was priest in the reign of the last Persian king Darius, and that he was still high-priest after the Persian dynasty was overthrown, i.e. in the reign of Alexander the Great (c/. Josephus, 11 Ant. vii. 2, viii. 4, 5, 7). Jadon', the Meronothite, who assisted in repairing the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.3.7). Jael' {wild goat; Judg.4,5) was the wife of Heber the Kenite, who had deserted his people in Arad, was allied with Jabin, and dwelt at Zaanaim, near Barak's home Kedesh. Jael was loyal to her race and to Israel, and had apparently aided Shamgar in the S. (5.6). The defeated Sisera sought her tent (among Semites the tent is the woman's, not her husband's, according to W. R. Smith ; see Kinship and Marriage, p. 202). She asked him in, gave him milk, killed him, and showed his corpse to Barak. To many the accounts of the murder seem contradictory. W. R. Smith {O.T. in Jewish Ch. p. 132) translates nail as handle, and treats the first two lines of 5.26 as parallel. This, he thinks, the prose narrator misunderstood, and so added details to explain Jael's hammering a nail into Sisera's forehead. Hence, he argues, Jael did not murder a sleep- ing man, but by a daring stratagem delivered a courageous blow. Against this theory is the fact that the two accounts seem independent (Moore). The poem is earlier, the prose narra- tive more precise. The accounts are not incon- sistent if we regard ver. 27 as poetr}^ emphasiz- ing the fall of a great man before a woman. In a moral estimate we must remember there could have been no peace while Sisera lived. Jael had to violate hospitality or betray the cause of Israel. She had to lie to Sisera or to his pursuers. She was disinterested, and took the risk herself. We cannot praise her as Debo- rah did, but then we have not, like Deborah, lived under Sisera's oppression. [h.m.s.] Jagrup', a town of Judah, one of those farthest S., on the Edom frontier (Jos. 15. 21). Jah, perhaps an abbreviation of Jhvh in Hallelujah {praise Jhvh) ; but in " Jah Jhvh is the rock of ages " and " In Jah Jhvh is my strength and song" (Is.12.2,26.4 ; cf. Ex.15. 2) the name appears to have some special force. It is poetical, except in Ex.17. 16 : " There is a hand upon the throne of Jah, war for Jhvh with Amalek from generation to generation." The LXX., taking kes yd, "the throne of Jah," as a single word (from root kdsd, "cover"), has "with secret hand the Lord doth war with Amalek." Jah occurs 23 times in Hallelujah, frequently in proper names, and 49 times as a separate word in O.T., 6 times in Ps.118. [Jehovah. 1 [c.h.w.] Ja'hath. — 1. A Gershonite Levite, son of Libni and ancestor of Asaph (iChr.6.20,43). — 2. Head of a later Gershonite family, being the eldest son of Shimei, son of Laadan (iChr. 23.10,11). — 3. Son of Reaiah ; a descendant of Judah (iChr.4.2). — 4. A Levite, son of Shelomoth (iChr.24.22). — 5. A Merarite Le- vite ; one of the overseers of the temple-repairs in the reign of Josiah (2Chr.34.12). Ja'haz, Num.21. 23, Deut.2.32, Judg.ll. JAIRXJS 379 20, Is.15.4, Je.48.34 ; Ja'haza, Jos.l3.i8 ; Ja'hazah, Jos. 21. 36 (R.V. Jahaz in all the preceding), Je.48.2i (R.V. Jahzah, see iChr. 6.78), a town of Moab, where Sihon the Amorite king was defeated by Israel. The Onomasticon places it between Medeba and Dibon. It was apparently near Baal-meon (Jos.13.i8). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Jahaziah', son of Tikvah, and apparently a priest, who, with Jonathan, 7, judged those who had made mixed marriages (Ezr.lO.15). Jahazier. — 1. One of the Benjamite archers who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.l2. 4). — 2. A priestly trumpeter in the reign of David (iChr.16.6).— 3. A Kohathite Levite, third son of Hebron (iChr.23. 19,24.23). — 4. Son of Zechariah, a Levite of the Bene-Asaph, who prophesied the deliverance of Jehosha- phat by the internal dissensions of the army advancing against him (2Chr.2O.14). — 5. The "son of Jahaziel" ; probably Shechaniah, 3, a preceding name having slipped out of the text {cf. iEsd.8.32) ; he led his family back from Babylon with Ezra (Ezr.8.5). Jahdai', a man who appears to be thrust abruptly into the genealogy of Caleb, as the father of six sons (iChr.2.47). Jahdiel', a chieftain of Manasseh on E. of Jordan (iChr.5.24). Jahdo', a Gadite (iChr.5.14), son of Buz and father of Jeshishai. Jahleel', the third of the three sons of Zebulun (Gen. 46. 14 ; Num. 26. 26), founder of the family of the Jahleelites. Jahmai', a man of Issachar, one of the heads of the house of Tola (iChr.7.2). Jahzah' (iChr.6.78). [Jahaz.] Jahzeer, the first of the four sons of Naph- tali (Gen. 46. 24), founder of the family of the Jahzeelites (Num.26.48). Jahzepah', a priest of the house of Immer (iChr.9.i2). Jahziel' (iChr.7.13) = Jahzeel. Jaip' {Jah enlightens). — 1. A descendant of Judah and Manasseh (iChr.2.23) who con- quered Argob (Deut.3.14) and possessed 23 villages in Gilead — Havoth-jair (Num. 32.41). — 2. The Gileadite judge (Judg.lO.3-5) who had 30 cities and 30 sons who rode on asses. He was buried at Carnon. Critics regard i and 2 as identical and Moore argues that Gilead was conquered at a late date by western tribes. Yet Moore himself reckons Num. 32. 41 to belong to the oldest strata in the Pentateuch, and Jair there fits into the narrative. [Machir.] Judg. 10.3-5 is an isolated note that may well be out of place. It is not inconceivable, however, that a man and his grandson should have the same name and possess the same property. Note, T was a warrior, 2 was only remarkable for wealth and ostentation. — 3. A Benjamite, son of Kish and father of Mordecai (Esth.2.5). —4. Father of Elhanan, i, one of David's heroes (iChr.20.5). [h.m.s.] Ja'ipite, The. Ira the Jairite was a " priest," R.V. (" chief ruler," A.V.), to David (2Sam.2O.26). [Ithrite.] Jai'pus. — 1. A rulter of a synagogue, pro- bably at Capernaum, or some town near the W. shore of the sea of Galilee, whose daughter Jesus raised (Mt.9.i8 ; Mk.5.22 ; Lu.8.41). — 2. (Est. Apocll.2.) [Jair, 3.] 380 JAKAN Ja'kan. [Akan.] Ja'keh. The A.V. of Pr.SO.i represents this as the proper name of the father of Agur, whose sayings are collected in Pr.30, and such is the natural interpretation. But beyond this we have no clue to the existence of either Agur or Jakeh. R.V. marg. reads " Jakeh, of Massa." For a full discussion sec DeUtzsch, Comtn. [Proverbs.] Jakim'. — 1. Head of the 12th course of priests in the reign of David (iChr.24.i2). — 2. A Benjamite, of the Bene-Shiinhi (iChr.8.19). Jalon', a son of Ezra, 2, in the genealogy of Judah (iChr.4.17). Jambres. [Jannes and Jambres.] Jam'bpi. Soon after the death of Judas (i6t B.C.) " the children of Jarabri " attacked a Hasmonaean detachment (iMac.9. 36-42). The name Jambri is elsewhere unknown, and the LXX. reading is here uncertain. If the true form is Ambri, the Amorites may be meant. [c.d.] James ('16.ku^os, Lat. Jacobus ; the Heb. Jacob, with the Gk. termination os, which is not, however, added to the patriarch's name). The name has, in various languages, under- gone more changes than almost any other. In the East St. James is still St. Jacob. In English the separation between the two names has now become complete, but the kalendars to 1662 have " St. Philip and St. Jacob." — 1. St. James, son of Zebedce and Sa- lome, elder brother of St. John. It is probable that his acquaintance with our Lord began with the incident Jn.l. 35-42; from which we infer that (after being a disciple of the Baptist) he was brought to our Lord by his younger brother, who (according to his custom) docs not name him. At liis first call (Mk. 1.19,20) the brothers were in the ship mending their nets, when they left their father and " went after Him." At a second and more definite call (Lu.5.i-ii) "they forsook all and followed Him." Thirdly, with the eleven, he was chosen to be an apostle (Mt.10.2 ; Mk.3.17 ; Lu.6.14 ; Ac.1.13). In all four lists St. James comes second or third ; he was one of the most honoured three, beinc; present at the raising of the daughter of J aims, the Transfiguration, and the Agony. Our Lord gave the brothers the name Boanerges (sons of thunder). The fiery spirit which evoked this description was shown in the wish to call fire from heaven on the Samaritans (Lu.9.54). Westcott and others suppose (from a comparison of the names of the holy women present at the Crucifixion) that Salome was the Virgin's sister. This might accoimt for her ambitious request for her sons (Mt.20.20 ; Mk.10.35). The fact that our Lord neither showed anger nor uttered any rebuke, as He did in the case of other ambitious requests, shows that He was looking forward to the future with the know- ledge that the two would fulfil their seemingly boastful words. About 14 years after this (44 A.D.) St. James was killed with the sword by Agrippa I., the most dangerous enemy of the Church in its first years (.\c.l2.2). AlthouRh this is the only death of an apostle recorded in N.T., St. Luke barely mentions it,' because it had no immediate effect on the history of the Church, as the death of St. Stephen had. It is JAMES reported that the accuser of St. James asked forgiveness of him, and was executed with him. (For the supposed journey of this apostle to Spain, cl. Diet, of Christian Antiquities, and Mrs. Jameson's Sacred and Legendary Art, vol. i. pp. 231 ff.) — 2. James (the son) of Alphaeus, is so called in all four lists of the Twelve and in all four heads the third group. He is probably to be identified with James the little, or " the less," and was the son of Mary, and possibly brotherofSt. Matthew, who is also called (son) of .Alphaeus (Mk.2.14), probably, however, a different person. The question whether he is to be identified with " the Lord's brother " is admittedly the hardest question about the Twelve, vide infra. As a rule, the Western Church has so identified him, but not the Eastern. The Byzantine and some other Eastern kalendars distinguish between the two ; but the gospel for SS. Philip and James' Day in the English Prayer-Book shows that the compilers (mistakenly, as we think) identified them. We know nothing further of this St. James. Untrustworthy tra- ditions relate that he was crucified in Persia. — 3. " James, the Lord's brother." It is ne- cessary first to consider who the Lord's bre- thren were. There are three possible theories ; and we use the names given to them by Bp. Lightfoot in his classic note on " The Brethren of the Lord " {Ep. to Galatians, pp. 247-282) : (a) The Epiphanian view that they were the sons of Joseph by an earlier marriage. (/3) The Hclvidian, that they were sons of Joseph and the Virgin. (7) The Hieronymian theory, in- vented by Jerome about 383 a.d., that the brethren were not brothers, but cousins, being sons of the Virgin's sister, Mary, wife of Clopas. With regard to (/i) it must be admitted that those wliose sense of reverence is not disturbed by it will not care to pursue the question further. There are, however, two objections : (i) It is against tradition, and has never been held by any one of importance in the Church except Tertullian, a writer who was capable of entertaining many strange opinions, (ii) The words from the cross, " Woman, behold thy son " (Jn.l9.26),areinconceivableif at the time the Virgin had four sons and three daughters, capable of caring for her, from whose society she was taken and given to another by Him Who laid such stress on natural affection. It is no argument that the brethren at the time did not believe that our Lord was the Messiah, for in a few days they all did believe in Him, and to St. James a special appearance was granted, and he was chosen to be the first bishop of Jerusalem. Surely he would have reverenced his mother more than any one had he known she was the mother of his Lord. (7). the //(Vrony- »« (an view, demands fuller consideration. It is clever — the invention of a young man who in maturer years spoke of it slightingly, if he did nf)t discard it. The arguments for Jerome's theory are specious: (i) The second James in the Twelve, the son of Alphaeus, is iden- tified with James, the Lord's brother, because St. Paul WTote ((ial.t.19), " other of the apos- tles saw I none save James, the Lord's brother." But St. Paul's words do not prove that St. James was one of the Twelve, though he had a right to the title apostle, as he was vouchsafed JAMES a special appearance during the 40 days (iCor. 15.7), when he was sent forth. The word apostle is used for others besides the Twelve — e.g. Paul, Barnabas, Andronicus, and Junias. (ii) James and Joseph were names of our Lord's brothers ; they were also sons of Mary who was present at the Crucifixion (Mt.27. 56 ; Mk.i5.40), and who is (iii) (Jn.i9.25) stated to be the Virgin's sister and the wife of Clopas — therefore, the title brothers must be used in the wider sense of cousins. But the names were too common to found an argument upon, without other evidence ; and the words of St. J ohn may equally well refer to four women (the Peshitta inserts "and " after " sister "), and do not sufiiciently warrant the improbable assumption that two sisters would have the same name " Mary." Moreover, it is quite un- precedented that in a description of relationship various writers should persistently and ex- clusively use the term " brother " of those who were cousins. Further, it is clearly stated "neither did His brethren believe in Him" (Jn. 7.5). This could not have been said of the son of Alphaeus, for he and his brother St. Jude were actually amongst the Twelve, from whom (in fact) the brethren are excluded (Ac.l.14), and from whom St. Jude seems to exclude himself (17). The appearance to St. James changed the attitude of the brethren towards our Lord. We, therefore, do not believe that the brethren were sons of Joseph and the Virgin because of the words from the cross, and because (if they had possessed that remarkable relationship) some- thing more than vague hints would have been given. (The passage Mt.l.25 no more means that the Blessed Virgin Mary had other children, than 1Sam.i5.35 means that Samuel came to Saul on the day of his death. The word firstborn must be omitted from this verse, as in R.V. In Lu.2.7 it is simply the legal designa- tion of the Child. ) Nor do we believe that they were sons of the Virgin's sister and Clopas, be- cause they are never associated with them, but with the names of Joseph and Mary (Mt.i3.55). They were never with their supposed mother. No other theory remains but that they were sons of Joseph by an earlier marriage. No one was better suited than St. James to preside over the church at Jerusalem. His tone of thought and his education (which had not been imbued with the Lord's teaching) made him acceptable to the Jews, who reverenced his zeal for their religion (c/. Ac.l5.2i). The whole speech has a J udaic tone, even in the Gentile editor's report. At an unknown date he was made bishop of Jerusalem. Probably our Lord Himself had designated him for that office — a last kindness to His own people. The Twelve were evidently precluded from this office by their mission into all the world. He upheld his official position with that vigour which characterizes his epistle. After he has spoken, even SS. Peter and Paul are silent. The decree of the church at Jerusalem is his sentence (e-yw Kpivw, Ac. 15. 19, an expression that a bishop nowadays would scarcely use). And even St. Paul put him before SS. Peter and John (Gal. 2. 9). Later writers give him the same pre-eminence. He- gesippus (160 A.D.) gives interesting particulars about him, which Eusebius accepted. He seems to infer that St. James became bishop JAMES, G-ENERAL EtlSTLE OF 38 1 immediately after the Ascension. His holiness was acknowledged by all. It is said that he was allowed to enter the holy of holies, and that his knees became hard as a camel's from constant prayer. His influence with the Jews was so great, that had he lived he might have averted the destruction of Jerusalem; but the scribes and Pharisees killed him, and our Lord's fore- knowledge of this may be an explanation of His terrible denunciation of them. They seem to have brought him forth on a critical occasion, and to have set him in a prominent place on the temple, "the pinnacle of the temple." But his words were not their words, and they threw him down headlong, then stoned him till a charitable fuller ended his sufferings with his workman's club, as he was praying for his murderers ; and they immediately buried him close to the temple, with an inscription de- claring his sanctity. Then the cup was full, and the fatal siege of Jerusalem began. See also next article. [b.r.] James, General Epistle of. I. Its Authenticity. The epistle was accepted as canonical at the Council of Carthage (397 a.d.), and its authenticity was not again questioned until the time of the Reformation. But until the end of the 4th cent, there seems to have been some doubt as to its genuineness. For though there are probable references to it in Clement of Rome, Hermas, and the Didache, and though it is certainly quoted by Irenaeus, it is omitted in the Muratorian Fragment (180 A.D.), and Eusebius, though he quotes it and speaks of it as being used in most of the churches, adds that it is " considered spuri- ous," and, in his catalogue of the N.T., classes it with the "disputed" books. Its comparatively late acceptance was possibly due to its Jewish and apparently anti-Pauline character. — II. Its Author. The author de- scribes himself simply as " James, a servant of . . . Jesus Christ," but the authoritative tone of the letter implies that he held an important position in the Church. He must, therefore, be either James the son of Zebedee, James the son of Alphaeus, or the James who is fre- quently mentioned in Acts as the leader of the church at Jerusalem, and is identified by St. Paul with James " the brother of the Lord." The first two are plainly excluded. Had the author been one of the Twelve he would almost certainly have claimed the title. Moreover, the son of Zebedee was probably put to death before the epistle was written, while the son of Alphaeus was not sufficiently prominent. The author, therefore, must be James " the brother of the Lord." This conclusion is supported by the general character of the book, which shows it to be the work of a Palestinian Jewish Chris- tian, and agrees with all that we read of James in St. Paul and Acts. The language of the epistle, too, is strikingly similar to that of the speech and letter of James recorded in Ac. 15. — III. Its Date. If James was the author, he must have written the epistle after 40 a.d. and before 68 a.d. — i.e. after he became leader of the church at Jerusalem, and before his mar- tyrdom (62 a.d. according to Josephus, 68 a.d. according to another tradition). The internal evidence confirms this view. The theology of the epistle, the_belief_in the nearness of the 3^2 JAMIN Parousia (5.7,8), the lack of definite church organization, agree with the account of the church at Jerusalem given in Acts, and belong to the period prior to the fall of Jerusalem (70 A.D.) — which would certainly be mentioned if it had already occurred — and the consequent separation of Christianity from Judaism. On the ground that tiiere is no reference to the Council of Jerusalenr (49 a.d.), Mayor places it before 50 .■v.u., and regards it as the earliest book in N.T. ; while Sanday, arguing that James would not be likely to write an epistle unless influenced by the example of St. Paul, places it after the earlier Pauline epistles (c. 60 A.D.). — IV. Character AND Contents. (i)The epistle deals with Christian life rather than Christian doctrine. It was addressed to Chris- tians belonging to the poorer classes, who were subject to persecution from their wealthy fellow-countrymen, to warn them against the sins into which they were most likely to fall, to console them in their sufferings, and to put before them the true Christian ideal of life. (2) James may have had in view some per- version or misuse of the Pauline doctrine of justification by faith (2.14-26). That he wrote to controvert directly St. Paul's argu- ment in Ro.1-4 cannot be maintained. " If we suppose direct polemics between the two apostles, then both seem strangely to miss the mark. Each would he arguing against some- thing the other did not hold" (Sanday) — James, against a barren orthodoxy; Paul, against a self-righteous Pharisaism. (3) Lu- ther said there was nothing " evangelical " about the epistle. But despite its Jewish and untheological character, it preserves more of the teaching of our Lord, as contained in the Synoptic gospels, than all the other epistles put together. It breathes the spirit of the Master, and is an attempt to give a practical application to the i)rinciples of the Sermon on the Mount. Mayor, Epistle of James : an excellent commentary, with introduction. See also Stevens, N.T. Theology ; R. W. Dale, Discourses on the Epistle of James ; Boyd Car- penter, Wisdom of James the Just. [r.b.] Jamin'. — 1. Second son of Simeon (Gen. 46.10 ; Ex.6. 15 ; iChr.4.24), founder of the family of the Jaminltes (Num. 26. 12). — 2. A man of Judah, second son of Kani (iChr.2.27). — 3. A I.evite who expounded the law (Ne. 8.7). Jamlech', one of the chief men of Simeon (iChr.4.34; cf. 41,42) in the time of Hezekiah. Jamnia, Idols of (2 Mac. 12. 40, Updifxara tQ>v a-rb lanviias fi'SuiXwi'). The Syriac, which in this and other ]iassages of 2Mac. has many divergencies from the Gk., reads "gold of the idols of Jamnia" (de yamnin). No adequate reason is offered for the use by Judas's men of tokens from Jamnia. It is possible that d7r6 'la/j-vtias has its origin in a gloss |*0d = Bainovtf. fj AHNI'KI..) [j.A.D.] Jam'nia, Jamnites, The (iMac.4.i5,5. 58,10.69,15.10; 2Mac.l2.H,<),4"). [Jabneel.] Jan'na.soii of josc|ili, and father of Melchi, in till- (,'cnfMloKV of Christ (Lu.3.24). Jan'nesand Jatn'bpes, the names of the two Egyptian magicians who opposed Moses. St. Paul alone of the canonical writers men- tions them by name, and says no more than that they " withstood Moses," and that their JAUAH folly in doing so became manifest (2Tim.3.8,9). Theodoret believes St. Paul to be merely re- peating an oral tradition as to their names; but Origen asserts that in 2Tim.3.8 St. Paul quotes from an apocryphal "' Book of Jannes and Mambres " — the latter being a variant on the second name. Though such a book has not yet been rediscovered, there are grounds for ac- cepting this as the more probable, [a.c.d.] Jano'ah, a place in the N. of Galilee, taken by Tiglath-pileser in 734 B.C. (2 K. 15. 29). Now Ydmih, a village 5 miles E. of Tyre, [c.r.c] Janohah', a place on the E. boundary of Ephraim (Jos.16.6,7). Eusebius {Onomasticon) places it 12 Roman miles E. of Neapolis. Now Ydmln, a village 7 English miles E. of Shechem, and S. of T'ana. [Taanath-shiloh.] [c.r.c] Janum', a town of Judah in the mountain district, apparently not far from Hebron (Jos. 15. 33). Probably the village Beni Nairn, 3 miles li. of Hebron. [c.r.c] Ja'pheth. — 1. (Gen.9.18,27,10.1-5.) Son of Noah, and ancestor of one of the three great di- visions of mankind. [Races.] The name (Heb. yepheth) is connected with a root meaning to "open" or "enlarge" (Gen. 9. 27). Possibly, on the analogy of other names, J apheth was ori- ginally yiphtah 'cl, " God opens." He occurs last in each list of the sons of Noah ; but in Gen. 9. 24 (R.V.) Ham is said to be the youngest son and J apheth is blessed by his father before Shem. In the enumeration of the peoples descended from these three patriarchs, Japheth's sons stand first, and in Gen. 10. 21, Japheth is said to be Shem's elder brother. His family is said (Gen. 10.5) to have " divided the isles [coasts] of theGentiles." His most important sons were Gomer and Javan (Ionian, or Greek). From Javan sprang Elishau (? Hellas), Tarshish, Kittim (Cyprus), and Dodanim (LX.X. 'P65tot, iChr.1.6; Heb. rodhdnim, ? the Rhodians). In the poem wherein Noah foretells the future of his sons (Gen. 9. 25-27), Japheth is to be " en- larged " — a play on his name — and is (unless the Targum and Bab. Talmud are right in making " God " the subject) to " dwell in the tents of Shem." The name Japheth has been identified with that of the giant lapetus of Homer (//. \n\. 479), according to Hesiod, the father of Prometheus. — 2. The name of a dis- tri(;t mentioned in Jth.2.25. Holofernes came unto the borders of Japheth, which were to- wards the S., over against .Arabia, [f.j.f.-j.] Japhla'. — 1. King of I.achish at the time of the conquest of Canaan by the Israelites ; one of the five kings defeated at Beth-horon (Jos. 10. i). — 2. .\ son of David born in Jerusalem (2Sain.5.i5 : iChr.3.7,14.6). Japhi a, on the boundary of Zebulun (Jos.19.i2). Ydfa, li miles S.W. of Nazareth, is apparently meant, between Sarid (Tell Shadiid) and Cmislotii (Iksdl) at the foot of the Nazannh hills. [c.r.c] Japhlet', a descendant of Asher through Hcriah ( iC lir.7.32,33). Japhletl'. The boundary of the " Japh- letite " (sec R.V.) is one of the landmarks on the S. hnund.iry-line of I'^phraim (J0S.I6.3) : Iv. of Hi-Tii-MOKON the nether. [c.R.c] Japho' (Jos.l9.4() <^nly), the Heb. form of Joi'PA. lis modern form is Ydfa. japah', a descendant of Saul (iChr.9.42). TARES Japeb' (Ho.5.13,10.6). " King Jareb" has been otherwise rendered "king of Jareb"; but more probably " the hostile king " (of Assyria) with whom Ephraim sought alUance in 8th cent. b.c. [c.r.c] Japed', one of the antediluvian patriarchs, the fifth from Adam ; son of Mahalaleel, and father of Enoch (Gen.5.i5ff. ; Lu.3.37). Japesiah', a Benjamite of the sons of Je- horam (iChr.8.27). Japha', the Egyptian servant of Sheshan, about the time of Eli, to whom his master gave Ahlai, his daughter and heir, in marriage (iChr.2.31,34,35). Japib'. — 1. Named in the list of iChr.4.24 only, as a son of Simeon. Perhaps the same as Jachin, I (Gen. 46. 10; Ex. 6. 15 ; and Num.26. 12). — 2. One of the " chief men " who accom- panied Ezra from Babylon to Jerusalem (Ezr. 8.16). — 3. A priest of the house of Jeshua, who put away his foreign wife at the command of Ezra (10. 1'S).— 4. [Jehoiarib.] Japimoth' (iEsd.9.28) = Jeremoth, 5. Japmuth'. — 1. A royal Amorite city (Jos. 10.3,5,6) conquered by Joshua (12. 11), and lying in the sh^pheld region of Judah (I5.35), near AduUam and Socoh. It was inhabited after the Captivity (Ne.ll.29). Now the ruin el Yarmuq, 3 miles N. of Socoh, on N. side of the valley of Elah. — 2. A Levitical town in Issachar (Jos. 21. 29), apparently Remeth, now Rdmeh. [Ramoth.] [c.r.c] Japoah', a Gadite chief (iChr.5.14). Jasael' (iEsd.9.30) = Sheal. Jashen'. "Sons of J ashen" occur in the catalogue of David's heroes (2Sam.23.32). In iChr.11.34 they appear as sons of Hashem the Gizonite. In his Notes on Samuel, p. 283, Dr. Driver is of opinion that " sons of " (''33) has crept into the .text from the ending of " the Shaalbonite" ("'i^'^y-') which precedes; that " the Gizonite " should be " the Gunite " or member of the family of the Guni (cf. Num.26. 48); and that thus "the sons of Jashen" should be read " Jashen the Gunite." [h.c.b.] Jashep' (properly Jashar, as R.V.), Book of. This long-lost book is mentioned twice in O.T., first, as containing a poem on the battle of Gibeon (Jos.lO.1-14), and also secondly the lament of David over Saul and Jonathan, cited in 2Sam. 1.17-27. Possibly there may also be a reference to it in the somewhat strange inter- polation in the LXX.of iK.8.53 — iv ^L^Xiui tt}s iiidrjs. [Kings, Books of.] The collection in the book was probably one of ancient national poetry. Several forged books under this title have appeared at various times and places. They are of no value whatever. Dr. Donald- son's work bearing this title is also an attempt to restore the book out of portions of the Pentateuch and O.T.. an attempt based on no evidence. [Kings, Books of.] [c.h.h.w.] Jashobeam'. Possibly one and the same follower of David, bearing this name, is de- scribed as a Hachmonite (iChr.ll.ii), a Korhite (iChr.12.6), and son of Zabdiel (iChr. 27.2). [EzNiTE ; Tachmonite.] He came to David at Ziklag. He slew 300 (or 800, 2Sam.23.8, see marg. and R.V.) men at one time. He is named first among the mighty men of David (iChr.ll.ii). Jashub'. — 1. Third son of Issachar (called Jasper 5§S Job ; R.V. iob ; Gen.46.i3), and founder of the family of the Jashubites (Num.26.24 ; iChr. 7.1). — 2. A layman of the sons of Bani, who had to put away his foreign wife (Ezr.lO.29). Jashubi-le'hem (iChr.4.22). The wri- ter, copying an ancient list, seems to have found this term difficult, and adds the sen- tence " and ancient things " (or "deeds," or " words "). The LXX. understands the words to mean " and turned them back." Possibly we may read that the men of Chozeba " were masters in Moab, and the dwellings of Ham." [c.r.c] Jashub'ites, The. [Jashub, i.] Jasiel', the Mesobaite, the last named in the list of David's heroes in 1Chr.ll.47. Jason. A form which the name Joshua took under the Hasmonaeans and onward. — 1. Son of Eleazer, one of the commissioners sent by Judas Maccabaeus to make a treaty with the Romans, 161 b.c (iMac.8.17), probably the same as — 2. Father of Antipater (12.i6, 14.22). — 3. A Jewish historian, of Cyrene, therefore probably a Hellenistic Jew who wrote in five books a history of the Jewish war of freedom which supplied most of the materials for 2Mac. [Maccabees, Books of.] —4. The high-priest, second son of Simon II. and brother of Onias III., who obtained the high-priesthood from Antiochus Epiph- anes, to the exclusion of his elder brother, by means of a bribe. He was a great Hellen- izer, and by a liberal expenditure of money secured a gymnasium, an ephebhim at the very foot of mount Zion, and procured the enrolment of the Jews among the citizens of Antioch. Greek caps were worn and Greek games practised in the city, and the latter caused many Jews " to make themselves uncircum- cised " (iMac.1.15), which many have inter- preted " to endeavour to remove traces of their circumcision " (cf. iCor.7.i8), though the possi- bility of such a hteral physical interpretation is doubtful. [Circumcision.] After three years he was supplanted, but stimulated by a report of the death of Antiochus, he made an only partially successful attempt to recover his power. He was ultimately forced to retire to the Ammonites, thence to Egypt, and after- wards to Sparta, where he died (2Mac.4,5). [Hellenist ; Maccabees.] — 5. A Thessaloniaii who entertained SS. Paul and Silas. When a Jewish mob came to secure Paul and could not find him, they took Jason before the politarchs, who demanded security of him before setting him free. It is not improbable that he is the same as the companion and fellow-tribesman of the apostle mentioned in R0.I6.21. [b.f.s.] Jaspep (Heb. yashpi ; Gk. ta(T7rts), a precious stone frequently noticed in Scripture. It was the last of the twelve inserted in the high-priest's breastplate (Ex. 28. 20, 39. 13), the first of the twelve used in the foundations of the new Jerusalem (Rev. 21. 19), and was among the treasures of the king of Tyre (Ezk.28.13). He that sat on the throne (Rev. 4. 3) was to look on " like a jasper and a sardine stone " ; the light of the new Jerusalem (21.ii) was " like a stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal," and its wall (21. 18) was built of it. These three passages, at any rate, seem 384 JASUBUS to^denote a stone of greater brilliancy and value than the modern jasper, which, though often richly coloured {e.g. red or dark green) and handsome, is rather opaque and not very rare, being one of the less translucent and pure varieties of Chalcedony. But in Mr. King's words, " greenness and more or less trans- lucency," as we can see from Pliny and other early authors, " were the two essential char- acters of the ancient iaspis." It is certain, as we learn from the former author, that about the ist cent, of our era this name covered more than one kind of mineral, mostly, how- ever, the more translucent chalcedonies, the green varieties (choice specimens of plasma or prasej being the most esteemed, and in earlier times (as Pliny says) highly valued. A possible parallel (yaspn) for the name has been found in the .^marna tablets (Berlin 26). [t.g.b.] Jasu'bus (iEsd.9.30) = Jashub, 2. Ja'tal (iEsd.5.28) = Ater, i. Jathniel', a Korhite Levite, the fourth of the family of Meshelemiah (iChr.26.2). Jattip', a town of Judah in the mountain district ( J 0s.i5.48), one of the group containing Socho, Eshtemoa, etc. (See also Jos.2i.14 ; i Sam.30.27 ; iChr.6.57.) Robinson identified it with 'Attir, 13 miles S. of Hebron. Javan', a son of Japheth (Gen. 10.2,4 ; i Chr.l.5,7), representing the Gk. race of Ionia, the descendants of which were found in Acolia, Tarsus, Cyprus, and Rhodes. The Greeks of Cyprus are traced as early as the time of Ksar- haddon (670 B.C.), and Sargon of Assyria (c. 710 B.C.) speaks of the lonians as " fronting the sea, spawning like fishes." [Races.] In Isaiah (66.19) Javan is connected with Tarsus, Lydia, Tubal, and (in LXX.) Meshech, and in Ezekiel (27.13) with Tubal and Meshech, also with the Danai [DanJ as trading with Tyre (ver. 19; c/. R.V. marg.). Javan is rendered Grecia or Greece in A. V.( Dan. 8. 21, 10. 20, 11. 2 ; Zech.9.13 ; Jl.3.6), in consequence of LXX. rendering "Hellenes"; but the Asiatic Greeks are usually to be understood. [c.r.c] Javelin. [Arms.] Jazap', Jazep'. [Jaazer.] Jaziz', a Hagarite who had charge of the flocks of king Uavid (1Chr.27.31). Jealousy, Ordeal of. [Ordeal of Jealousy.] Jealousy, Water of. [Water of Bitterness.] Jeaplm , Mount, a place on the N. boundary of Judah (Jos. 15. 10). The range E. of Kirjath-jkarim ('£>wa)andS. of Chesalon (Kesla). The valley between runs to Beth- SHEMESH and formed the border. [c.r.c] Jeatepai', a Gershonite Levite, son of Zerah (iClir.6.21). Jebepechiah', father of Zeciiariah, 28, in the rclKii of Ahaz (Is. 8. 2). Jebus', the city of the Jebusites, is only mentioned, under this name, twice in O.T. : Judg.l9.io, "Jebus, wliich is Jerusalem," and iChr.11.4, "Jerusalem, which is Jebus." The origin of this latter name is not kiif)\vii ; but Col. Conder suggests, with some pro- bability, that Jebus (Heb. yfhhus) is the Akkadian cb-tis ("house of safety") t'l/utvalenl to Jerusalem = "house of safety" (or, "of peace"). [Jerusalem.] [c.w.] JEDAIAH Jebusi' = Jebusite, the inhabitant being put for the place (Jos.18.16,28; c/. 15.8). Jebusite. According to the table (Gen. 10. 16 and iChr.1.14), " the Jebusite " is the third son of Canaan. In all lists of the inhabitants of Canaan the Jebusite occupies the last place (Gen. 15. 21 ; Ex. 3. 8, etc.). In the report of the spies (Num. 13. 29) they are distinguished, with the Hittites and Aniorites, as dwellers in the mountains ; and the fact that they were mountaineers is emphasized in Jos. 11. 3, where the Jebusites joined the confederacy of Jabin against Israel. They never seem to have been numerous or influential, but owed their im- portance to the possession of the strong fortress which for a time appears to have borne their name. Jebus was not, however, the original name of Jerusalem, for in the Amarna correspondence, some of which is probably of earlier date than the Israebtish conquest of the land, the city is called Uru-salim. Possibly Adoni-zedek, the leader of the five kings who combined against Joshua (Jos. 10. i), perhaps also Adoni-bezek (Judg.1.5), was a Jebusite, though the former is called an Amorite (Jos. 10.5). Jerusalem, after the defeat of Adoni- bezek (Judg.1.8), was taken by the tribe of Judah ; but from this time to its capture by David it is always alluded to as a Jebusite town. The border of Judah went up " to the south side of the Jebusite; the same is Jerusalem" (Jos. 15. 8) ; and the Levite would not enter the foreign town of "Jebus, which is Jerusalem" (Judg.l9.io). WhenDavid attacked the stronghold, the Jebusites evidently considered it impregnable (2Sam.5.6) ; and even after its capture, they continued to oc- cupy part of it. Araunah, or Oman, the Je- busite, in his well-known transaction with David, deals with him " as a king with a king" (2Sam.24 ; iChr.21). In the days of Solomon the Jebusites, with the other non-Israelite peoples in the land, were put to forced labour (1K.9.21). Zechariah uses the term" Jebusite," apparently as an archaism, to signify an inhabi- tant of Jerusalem. When the Philistines are incorporated with J udah, Ekron, says the pro- phet, " shall be as a Jebusite." [f.J.f.-j.] Jeeamiah' (R.V. Jekamiah), a sou of king Jcconiah (iChr.3.i8). Jecholiah', wife of Amaziah, king of Judah, ami mother of Azariah, or Uzziah, his successor (2K.I5.2). Jechoni'as. — 1. The Gk. forna found in Apoc. and X.T. of the name of king Jecho- niah (Est. Apoc.11.4 ; Ba.l.3,9 ; Mt.l.11,12). 2. (llisd.8.92) = SUECHANIAH, 4. Jecoliah' (2Chr.26.3) = Jecholiah. Jeconiah', in iClir.3. 16,17 ; Esth.2.6 ; Je. 24.1,27.20,28.4, and 29. i for Jehoiachin. Jeconi'as (ilisd.1.9) = Conaniah. Jedai'ah (n^Vl'), head of the second course of i)ricsts in the time of David (iChr.24. 7). Some of the famiU — or of a second priestly family of the same name; see Ne.12.6 (c/. 7), 19 (c/. 21) — returned to Jerusalem after the Cap-, tivity (l':zr.2.3() ; Nc.7.39). To one uf these families i)robal)ly belonged the priest in the time of Jeshua the liigh-priest (Zech.8.10,14). Jedaiah' (Hp'). — 1. .\ Simeonite, son of Shimri (iChr.4.37). — 2. Son of llarumaph ; Jeddtt Oiae who assisted in^rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.S.io). Jed'du (iEsd.5.24) = Jedaiah (Ezr.2.36). Jede'us (iEsd.9.30) = Adaiah, 6. Jediael'. — 1. A chief patriarch of the tribe of Benjamin (iChr.7.6,ii). He is sometimes assumed to be the same as Ashbel, son of Ben- jamin ; but this is not certain. [Bilhan.] — 2. Second son of Meshelemiah, a Korhite Levite (26.2). — 3. Son of Shimri ; one of David's guard (11. 45). Possibly the same as — 4. One of the chiefs of the thousands of Manasseh who joined David at Ziklag (12.2o). Jedidah', queen of Amon, and mother of king Josiah (2K.22.1). Jedidiah', the name bestowed, through Nathan, on David's son Solomon (2Sam.l2. 25). Bathsheba's first child had died — " Jehovah struck it " (ver. 15). A second son was born, David called his name Shelomoh (Peaceful) ; and " the Lord loved him," i.e. al- lowed him to live. David sent by the hand of Nathan, to obtain some oracle or token of the divine favour on the babe, and the babe's name was called Jedid-Jah. To David, him- self the " darling " of his family and his people, no more precious seal of his restoration to the divine favour, after his late fall, could have been afforded than that the name of his child was to combine his own name with that of Jehovah — Jedid-Jah, "darling of Jehovah." Jeduthun', a Levite, of the family of Me- rari, mentioned, along with Heman (of the family of Kohath) and Asaph (of the family of Gershon) as head of one of the three guilds who had charge of the temple music (iChr.25. 1,3,6). In one place he is called " the king's seer " (2Chr.35.15) : and the name Ethan oc- curs in some passages where we expect Jedu- thun (iChr.6.44,15.17; cf. 16.38,41,42). The consonantal te.xt in a few passages reads Jedithun. His name stands at the head of Pss. 39.62, and 77. [Psalms, Titles of.] [j.r.] Je'eli (iEsd.5.33) = Jaalah. Jee'lus (iEsd.8.92) = Jehiel, 9. Jeezep' (Num.26. 30; R.V. lezer), con- tracted from Abiezer, a descendant of Manasseh and founder of the family of the Jeexepites (R.V. lezerites). [h.c.b.] Jega'p-sahadutha' (heap of testimony), the Aramean name given by Laban the Aramean to the heap of stones erected as a memorial of the compact between Jacob and himself (Gen.3i.47). Galeed, " witness heap," is given as the Heb. equivalent. The heap surrounded the pillar — a common feature of rude stone monuments — each stone representing a person present. The site was at Mizpah (probably SAf), where many rude stone monuments still exist. [c.r.c] Jehaleleer (R.V. Jehallelel). Four of the Bene-Jehalleleel are introduced abruptly into the genealogies of Judah (iChr.4.i6). Jehalelel' (R.V. Jehallelel), a Merarite Levite, father of Azariah, 17 (2Chr.29.12). Jehdeiah'. — 1. The representative of the Bene-Shubael in the time of David (iChr.24. 20). — 2. A Meronothite who had charge of the she-asses of David (1Chr.27.30). Jehezekel', a priest to whom David gave the charge of the 20th of the 24 courses for the temple-service (iChr.24.i6). Jehohanan 385 Jehiah', one of the two " doorkeepers for the ark" in Jerusalem (1Chr.i5.24). Jehiel' (Heb. 'pX''!!*).— 1- One of the Levites appointed by David to assist in the serviceof thehouseofGod(iChr.l5.i8,2o,16.5). — 2. A son of Jehoshaphat, king of Judah, put to death by his brother Jehoram (2Chr.21.2). — 3. A ruler of the house of God at the time of the reforms of Josiah (35.8). — 4. A Ger- shonite Levite, head of the Bene-Laadan in the time of David (iChr.23.8), who had charge of the treasures (29.8). — 5. Son of Hachmoni, named in the list of David's officers (27.32) as "with the king's sons." — 0. A Levite of the Bene-Heman, who took part in the resto- rations of king Hezekiah (2Chr.29.14). — 7. An- other Levite at the same period (31. 13). — 8. Father of Obadiah, of the Bene-Joab (Ezr.8.9). — 9. One of the Bene-Elam, father of She- CHANiAH, 4 (10.2 ). — 10. A member of the same family (IO.26), who, like — 11. A priest, one of the Bene-Harim, had to put away his foreign wife (IO.21). , , Jehiel' (Heb. q'^ri, 7it.']^\; Mhibh, PNIV; R.V. Jeiel), a name distinct from the last. — 1. A man described as father of Gibeon ; a forefather of king Saul (iChr.9.35). — 2. Ason of Hotham the Aroerite ; a member of David's guard (11.44)- Jehieli' (iChr.26.2i, 22) = Jehiel, 4. Jehizkiah', son of Shallum, and a leader of Ephraim in the time of Ahaz (2Chr.28.12). Jehoadah', a descendant of Saul (iChr.8. 36) ; great-grandson to Meribaal — i.e. Mephi- bosheth ; called Jarah (9.42). Jehoaddan', queen to Joash, and mother of Amaziah of Judah (2K.I4.2 ; 2Chr.25.i). Jehoahaz'. — 1. The son and successor of Jehu, reigned 17 years over Israel in Samaria. His inglorious history is given in 2K.I3.1-9, 22-29. Throughout his reign he was kept in subjection by Hazael, king of Damascus (cf. ver. 7 with 2K.8.12). Jehoahaz maintained the idolatry of Jeroboam ; but in his extremity he besought Jehovah ; and Jehovah gave Is- rael a deliverer — probably either Jehoash (vv. 23 and 25) or Jeroboam II. (2K. 14.24,25). — 2. Jehoahaz, otherwise called Shallum, the son and successor of Josiah, king of Judah. He was chosen by the people in preference to his elder brother Jehoiakim (cf. 2K.23.3i,36), and reigned three months in Jerusalem. Pharaoh Necho, on his return from Carchemish, perhaps resenting the election of Jehoahaz, sent to Jerusalem to depose him, and to fetch him to Riblah. There he was cast into chains, and from there taken into Egypt, where he died. His character is given in 2 K. 23. 32, and his fate alluded to in Je.22.io-i2 and Ezk.i9.2-4. — 3. (2Chr.21. 17,25. 23) = Ahaziah, 2. Jehoash', the imcontracted form of Joash. — 1. The eighth king of Judah ; son of Ahaziah(2K.11.2i,12.i-i8[c/.i9,2o],14.i3).— 2. The twelfth Idng of Israel ; son of Jehoahaz (2K.13.io,25, 14.8-17). Jehohanan'. — 1. A Korhite Levite, sixth son of Meshelemiah, and one of the door- keepers to the tabernacle appointed by David (iChr.26.3). — 2. One of the principal men of Judah, under king Jehoshaphat (2Chr.i7.15). Probably the same as — 3. Father of Ishmael, 25 386 JEHOIACHIN one of the " captains of hundreds " who as- sisted Jehoiada the priest in putting an end to the usurpation of Athaliah (2Chr.23.i). — 4. A lay Israelite, of the sons of Bebai, who was forced to put away his foreign wife (Ezr.lO.28). —5. A priest (Ne.i2.13) representing the house of Amariah when Joiakim was high- priest. — 6. A priest who took part in the de- dication of the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.i2.42). Jehoiachin', king of Judah for 3 months, son and successor of Jehoiakini (2K.24.8). Called Jeconiah (Je.27.2o), Coniah (Je.22.24), Joacim (iEsd.l.43), Jechonias (Ba.l.3 ; ^It. l.ii). On Jehoiachin's accession Jerusalem was unable to offer any resistance to the army which Nebuchadnezzar sent to besiege it in the eighth year of his reign, and which he seems to have joined in person after the siege was commenced. In a very short time, apparently, Jehoiachin surrendered with the queen-mother, the servants, captains, and officers. With these he was sent captive to Babylon, his throne having been given by Nebuchadnezzar to Mattaniah (Zedekiah), a son of Josiah (2K.24.11-17 ; Je.29.2 ; Ezk.17. 12,19.9). Jehoiachin remained a prisoner in Babylon for 36 years, viz. until the accession of Evil-merodach, who released him from prison, raised him above the other subject or captive kings, and made him sit at his own table (2K. 25.27-30 ; Je.52.31-34). Notices of Jehoiachin are found in Ba.l.3ff. and (if, as some assert, Joacim the husband of Susanna is to be identified with Jehf)iachin) in the History of Susanna and the Elders ; but the unhistorical character of these notices would seem to be proved by the long imprison- ment of Jehoiachin in Babylon. From Je. 22.28-30 it has been thought that Jehoiachin had no children ; but the sense in which the prophet speaks of him as " childless " (LX.\. fKKT}pvKTov, "proscribed") is evident from tlic words which follow, " for no man of his seed shall prosper." See also iChr.3.17. [h.c.b.J Jehoiada'. — 1. Father of Benaiah, Da- vid's warrior (2Sani.8.i8 ; iK.l and 2 passim ; 1Chr.l8.17, etc.). In iChr.27.5 Benaiah's father is called " a chief priest " in A.V., but in R.V. the words are " the priest, chief," where " chief " refers to Benaiah and " the priest " to Jehoiada, who is therefore doubtless identical with — 2. Leader of tlie Aaronites, i.e. the priests ; who joined David at Hebron (1Chr.i2.27). — 3- According to iChr.27.34, son of Benaiah. But probably Benaiah the son of Jehoiada is meant, by a confusion similar to that with regard to Ahimelech and Abiathar, iChr.l8.i6 ; 2Sam. 8.17. — 4. High-priest at the time of Athaliah's usurpation of the throne of Judah, and during the greater portion of the 40 years' reign of Joash. He probably succeeded Amariah. He married Jkhosheba, or Jehoshabeath, daughter of king Jehoram, and sister of king Ahaziah (2Chr.22. 1 1), and, when Athaliaii slew all the seed royal of J udah after Ahaziah had been put to death by Jehu, he and his wife stole Joash from among tlu; king's sons, and hid him for six years in tiie tt-mple, and eventually replaced him on the throne of his ancestors. He divided the priests and Levites into three bands, posted at the principal en- JEHOlAKlM trances, and filled the courts with people favour- able to the cause, and then produced the young king before the whole assembly, crowned and anointed him, and presented to him a copy of the law (c/. Dent. 17. 18-20). None but the priests and ministering Levites were permitted to enter the temple ; and Jehoiada gave strict orders that Athaliah should be carried outside its precincts before she was put to death (2Chr.23). The destruction of Baal worship and the restoration of the temple were among the great works due to him. He died at an advanced age, but too soon for the welfare of his country under the weak, unstable rule of Joash. The text of 24.15, supported by the LXX. and Josephus, makes him 130 years old at his death, but is evidently corrupt. He was buried " in the city of David among the kings, because he had done good in Israel, both toward God and toward his house" (24. 16). — 5. Second priest, or sagan, to Seraiah the high-priest (Je. 29.25-29 ; 2K. 25.18). — 6. Son of Paseah ; he helped to repair the old gate of Jerusalem (Ne.3.6). Jehoiakim', i8th (or, counting Jehoahaz, 19th) king of Judah from David inclusive — 25 years old at his accession, and originally called Eliakim. He was the son of Josiah and Zebudah, daughter of Pedaiah of Rumah. The outline of his history is contained in 2 K. 23. 34-24.7 ; 2Chr.36.4-8 ; but it is in the writings of Jeremiah that we have the fullest portraiture of him. After deposing Jehoahaz, Pharaoh Necho set Eliakim, his elder brother, upon the throne, and changed his name to Jehoiakim. Egypt played no part in Jewish politics during seven or eight years of Jehoia- kiin's reign. After the battle of Carchemish, Nebuchadnezzar came into Palestine as being one of the Egyptian tributary kingdoms, the capture of which was the natural fruit of his victory over Necho. He found Jehoiakim quite defenceless. After a short siege he entered Jerusalem, took the king prisoner, bound him in fetters to carry him to Babylon, and took also some of the precious vessels of the temple and carried them to the land of Shinar. But he seems to have changed his purpose as regards Jehoiakim, and to have accepted his submission, and reinstated him on the throne, perhaps in remembrance of the fidelity of his father Josiah. What is certain is, that Jehoiakim became tributary to Nebuchadnezzar after his invasion of Judah, and continued so for three years, but at the end of that time broke his oath of allegiance and rebelled against him (2K.24.1). Though Nebuchadnezzar was not able at that time to come in person to chastise his rebellious vassal, he sent against him numerous bands of Chaldeans, with Syrians, Moabites, and Am- monites, who were all now subject to Babylon (2 K. 24.7), and who cruelly harassed the whole country. liither in an engagement with some of these forces, or else by tlie hand of his own oppressed subjects, who thought to conciliate the Babylonians by the murder of their king, Jehoiakim came to a violent end in the nth year of his reign. His body was cast out ignominiously on the ground : and then, after being left exposed for some time, was dragged away and buried " with the burial of an ass," JEHOIARIB without pomp or lamentation, " beyond the gates of Jerusalem" (Je. 22.18,19,36.30). All the accounts we have of Jehoiakim present his character as vicious and irreligious. In 2 K. 23. 37 we read that " he did that which was evil in the sight of Jehovah," a statement repeated in 24.9 and 2Chr.36.5. Jeremiah charges him with covetousness, the shedding of innocent blood, oppression, and violence (Je. 22.13-15, 26.20-23, 36). Josephus asserts that " he was of a wicked disposition, and ready to do mischief ; nor was he either reli- gious towards God or good natured towards men " {10 Ant. v. 2). Jehoiarib', head of the first of the 24 courses of priests, as arranged by David (iChr. 24.7). Some of his descendants returned from the Babylonish captivity (iChr.9. 10 = Joiarib; Ne. 1,1. 10,12.6, 19). They were probably of the house of Eleazar. To the course of Je- hoiarib belonged the Hasmonaean family (i MdiC.2.1, ] oarib = J arib, 14. 2 9), as did Josephus, as he himself informs us {Life, i. i). Jehonadab' or Jonadab', son of Re- chab, chief of the Rechabites. His father or ancestor Rechab possibly belonged to a branch of the Kenites (see iChr.2.55), who entered Palestine with the Israelites. One settlement of them was established at or near the town of Jabez in Judah (2.55). Nomad habits, like those of the Kenites (Judg.l.i6 ; iSam.15.6), were inculcated by Jehonadab with the utmost minuteness on his descendants (Je.35. 6). Jehu was advancing, after the slaughter at Beth -eked, on the city of Samaria, to destroy the remnant of Ahab and the prophets of Baal, when he met the austere Rechabite on foot (2K.IO.15). This leader of a semi- religious sect was realized by the king to be a fit companion for his present purpose. Greetings and assurances of sympathy therein passed between them, and Jehonadab pro- ceeded with the king in his chariot to " see " his " zeal for Jehovah." No doubt he acted in concert with Jehu throughout ; but he is only expressly mentioned when they went through the temple of Baal to expel any servants of Jehovah who might be there (10. 23). The Rechabites may have been Benjamites descended from Rechab (2Sam.4.2-9), which would account for their being known to Jeremiah, whose home [Anathoth] lay in Benjamin. Rechab was a Hebrew name (Ne.3.14). Jehonathan'. — 1. Son of Uzziah ; super- intendent of certain of David's storehouses (i Chr.27.25). — 2. One of the Levites sent by Jehoshaphat through the cities of Judah, with a book of the law, to teach the people (2Chr. 17.8). — 3. A priest (Ne.l2.i8) representing the family of Shemaiah, when Joiakim was high- priest. Jehopam' (or Jopam'). — 1. The second son of Ahab king of Israel. He succeeded his brother Ahaziah. The alliance between the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, commenced by his father and Jehoshaphat, was very close throughout his reign. We first find him as- sociated with Jehoshaphat and the king of Edom, at that time a tributary of the kingdom of Judah, in a war against the Moabites. Mesha, their king, on the death of Ahab, had JEHORAM 387 revolted from Israel, and refused to pay the customary tribute. Jehoram asked and obtained Jehoshaphat's help to reduce him to his obedience, and accordingly the three kings, of Israel, Judah, and Edom, marched through the wilderness of Edom to attack him (2K.3.4-8). The three armies were in great danger of perishing for want of water. Je- hoshaphat wished to inquire of some prophet of Jehovah, and Elisha was found with the host (3. 11). From him Jehoram received a severe rebuke ; nevertheless for Jehoshaphat's sake Elisha inquired of Jehovah, and received the promise of abundant water, and of a great victory over the Moabites— a promise immediately fulfilled. The allies pursued the Moabites with great slaughter into their own land, which they utterly ravaged and de- stroyed all its cities. Kir-haraseth alone re- mained, and there the king of Moab made his last stand. An attempt to break through the besieging army having failed, he resorted to the desperate expedient of offering up his eldest son, the heir to his throne, as a burnt- offering, upon the wall of the city, in the sight of the enemy. Upon this the Israelites retired and retmrned to their own land, having failed to gain any substantial advantage from their expedition' (2K. 3). A little later, when war broke out between Syria and Israel, we find Elisha befriending Jehoram (6.8-23). It seems probable that when the Syrian inroads ceased, and Jehoram felt less dependent upon the aid of the prophet, he relapsed into idolatry, and was rebuked by Elisha, and threatened with a return of the calamities from which he had escaped. Refusing to repent, a fresh invasion by the Syrians under Benhadad, and a close siege of Samaria, actually came to pass, probably according to the word of the prophet. Hence when the terrible incident arose, in con- sequence of the famine, of a woman boiling and eating her own child, the king immediately attributed the evil to Elisha, and determined to take away his life (6.24-3 1 ). The providen- tial interposition by which both Elisha's life was saved and the city delivered is narrated 2K.7, and Jehoram appears to have renewed his friendly feeling towards Elisha (8.4). Soon after the above events Elisha went to Da- mascus, and predicted the revolt of Hazael, and his accession to the throne of Syria in the room of Benhadad (8.7-13). Jehoram seems to have thought the revolution in Syria, which immediately followed Elisha's prediction, a good opportunity to pursue his father's favourite project of recovering Ramoth-gilead from the Syrians. He accordingly made an alliance with his nephew Ahaziah, who had just succeeded J oram on the throne of Judah, and the two kings proceeded to occupy Ra- moth-gilead by force. The expedition was unfortunate, jehoram was wounded in battle, and obliged to return to Jezreel to be healed of his wounds (8.29,9.14,15), leaving his army under Jehu to hold Ramoth-gilead against Hazael. Jehu, however, and the army under his command, revolted from their allegiance to Jehoram (9), and, hastily marching to Jezreel, surprised the wounded and defenceless Jehoram, who, going out to meet him, fell pierced by an arrow from Jehu's bow on the 388 JEHOSHABEATS very plat of ground which Ahab had wrested from Naboth, thus fulfilling the prophecy of Elijah (iK. 21. 21-29). Thus ended the dynasty of Oniri. — 2. Eldest son of Jehoshaphat, be- came king of Judah at the age of 32, and reigned 8 years. Jehosheba his daughter was wife to the high-priest Jehoiada. As soon as he was settled on the throne, he put his six brothers to death, with many of the chief nobles. He then (probably at the instance of his wife Athaliah, the daughter of Ahab) proceeded to establish the worship of Baal. A prophetic writing from the aged prophet Elijah (zChr. 21. 12-15) failed to produce any good effect upon him. This was in the first or second year of his reign. The remainder of it was a series of calamities. First the Edomites, who had been tributary to Je- hoshaphat, revolted, and established their permanent independence (2 K. 8. 20-22 ; cf. Gen. 27.40). Next Libnah, one of the strongest fortified cities in Judah (2K.I9.8), rebelled against him. Then followed invasions of armed bands of Philistines and of Arabians, who stormed the king's palace, put his wives and all his children (except his youngest son Ahaziah) to death (2Chr.22.i), or carried them into captivity, and plundered all his treasures. He died of a terrible disease (21.19,20) early in the twelfth year of his brother-in-law Jehoram's reign over Israel. Jehoshabeath' (2Chr.22.11). [Jehoshe- D.\.] Jehoshaphat. — 1. The son of Asa and Azubah, succeeded to the throne of Judah when he was 35 years old, and reigned 25 years. His history is to be found in iK. 22.41-50 and among the events recorded in 15.24, 2K.8.16, or in a continuous narrative in 2Chr. 17.1-21. 3). He was contemporary with Ahab, Ahaziah, and Jehoram. At first he strengthened himself against Israel by fortifying and garrisoning the cities of Judah and the Ephraimite conquests of Asa. But soon afterwards the two Heb. kings, perhaps appreciating their common danger from Damascus and the tribes on their eastern frontier, formed an alliance. Jehosha- phat's eldest sun Jehoram married Athaliah, the daughter of Ahab and Jezebel. Jehosha- phat was always a zealous follower of the com- mandments of God : he endeavoured, but with only partial success, to put down the idolatrous high places and groves in his king- dom. In his third year he sent out certain princes, priests, and I.evites, to go through the cities of Judah, teaching the people out of the Book of the Law. Riches and honours in- creased around him. He received tribute from the Philistines and Arabians, and kept up a large standing army in Jerusalem. It was probably about the i6th year of his reign that he went to Samaria to visit Ahab, and became his ally in the great battle of Ramoth-gilead. From thence Jehoshaphat returned to Jerusa- lem in peace, and went himself throughout the land " from Bcer-sheba to mount Ephraim," reclaiming the people to obedience to the law of (iod. Turning his attention to foreign commerce, he built at Ezion-geber, with the help of Ahaziah, a navy designed to go to Opiiir (2 K. 22. 48) ; but it was wrecked at Ezion-geber. Two more wars followed before JEHOVAH the close of his reign. He was miraculously de- livered from a threatened attack of the people of Ammon, Moab, and Seir. After this, per- haps, must be dated the war which Jehosha- phat, together with Jehoram king of Israel and the king of Edom, made against the rebellious king of Moab (2K.3). [Mesha.] In his de- clining years the administration of affairs was placed in the hands of his son J ehoram (8. 16).— 2. Son of Ahilud. He was the recorder or anna- list in the reigns of David (2Sam.8.i6, etc.) and Solomon (iK.4.3). — 3. One of the priests ap- pointed to blow trumpets before the ark when it was carried from the house of Obed-edom to Jerusalem (1Chr.i5.24). ^-4. Son of Paruah ; one of the twelve officers of king Solomon (iK. 4.17). He is said to have ruled in Issachar, but the towns under another officer [Baana] were all of that tribe, and apparently Jehosha- phat ruled in Zebulun with perhaps part of N. Issachar. [Palestine.] — 5. Son of Nimshi, and father of king Jehu (2K.9.2,i4). Jehoshaphat, Valley of {Jl.3.2,12), a deep valley ('emcq) for " Jehovah's judg- ment " of the gdyim or " nations." It is ap- parently intended to be understood as being near Jerusalem (ver. 16), and is called the " valley of decision " (hdruf, ver. 14) or of " threshing." Traditionally it is the Kidron Valley, called by Moslems Wddy en Ndr (the valley of fire) where they — and the Jews also — expect the Last Judgment to occur. There is a village 2 J miles N. of Jerusalem called Sh'a/dt, said by the natives to be named after a king — Jehoshaphat. It is near the head of the Kidron Valley, and may preserve a corrupt form of the name in question. [c.r.c] Jehoshe'ba, daughter of Joram, king of Judah, and wife of Jehoiada the high-priest (2K.II.2). Her name in Chronicles is given Jehoshabeath. As she is called "the daughter of Joram, sister of Ahaziah," it has been conjectured that she was the daughter, not of Athaliah, but of Joram by another wife {cf. Josephus, 9 Atit. vii. i). She is the only recorded instance of a princess of the royal house marrying a high-priest. It proved a providential circumstance (2Chr.22.ii), as inducing, and probably enabling, her to rescue the infant Joash from the massacre of his brothers. [JrnoiAnA.] Jehoshu'a, the full form of the name Joshua given in Num.13. 16, on the occasion of its bestowal by Moses ; and once more only in .\.V. (with a redundant h) as Jehoshu'ah (iChr.7.27)- Jehovah, (i) The name Jnvii — usually spelt JeHoVaH — was first revealed in its full sense to Israel through Moses (Ex. 6. 2, 3). It appears in the records of a time when the whole earth had one language (Gen. 11. i), and has not been traced with certainty to any source be- yond Heb. among the divers languages of man- kind. How it sounded on the lips of Eve, or of Lamech the father of Noah (Gen. 4.1,6.29), we cannot say. Nor can we tell how names significant in the universal language of man- kind have been made equally significant in Heb., a member of tlie Semitic family of Babel- tongues. This shows the skill of the author of the early chapters of Genesis, and is the JEHOVAH first notable fact concerning the name Jhvh in the Bible. When God revealed Himself (Ex.3. 14,15) to Moses in Horeb as God of the fathers of Israel, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and Moses asked His name, the answer was, " What I am, I am " {'eJiye 'dsher 'ehye). " Say, I am \_'ehyi] hath sent me unto you ; and His name is Jhvh, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob." The full sense of Jhvh and the attributes it conveys were proclaimed in Ex. 34. 6, 7. "For His Name's sake" is a plea based on this proclamation. To Israel Jhvh was to be His "}Jame for ever," His "me- morial to all generations." But it was not to be the Name of God for all His servants. "The Lord Jhvh shall slay thee, and call His servants by another Name . . . the God of Amen, the true God " (Is.66.15,16. Our R.V. refers us to aCor.l.zo, Rev. 3. 14, where our Lord calls Himself the Amen). Thus the name Jhvh and its disuse are alike revealed in O.T. (2) The disuse of the name Jhvh and the use of Lord or God (in capitals) in its stead. So completely has the name Jhvh been disused, that its vowels and pronuncia- tion have long been in dispute. The O.T. was \vritten by its authors without vowels, as the Talmud is now. But in order to preserve the traditional reading of the Heb. Scriptures, the Jews (300-700 A.D.) added vowels, or points, as they are called, to every word ; and so the Heb. Bible, as we have it, appears. Thus the Scriptures of the O.T. answer the question, " What is xvritten in the law ? " with con- sonants only. But " How readest thou ? " If we follow our present Heb. Bible, we read according to the tradition of the " wise men and scribes " of the nation to whom " were intrusted the oracles of God." They did not put vowels to those " oracles," to declare how they read them, until after their rejection of Jesus. But when we come to the name Jhvh and ask, " How readest thou ?" the Jew re- plies " We do not read that name. We cannot tell how it was read by Moses and the prophets. We read Adonai (Eng. Lord) or Elohim (Eng. God) instead of Jhvh." The Jews, taking Lev. 24.16 to mean, " He that pointeth or pointedly expresseth the name shall be put to death," have no certain vowels for the name Jhvh. It was pronounced on the Day of Atonement in the Holy of Holies by the high-priest ; but they have now no high-priest to pronounce the name. In their Bibles they print Jhvh with the vowels of Adonai or Elohim, which- ever they intend to read. This Jewish use has affected all translations of O.T. into Gentile tongues. In the LXX. — the oldest published version — K^ptos (= 'ddhondy, Lord) takes the place of Jhvh. In Eng. we use Lord or God, in capital letters. In our A.V. J ah is also translated Lord, as though it were Jhvh. (R.V. of O.T. where Lord is used for J ah, prints J ah in the marg.) In N.T., Lord is the usual Eng. for KvpLos or Becnrdrris, which are applied to God or to man in the sense of Master. But when Ps.llO.i is quoted in the gospel, we find Lord in capitals for Jhvh (Mt. 22.44, but not in R.V.). (3) The true spelling of Jhvh. It has been very generally held of late that the name should be Jdhdv^h, or Jah- JEHOVAH 389 veh, rather than Jehovah. Jahaveh (yahdwS) would be the third future of the causative form of the verb hdwd, an older form of hdyd, "to be," the verb of 'ehyi in Ex.3. 14. This verb, however, is not found in the causative form in O.T. Jahaveh would mean, "He will cause to be," rather than, " He is." But it seems safer to keep to the meaning of " 'ehyS 'dsher 'ehyS, What I am, I am," in our interpretation of the mnemonic Jhvh, than to introduce another derivation, which changes the force of the verb. Moreover the form Jahaveh is not sup- ported by the proper names compounded with Jhvh in O.T. Although the Jews have not put vowels to Jhvh, they have not failed to give them to its several syllables when they form part of another name. We find /e/ioshua and Joshua or Jeshua, /e/ioshaphat and Josha- phat, and many similar forms. Are there any in which the sacred name is represented by Jaha ? And where the syllable Jah appears at the end of a name in O.T., it takes the form Jahu. Elijah in 2K.2 is Y.\iyahu, Isaiah in ch. 1 is Yeshagh-vfl/iw ; and in the Ass^Tian Hezekiah's name has the ending -yahu or dhu. We have a true future of hdwd in the form y(hu in Eel 1.3. The long a in ydhil at the end of a word is the proper vowel in that position, and the syllables have a mean- ing. But what would be the meaning of Jdhd, with two short vowels ? (4) The meaning of Jhvh. The true meaning of 'ehy& 'dsher 'ehyS cannot be questioned. " What I am, I am." The Gk. version dwelt on the idea of being : iyio eifj.1 6 &v. The gospel shows this name on the lips of oiu: Saviour. " Before Abraham was, I am." " / am, be not afraid " (^701 et/ut)- " The Son of man, who is [6 we] in heaven." The Apoca- lypse expands the thought in " Grace, mercy, and peace from the Who is, and the was, and THE ONE TO COME" (airo [toO] 6 (hv Kai 6 -^v Kai 6 epx^Mfos). a sentence that defies grammar and outstrips thought. It embodies the " What I am, I am " of Ex.3, and reminds us that " What I am, I was," and " What I was, I shall be " are equally true transla- tions, and that the speaker is " the same yes- terday, and to-day, and for ever." Eternal being, unshaken fidelity, and measureless vi- tality are all implied. The Heb. 'ehye serves for present, future, and imperfect tense ; and the verb hdyd means both "to be" and "to become." On this the late Dr. John Duncan made this striking remark. " ' I am that I am ' is ' I will become what I will become ' ; Kai crap^ iy^fero, 'and He became flesh.' But He did not tell Moses that it would be flesh." Returning to the difficult sentence in Ex.6. 2,3, " Elohim said to Moses, I am Jhvh. And I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob by the name [i.e. in the Ught] of God Al- mighty ('el shadday), and by My name Jhvh [i.e. in the light of Jhvh ("What i am, lam")] I was not known to them " ; it seems to be rightly held that more than a mere acquaint- ance with the word Jhvh is intended by God's being " known " by that name. He Himself puts side by side with " What I am, I am," " the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob." These three lives em- braced ai5 years of ^ivifle self-revelatioa jft 390 JEHOZABAD Canaan. [Chronology.] In order to show Himself to the children of Israel, 215 years after the descent of Jacob their father into Egypt, as the same God, He promised (Ex.6 4) to restore them to the land of their fathers. Thus the story of yesterday both inspired the hopes of to-day, and shaped the forecast of to- morrow. " What I am, I am " became " the hope of Israel " in a practical way. But seeing that the fathers of Abraham and Nahor " served other gods," no such revelation as " What I am, I am " was possible in their case. There was no yesterday to fall back on. In the face of " Jehovah-jireh " (Gen. 22. 14), we cannot deny that the word Jehovah was known to the patriarchs. In the days of Enos men began to use (or misuse) the Name Jhvh (4.26). Eve, Lamech, Noah, Abraham, Sarah, Lot, Abraham's servant in Gen. 24, Laban and Bethuel, Isaac, Rebekah, Abime- lech and his friends, Jacob, Leah and Rachel, all used the name. But only three of these persons are mentioned as speaking to God as Jhvh, and only in five places. We are re- minded that it is one thing to be aware that an exalted personage has a certain name, an- other thing to understand its significance, and a third to address Him by it. It is written that once God spoke of Himself to Abraham as Jhvh. (See Gen. 18. 14 for this, and 15.2, 8,24.12,32.0,49.18 for the places where men spoke to Him by that name.) For the sup- posed distinction in different writers in the use of Jehovah and Elohim, see Elohim; E.xodus. The following combinations of the Name appear in O.T. (i) JEHOVAH-JIREH {==the Lord will see, or provide. Gen. 22. 14). Thus Abraham named " the place " in the land of Moriah where God did " provide Himself the lamb for burnt-offering." The sacred writer adds, "In the mount of Jhvh it will be provided." (2)JEH0VAH-R0PHEKA{ = [Iam]theLoRD thy healer, Ex. 15. 26), at Marah, when the Lord had shown Moses the tree which healed the bitter waters. (3) JEHOVAH-NISSI (= the Lord my banner, Ex.17. 15). Thus Moses named the altar which he built in Rephidim after the defeat of Amalek. The true meaning of the " banner " depends on the interpre- tation of the mysterious saving which follows, for which see J ah. (4) J EHOVAH-MEQAD- DESH ( = [/ am] the Lord sandifier), with pronoun "your," "his," "their," in Ex. 31. 3 and in Lev. and Ezk. in relation to Israel as a whole, and tf) their priests in particular. (^) JEHOVAH-SHALOM (= the Lord peace), Gideon's name for his altar in Ophrah, com- memorating His promise of life and peace (Iudg.6.24: cf. 2Th.3.i6). (6) JEHOVAH- TSIDKENU, (a) a prophetic title of the Messiah (Je.23.6), = the Lord our rip,hteottsncss, or justice. Both senses are clearly in the Heb. word, (h) a title of Jerusalem (Je.33.i6). (7) JEHOVAH-MAKKEH (=[/ am\ the Lord smiter, I'^zk.T.g), a name of judgment Ufxin the land of Israel. (8) JEHOVAH-SHAM M AH (= the Lord is there, lizk.48.35), the final name of Jerusalem in her glory. [c.h.w.] Jehozabad'. — 1. A Korahite Levitc, second son of Obed-edom, and one of the porters of the S. gate of the temple, and of the storehouse there ia the time of David (iCbr.36.4; c/. 13, JEHU 15)- — 2. A Benjamite, captain of 180,000 armed men, in the days of Jehoshaphat (2Chr. 17.18). — 3. Son of Shomer or Shimrith, a Moabitess ; one of two servants who conspired against and slew king Joash in his bed (2K.12. 21 ; 2Chr. 24.26). Jehozadak', son of the high-priest Seraiah (iChr.6.14,15) in the reign of Zedekiah. When his father was slain at Riblah, by order of Nebuchadnezzar, in the nth year of Zedekiah (2K. 25. 18,21), Jehozadak was led away captive to Babylon (iChr.6.i5). where he doubtless spent the remainder of his days. He was the father of Jeshua the high-priest — who with Zerubbabel headed the return from captivity — and ancestor of all his successors till the pontificate of Alcimus. His name appears as Jozadak in Ezr.3.2,8,5.2,10.i8, Ne.12.26; Josedech in A.V. of Hag. 1.1,12,14, 2.2,4, Zech.6.11; and Josedec in iEsd.5.5,48, 56,6.2,9.19, and Ecclus. 49.12. Jehu'. — 1. Founder of the 5th dynasty of the kingdom of Israel, and son of Jehoshaphat, son of Nimshi (2K.9.2). In his youth he had been one of the guards of Ahab. His first ap- pearance in history is when, with a comrade- in-arms, Bidkar, he rode behind Ahab on the fatal journey from Samaria to Jezreel, and heard the doom pronounced by Elijah against the murderer of Naboth (9.25). That he had already been personally known to Elijah may be gathered from the divine commission given to the prophet at Horeb (iK. 19. 16, 17). This injunction, for reasons unknown to us, was not fulfilled by Elijah, but by his successor Elisha. Jehu meantime, in the reigns of Ahaziah and Jehoram, had risen to importance. He was, under Jehoram, captain of the host in the siege of Ramoth-gilead. Whilst in the midst of the officers of the besieging army a youth, one of the sons of the prophets, suddenly entered (2K.9.11), and insisted on a private interview with Jehu. They retired into an inner cham- ber. The youth thereupon anointed Jehu as the appointed king of Israel and destroyer of the house of Ahab, rushed out of the house, and disapi^eared. On Jehu's return to his com- panions he was eagerly questioned as to the meaning of the mysterious visit of this " mad fellow." On learning the truth they were fired with enthusiasm, spread their mantles on the steps to make a temporary throne, blew the royal salute on their trumpets, and proclaimed Jehu king. He then cut off all communication between Ramoth-gilead and Jezreel, and set off with a band of horsemen, full speed, to the royal city. From the tower of Jezreel a watch- man saw the cloud of dust, and announced his coming (9.17). Messengers were sent, but not allowed to return, and it was not till he had almost reached the city, and was identified by the watchman, that alarm was taken. In answer to Jehoram's question, " Is it jieace, Jehu ? " Jehu's fierce denunciation of Jezebel revealed the full danger. Jehu seized his op- portunity, and shot Jehoram through the iieart (9.24). The body was thrown out on the fatal field, and whilst his soldiers pursued and killed the king of Judah at Bcth-haggan (A.V. the garden-house), possibly Jenin, a village in the plain of Esdraelon, Jehu himself ad- vanced to the gates of Jezreel aiid fultiUcd the PLATE XVII -i*- P- 390] THE BLACK OBELISK. On this are recorded the campaigns of Shalmaneser IL, with a sculpture of the embassy of Jehu (second from top on left). (Brit. Mus., showing two of the four sides.) JEHUBBAH divine threatening on Jezebel also. He then entered on a work of extermination hitherto unparalleled in the history of Israel. All the descendants of Ahab that remained in Jezreel, together with the officers of the court, and hierarchy of Astarte, were swept away. His next step was to secure Samaria. Every stage of his progress was marked with blood. At the gates of Jezreel he found the heads of seventy princes of the house of Ahab, ranged in two heaps. Next, at " the shearing-house " (or Beth-eked) between Jezreel and Samaria he encountered forty-two sons or nephews (10. 12-14) of the late king of Judah. These also were put to the sword at the fatal well. As he drove on he encountered Jehonadab, son of Rechab. He took him into his chariot, and they concocted their scheme as they entered Samaria (2K. 10. 15, 16). The Baal worshippers were collected into the temple at Samaria raised by Ahab (1K.I6.32), and there massa- cred to a man by eighty trusted guards (2K.IO. 18-28). The remaining 27 years of Jehu's long reign are passed over in a few words from which we see that he did not destroy the calf- worship of Jeroboam, and that the trans- Jordanic tribes suffered much from the ravages of Hazael (10. 29-33). He was buried in state in Samaria, and was succeeded by his son Jehoahaz (10.35). He is the first of the Israel- ite kings whose name appears in the Assyrian monuments. The obelisk of black marble from Nimrud (see illustration), showing the tribute of various nations, gives an account of the victories of Shalmaneser II. between 859 and 828 B.C. In the second row of designs is the picture which is inscribed " Tribute of Yahua, son of Humrt \Omri ; perhaps by a clerical error of one stroke for Ntiumsai = Nimshi] : objects of silver, gold, a gold cup, gold vessels, gold buckets, lead, a staff for the king's hand, and sceptres I received." Shalmaneser stands holding a cup, and two attendants behind hold a sunshade, and a bow. Two other Assyrians are bringing Jehu (or his ambassador) who kisses the ground. He wears a cap like that of later Phrygians. The tribute-bearers have the same cap, and shoes with curled toes (while the Assyrians wear sandals) ; they bear the objects mentioned in the text. The signs of the gods Assur and Istar are shown above the kneeling ambassador. This event occurred c. 840 B.C. The monument is also remarkable for its representation of Indian animals — the elephant, rhinoceros, apes, and the Bactrian hound and camel. [Tarshish.] Cuneif. In- scrip, and Old Test. i. p. 179, 2nd ed. ; Kittel, Hist, of Hebrews ; Driver, Lit. of O.T. ; Stade, Zeitschrift fiir die A .T.Weissenschaft {188$). — 2. Jehu, son of Hanani ; a prophet of Judah, but whose ministrations were chiefly directed to Israel. His father was probably the seer who attacked Asa (2Chr.l6.7). He denounced Baasha (iK.16.i,7), and, after an interval of 30 years, Jehoshaphat's alliance with Ahab (2Chr. 19.2,3). He survived Jehoshaphat and wrote hisUfe (20.34). — 3. Amanof Judah of the house ofHezron (iChr.2.38). — 4. ASimeonite, sonof Josibiah (4.35). — 5. One of David's heroes who joined him at Ziklag (12. 3). [h.c.b.] * Jehubbah', a man of Asher ; son of Shamer or Shomer (iChr.7.34). JEPHTHAH 391 Jehucal', son of Shelemiah ; one of two persons sent by king Zedekiah to Jeremiah, to entreat his prayers (Je.37.3). Jehud', one of the towns of Dan (Jos. 19. 45 ), now el Yehiidiyeh, a village 8 miles E. of Joppa. In the list of Shishak's conquests it is called Ynda-malek, or " royal Jehud." [c.r.c] Jehudi', son of Nethaniah ; a man sent by the princes of Jehoiakim's court to fetch Baruch to read Jeremiah's denunciation (Je. 36.14), and then by the king to fetch the roll itself and read it to him (21,23). Jehudijah' (iChr.4.i8). If a proper name at all, this should beHa-jehudijah (as in R.V. marg.), like Ham-melech, Hak-koz, etc. ; but it seems to be rather an appellative, " the Jewess " (as in R.V., and A.V. marg.). Ap- parently Mered married two wives — one a Jewess, the other an Egyptian, a daughter of Pharaoh ; but the passage is very confusing. Jehush', son of Eshek, a remote de- scendant of Saul (iChr.8-39). Jeiel'. — 1. A Reubenite chief (iChr.5.7). — 2. A Merarite Levite, one of the gate-keepers to the sacred tent (15. 18, 21), who played the psaltery and harp (I6.5) before the ark. — 3. A Gershonite Levite of the Bene-Asaph, forefather of Jahaziel, 4 (2O.14). — 4. The scribe who kept the roll-call of king Uzziah's irregular predatory warriors (26. 11). — 5. A Gershonite Levite of the Bene-Elizaphan, who assisted at the cleansing of the temple under Hezekiah (29.13). — 6. One of the chief Levites who gave offerings at the great Passover of Josiah (35.9). — 7. One of the Bene-Adonikam who returned with Ezra from Babylon (Ezr.8. 13)- — 8. A layman of the Bene-Nebo, who had put away his foreign wife (IO.43). Jekabzeel' (Ne.ll.25). [Kabzeel.] Jekameam', a Levite ; fourth son of Heb- ron, son of Kohath (iChr.23.i9,24.23). Jekamiah', son of Shallum, in the line of Ahlai, daughter of Sheshan (iChr.2.41). Jekuthiel', a man recorded in the geneal- ogies of Judah (iChr.4.i8) as the son of a cer- tain Ezra or Mered, by his Jewish wife (A.V. Jehudijah), and in his turn the father, or founder, of the town of Zanoah. Jemima', eldest of three daughters of Job, born amid his renewed prosperity (Job 42.14). Jemnaan'(Jth.2.28). No doubt Jabneel — generally called Jamnia by the Gk. writers — is intended. Jemuel' (Gen.46.io ; Ex.6.i5) = Nemuel, 2. Jeph'thae (Heb.ll.32), Gk. form of Jephthah. Jephthah' (the op poser ; Judg.ll.i-12.7), the son of a harlot. 11. i says, " Gilead begat Jephthah," but Gilead is a district. Perhaps he tried to establish his paternity and claim his portion before the elders of his tribe, and failed (Hastings, D.B.). He became an outlaw in the land of Tob — the unsettled region to N.E. — until the Ammonite oppres- sion. Then his people had to humble them- selves and receive him back as their chief. When diplomacy with Ammon failed, the Spirit of the Lord came upon him (cf. 3. 10, 6. 34), and he swept through E. Palestine, rousing the people to war. He defeated Ammon, but before the battle he devoted whoever first came out of his home when he returned in peace. 392 JEPHUNNE [Vow.] His daughter came out with timbrels and dances, " and she was his only child." He allowed her two months to bewail her virginity upon the mountains, and then " did with her according to his vow." The Ephraimltes came to assert themselves, and Jephthah, unlike Gideon (8.2), was scarcely conciliating. A battle took place; Ephraimwasdefcated. Jeph- thah seized the fords and slew all who could not pronounce Shibboleth {cf. Sicilian Vespers). He Judged Israel 6 years. 11. 12-28 is interpo- lated, but it can scarcely be a fraud of 6th cent, to establish the claim of Israel to Gad (Je.49.i), as Moore thinks, for this passage presupposes the existence of Num.21, which would make such a fraud unnecessary. The compiler, like Thucydides in similar cases, knew of the diplo- macy, but himself composed the message, or at any rate rewrote it, for ver. 26 implies his chronology. The references are to Moab rather than Ammon, to Chemosh rather than Milcom, but we do not know all the facts (cf. Jos.13.25). Wellhausen {Hist. 228-233) denies the existence of Jephthah, and treats this passage as an interpolation of very late date. Yet he relies on ver. 24 to prove that the Israelites were not monotheists ! This argument would prove Jeremiah (see 48.7) not a monotheist. Ver. 24 is an argumentum ad hominem. — Jephthah's Vow. Until the 12th cent. A.D. tliero was no doubt as to Jp]ihthah's vow and sacrifice. Then Kimchi, followed by other Rabbis, strove to show that the daughter was not sacrificed, but remained unmarried. The latest exponents of this view are, in Ger- many, Konig ; in England, Edersheim. But Jephthah certainly did not vow that the first person who came out of his house should be a virgin, and what he vowed he performed. In making his vow, he doubtless hoped for some lesser sacrifice. Had human sacrifices to Je- hovah been recognized, this story would not have been written, nor a mourning instituted to commemorate the event. Cooke's references (Hastings,/). S.) to 1Sam.i4.24f.45, 15. 33, 2Sam. 21.6-9 are not relevant, for retribution and not worship are implied. His other quotations have no reference to Jehovah worship, and E.x. 22.29 is explained 34.20, both texts being from the same source. — Ephraim's defeat and the slaughter at Jordan no doubt accounts for the weakness of this warlike tribe against Philistine aggression. Davidson, Expositor, 3rd series, vol. v.; Orr, Problem of O.T.; Robertson, Early Religion of Jsr. ; Hastings, D.B. {5 vols. 1904) ; Sayce, Early Hist, of Heb. ; Wellhausen, Hist, of Isr. ; and books given under Judgf.s. [u.m.s.] Jephunne' (Ecclus.46.7). [Jephtinneh, i.] Jephunneh'. — 1. Father of Caleb the spy and grandson of Kenaz [Kenezite] (Num. 13.6, etc. ; Jos. 14.6, etc. ; iChr.4.15, etc.). — 2. A descendant of Asher, and eldest son of Jether (iChr.7.38). Je'pah (month, or moon; Gen.lO.26 ; iChr. 1.20), fourth son of Joktan, and progenitor of a tribe in S. .\rabia. There is a place called Mahrah in E. Hadramaut. Warakh was a place of some importance in S. Arabia in the nth cent., and the name may preserve a tradition of Jorah. [''•J-i'--J-] Jerahmeer. — 1. First-born son of Hczron, JEREMIAH the son of Pharez ben-Judah (iChr.2.9,25fT.). [Caleb.] — 2. .\ Merarite Levite in the time of David (rChr.24.29 ; cf. 23.2i).— 3. Son of "Hammelech." [Malchi.\h, 8.] Jehoiakimbid him make Jeremiah and Baruch prisoners, " but the Lord hid them " (Je.36.26). Jepah'meelites, The (iSam.27.io), dwelt in the S. of Judah. [Jerahmeel, i.] Jep'echus (rEsd.5.22) = jERicHO. Je'ped 1. (iChr.l.2)=jARED, asR.V.— 2. A descendant of Judah; the "father" — i.e. the founder — of Gedor {iChr.4.i8). Jepemai', a layman of the Bene-Hashum, who put away his foreign wife (Ezr.lO.33). Jepemi'ah. Seven other men of the same name as the prophet (see next art.) are men- tioned in O.T. — 1. Jeremiah of l.ibnah, father of Hamutal, wife of Josiah (2K.23.31). — 2, 3, 4. Three warriors — two of the tribe of Gad — in David'sarmy (iChr.12.4,10,13). — 5. A "mighty man of valour " of the trans-Jordanic half-tribe of Manasseh (5.24).— 6. A priest, head of the second or third of the 2i courses which are apparently enumerated in Ne. 10 2-8,12. 1-21. This course, or its chief, took part in the dedi- cation of the wall of Jerusalem (I2.34). — 7. Father of Jaazaniah the Rechabite (Je.35.3). Jepemiah. Jeremiah was one of those men of whom what Hooker (Ecc. Pol. v. xlii. 5) said in tragic hyberbole of .\thanasius is true — he had " no friends but God and death." The only intelligible account of his lifelong per- sistence in the course he deliberately chose is that friendship with God is possible, and that this is a sufficient compensation for the want of friends in the world. The lesson of his brave opposing of the spirit of his time is a perpetual tonic for the Church. Jeremiah has written his autobiography, as no other prophet, in his book and in the Lamentations. Jeremiah's period of activity extended over five reigns and into the Captivity, covering at least 32 years : (i) the latter part of Josiah's reign, (2) the timesof Jehoahaz, J ehoiakim, the battle of Car- chemish, the Babylonian invasion, Jehoiachin and the first deportation or exile (597 e.g.), (3) the times of Zedekiah (597 e.g.) to the de- struction of Jerusalem, the siege of Jerusalem (end of Dec. 589), Jerusalem taken, Abib 10 (July), 387, (4) his after-life in Palestine and then in Egypt (after 586 e.g.). It is interesting to note that the rise of Greece fairlv syn- chronizes with the decay and extinction of Hebrew prophecv (Solon, 594 B.C. ; Herodotus, 478 B.C.). (i) The call to be a prophet came to him in Josiah's reign, and probably in the midst of an apparently complete religious reformation, following the equally great apostasy of Manasseh. He was a native of Anathoth, a priestly town with " suburbs," in Benjamin, where the high-priest Abiathar had been banished to his " fields " by Solomon (iK.2.26). He belonged to the priesthood (Je. 1. 1 ), and had private means. Here, about three- quarters of an hour's journey from Jerusalcni on a breezy highland with extensive views of the mountains N. and W. of the Jordan Valley and of the N. end of the Dead Sea. but out of sight of Jerusalem, in the midst of cornfields, fig-trees and olive-trees, traces of which still remain, his youth was spent (Buhl. p. i7.'>; Robinson, Pal, ij. 319; Surv- W, Pul. iii. ?)• JEREMIAH Chosen before birth for his office, he was here prepared for it. It is apparent, from the account of 2 K.22, that at the finding of the temple copy of the law neither he nor Zephaniah had risen to notice. When with striking words, fitted to encourage him in his weakness and friend- lessness, he was called to be a prophet, he was oppressed with a sense of youth and inexperience (Je.l.i-ii). His first utterances (3-6) were filled with a warmth of affectionate appeal, but he found the reforms of Josiah skin-deep and his opposition to the flatterers began. He points out that Judah had seen the end of her sister-kingdom of Israel some hundred years before, but turned not with her whole heart (3.i-ii). The priests and prophets were going the wrong road. They were covetous and comfortable liars. " They have healed the hurt of the daughters of my people slightly " {i.e. after a light and trivial sort, as a bad physician consulting his own ease rather than the recovery of the patient), "say- ing. Peace, peace, when there is no peace " (6.13,14). Yet the controversy is not so acute as later, and still there is hope. He has still Zephaniah and Habakkuk as fellow-workers. (2) But in the second period, when the cor- ruption of the nation increases, the message grows sterner and the activity of Jeremiah grows greater at the entry of the temple (7.2, 26.2), at the gate (17. 19), in the valley of Hinnom (19.2), in the streets of Jerusalem (11.6), at the entry of the palace (22.i,2), often with impressive symbolic action (13.1,19,27.2, 28.12). We see the confused outlines of a terrible conflict for his people. If we attempt to translate into modem conceptions the opposition, the calumny, the indignity and deadly peril, which fell upon the most sensitive of men " without a cause," we have the pictm"e of keen suffering. Himself a priest and prophet, he stands alone without sympathy amongst a numerous school of priests and prophets — as the Germans say, his Fach- genossen. First, at Anathoth, where he spent his brighter days, his old neighbours conspire against him (11. 21). They bid him, on pain of death, to prophesy no more. He can go there no longer. Then, in Jerusalem, the whole company of the prophets discount his call, oppose his message, and preach a more popular doctrine of peace and prosperity. " strengthen- ing the hands of evil doers " (23.14). The bolder of them resist him face to face. Soon they, with the priests, plot to get rid of him, and publicly arraign him for death for threatening Jerusalem and the temple with a desolation as great as that of Shiloh (7.14, 26.6,8,11). The princes and prominent laity (elders) stand his friends, quoting Micah's similar threatening in Hezekiah's days (26. 16- 20). Urijah, a solitary prophet, who dares to say the same things, is brought from Egypt, where he fled, is slain with the sword, and his body cast out with contempt to the graves of the common people (26.23), but at that time Ahikam saved Jeremiah from the people. The priestly prince-prefect of the temple, roused by what was probably Jeremiah's first utterance of unmitigated severity, beat him with rods and set him in the pillory at the N. gate of the temple for a day (20.i,2). He JEREMIAH 393 sends his denunciations, written out by his amanuensis Baruch, to king Jehoiakim, who contemptuously cuts the MS. with his pen-knife and throws it into the fire (36). And ever and anon, through all this storm and stress, we hear Jeremiah's bitter outcry to Jehovah against his lot as a prophet of evil (15. 10, 17), yet the words of Jehovah were " the joy and rejoicing " of his heart (15. 16). Still he identi- fies himself with his people. But later, after he has been publicly mocked as an evil-doer and the tragedy of his position weighs heavier, he says, " Thou didst entice me, and I was en- ticed " (20.7), and now the word of Jehovah has become " a burning fire shut up in my bones " which must out (2O.9). He is become a continual derision ; every one is mocking him. He hears nothing but the whispering of many, and fear is on every side. Every familiar friend, " every man of my peace " (see A.V. marg.), is perpetually watching for his stumb- ling (20.10). And in a momentary heart- break poiured out side by side with a strain of praise — which those who reprobate do not sufficiently regard — he curses the day of his birth (20.14-17). Yet still there is a flickering ray of hope. (3) But in the days of the feeble and vacillating Zedekiah (in 27. i read Zedekiah, see ver. 3), all hope is gone. He turns with the same iron resolution to counsel (by the direction of Jehovah) surrender to the Chaldeans in order to lessen the sorrow and ruin of his people. This he does publicly (27.12,13,38.1,2), and is pubUcly opposed by Hananiah, who prophesies deliverance within 2 years, and by a letter from Shemaiah from the Captivity (29.25) ; and he con- tinues his warnings from prison and chains, and the bitterness of death itself. The princes first detain him as a defaulter (37.15), and then seek his life as a traitor (38.4). None but a Cushite stranger and the vacillating king take his part (38,39.i5-i8). In his partial discovery of the truth as to his last historic interview with the king some have seen traces of cowardice (38.14-28). But such partial telling of the truth has been held blameless, when two lives are at stake. The incident of the legal purchase of property at Anathoth shows his tenacious faith (32). And when the destruction falls, in the Lamentations, too im- portant to be included in his prophecies and in general subordinate to the sorrows of his country, the old cry of heart-break dies down into trust. (4) The account of the final period is possibly, as much else may be, from the hand of his tried friend Baruch, or some other (40-44, with its appendix 52). The fall of Jerusalem struck off his chains and set him free to seek a closing peace under the protec- tion of Babylon. But the call of duty stays him. The faithful Gedaliah and his impover- ished countrymen at Mizpeh need him. His fickle countrymen murder Gedaliah by his side. They dissemble with him, carry him against his will and advice to Egypt, and there openly advocate and practise a return to idolatry. When last we hear of Jeremiah he is still delivering a rejected and unpopular message with undiminished vigour. The death, which tradition (first recorded in Tertullian) assigns to hirn, is the prqbable one of stoning 394 JEREMIAH, BOOK OF at their hands. Recognition came too late. Possibly about loo B.C., from a larger work of Jason of Cyrene, in aMaccabees are given the legends (found in the registers 2.i, in the writing 2.4) which grew up round Jeremiah. He hides the tabernacle, the ark, and the altar in Sinai till the times of the Messiah. " With gray hairs and exceeding glorious " he gives J udas the Maccabec a sword, and is introduced by Onias the high-priest as " the lover of the brethren, who prayeth much for the people and the holy city, Jeremias the prophet of God " (2Mac. 15. 13-16). Philo, an early contempor- ary of our Lord, apparently alludes to him only of all the prophets, and sets him equal with Moses {De Cherub. § 14). Josephus reconciles him with Ezekiel {10 Ant. vii. 2). And that Jesus of Nazareth was thought by some to be Jeremiah (Mt.l6.14) points the observed like- ness, and shows him indeed the prototype and forerunner of the Messiah, which, together with Isaiah, the Jews believed him to be. Koberle, Jeremia (Stuttgart) ; Jeremiah, in Stanley's Lect. Savonarola, Sorroxv and Hope {S.V .CVi..), gives a not unworthy parallel. [f.e.s.] Jepemiah, Book of. (i) History of the Text. As with regard to the man, so with regard to the work, there has been a great reversal of opinion. It is well known that the LXX. shows more variation here than else- where. It seems to witness to the fortunes of two Hebrew originals, one Egyptian, the other Babylonian. Scholz seems to have made out a good case for the opinion that the additions, which make the Heb. longer than the LXX., are the work of expounders and readers in the synagogue. They indicate, indeed, the early study and use of the book (Scholz, p. 218), possibly in Babylon (of. Dan. 9. 2 and the in- fluence upon P>,ckiel), while the Hebrew of the original was still a living language. Many other small divergences arose in time, without intention, in the two texts. The nine foreign prophecies probably originally stood (as in the LXX.), after 25.1.3. Becoming in time less interesting to the Hebrews, they were in Pales- tine editorially placed at the end, and their order changed from the original and more diffi- cult one preserved in the LXX., to correspond generally with the mention of the nations from S. to N. in 25.19-27. By this transposition, as Scholz says (p. 214), the great thought that Israel did not stand morally separate from the nations was obscured. The uiuhronological order of ch. 21 may have been adopted to con- tinue Pashur's history, that of 27,28 to con- tinue the thoughts of ch. 26. They are more or less the same in the LXX. The confusions of the LXX. copy, and perhaps of the Baby- lonian, possibly proceed from the troublous times from which the book emerges. MSS. of Jeremiah passed quickly to Babylon (see below). The connexion of the roll (86.2,32) with the rest is not clear. But the striking result of all this variation in the midst of essential e(]uivalence is the unique jiheno- menon that both parts of a scattered nation preserved with singular fidelity writings whicii form the most terrible indictment of their apostasy (Scholz. pp. 114, 120). This, and Dan. 9. 2, substantiate the genuineness of the prophecy of only 70 years of captivity (actu- JEREMIAH, BOOK OF ally 68), 25. 11, 12, 29. 10. Jeremiah and his writings arc all that survives from the de- struction of Jerusalem, and from them alone do we derive the picture of the political and religious conditions which immediately pre- ceded it. In some MSS. Jeremiah stood first of all the prophets. (2) Contents. 1-6 is gener- allv assigned to the time of Josiah ; 7-20 to that of jehoiakim; 21-38 (except 22-27, 35, and 36) to that of Zedekiah ; 39-44 is the history of the fall of Jerusalem and after ; 45 is the advice to Baruch on the occasion of his writing the roll of 36, placed at the end (both in LXX. and Heb.) possibly as giving in ver. 4 the moral and meaning of the commencement (l.io). The misplaced chapters, 46-51 (see above), contain the foreign prophecies ; 52 is an historical ap- pendix referring to Zedekiah and the end of the kingdom. The hand of Baruch may well have been employed both in the writing and in the editing, so that with some truth the book may be regarded as Baruch's " memorabilia " ; but it cannot be entirely so, as in 30.2,36.32,51.59- 64 we have proof of Jeremiah's personal ac- tivity. The general message of the whole is that reliance on Egypt is false (37.3-1 1) ; fall before Babylon is certain ; yet neither chastening nor annihilation is the [purpose of Jehovah ^27. 11,30.11,31). Messianic prophecies, occurring in the midst of threatening, are 3.14,23.5-8, 30.4-11,31,33. It is strangelv asserted that the Messianic idea in Jeremiah is less personal and characteristic. It is rather that allusions to it are brief and few. Times of boastful corruption are not fitted for emphasizing and multiplying hopes ca]iable of misconstruction. The allusions theniselves arc to a person well known — David's righteous scion, the well- known king reigning and prospering (23.5, 33.15), a second David raised up (30. o), the divine shepherd (31. 10), with good shepherds under him (23.4). What is characteristic of Jeremiah, in a time of tremendous change and moral apostasy, is that he adch that the Mes- sianic deliverance will be so great as to con- stitute a new covenant (31. 31) and to cause ark and passover to fall into oblivion (3. 16, 23.7), and that its essential feature will be moral renewal (31. 31-34). The new name "Jehovah is our Righteousness " (23.6) equates with Mt.l.2i. Je.7.22 has been taken to in- dicate that the Levitical law was not yet written ; but it really emphasizes an already- existing fact, as well as a prophetic common- place. God's marriage and covenant with Israel were moral and spiritual. Sacrifice, common to all nations, was merely Levitically regulated. The book of Jeremiah im]ilies that tiiere was plentv of heartless sacrifice and ritually correct lip-service. The allusions to earlier literature (by no means specially to Deut.), which liave been analyzed by Stanley Leathes (Law in Prophets), would in the case of any other literature be considered amply to substantiate its pre-existence. (3) Rela- tion to Other Prophets. Jeremiah uses some of Isaiah's figures — c.t;. the vine(2.2i), the cup of trembling (25.15), going up to Zion (31.6), my servant Jacob (30. 10), and the words of other prophets, especially Obadiah in ch. 49. Ezekiel exiiandsthe ideasof Jeremiah — f./j. the allegory of the two sisters (3.7; Ezk.23), the future union JEREMIAH, BOOK OF of Israel and Judah (33.7; Ezk.37. 15-28), the " sour grapes " proverb (31. 29 ; Ezk.18), the dry bones (8.1-5 ; Ezk.37. 1-14), the woe of the shepherds (23.1-4; Ezk.34) — and has many verbal and material resemblances (see Redpath, Ezek. xxiv). Daniel (9.2) is recorded as prayer- fully studying the prophecy of the 70 years. These points probably argue close intercourse and quick transmission of MSS. (Je. 29. 1,25, 51. 60-64) between Jerusalem and the Captivity, or they possibly belong to the commonplaces of the prophets. (4) Style. " The style of Jeremiah is much less purethanthat of Isaiah," says Renan (Histoire des langues semitiques, p. 132) ; yet it is " not without certain charms of its own, not destitute of noble and liberal ideas " (De Wette, Introduction, §220); " simple, easy, rustic, but most profound in the majesty of his thoughts, and equal in thought to the best " (Jerome, Commentary). He turns from politics to nature and to Jehovah the Creator and Source of all. " How note- worthy is his poetic and inspired sense of nature ! The roaring sea, the hot desert wind, the flight of birds of passage ; the art of fowler, reaper, ploughman, shepherd ; the maid rejoicing in the dance, the bride who can- not forget her adornment ; the sound of the mill, the light of the lamp, the children gather- ing wood, in the streets, fatherless, the Bedouin lurking in the desert, the hind, the lion, the spotted panther, the shy wild ass, — these are for him the picture and parable of eternal things. He gives us poetry, even aesthetically considered, of the finest " (Koberle, p. 13, slightly altered). Jeremiah's language is the language of his time, and is tinged with Aramaic (see list, De Wette, § 220, p. 424). The Aramaic verse (lO.ii) is possibly a short, emphatic proclamation to the neighbouring nations in a suitable Semitic dialect. Yet it is strange, if so, that the foreign prophecies should be, of all, the most vigorous Hebrew. But his book is a work of genius and true pathos, and his symbolic actions are often forcible. From Josephus to Lowth, Ley, Sievers, Cornill, Giesbrecht, and others, the writings of Jeremiah, like Hebrew poetry in general, have been seen to have a certain metre or form, arising from the rising and sinking of the tone. Jeremiah's qind-raetre (Ley's penta- meter of elegy, 3 + 2) is the most constant (oc- curring both in Je. and Lam.) ; and is found in poems of a different kind, e.g. Ps.l9.8f. (Baudis- sin). But since, in Jeremiah and elsewhere, the general application of any strict rule in- volves unwarrantable changes of the text, and since the distinction between poetic prose and poetic metre is difficult to draw, it is perhaps better to regard the metre as arising freely, almost unconsciously, from the differing lengths of the parallelism — longest in epic, shortest in elegy. In Orelli's Jeremiah (pp. 11, 12) there seems to be the best and most recent account of this question. There is a similar fluidity sometimes observable in strict gram- matical form. Text : Kittel's Heb. Bible ; Scholz, Der Masorethische Text tind die LXX. Uebersetzung (Regensburg) ; Giesbrecht, Jere- mias Metric (unpointed Heb., to show metre) (Gottingen). Comm. : Dean Payne Smith in Speaker's Commentdry (very capable) ; The JERIAH 395 Pulpit Commentary ; Spence and Exell, Gies- brecht, Hitzig, Ewald, Orelli in Strack-Zockler (3rd ed. — good) ; Duhm in Marti, Freiburg, Driver. [f.e.s.] Jepeml'as. — 1. The Gk. form of the name of Jeremiah the prophet (Ecclus.49.6 ; 2Mac. 15.14,15 ; Mt.l6.14). — 2. Given in iEsd.9.34, as one of the Bene-Maani ( = Bani) who put away his foreign wife. Perhaps transferred from ver. 33 (c/. Ezr.lO.34), and =Jeremai. Jepemiel' (Hieremihel, leremiel, God [El] hurls • cf. Jeremiah, or perhaps God sets [i.e. appoints] ; cf. Dan.7.9 and dv ira^ev in Gk. of Eth. En. xx. 7) only occurs in 2Esd. 4.38, A.V. marg., R.V. (A.V. text, Uriel). He there answers the questions of the righteous dead. He apparently = Ramiel, Apoc. Bar. Iv. 3, Ixiii. 6, who presides over the visions ; Remiel, Eth. En. xx. 7 (Gk.) ; cf. Orac. Sib. ii. 215-217. [a.l.w.] Jepemoth'. — 1. A Benjamite chief (iChr. 8.14). — 2. A Merarite Levite, youngest son of Mushi (23.23). — 3. Son of Heman ; head of the 15th course of musicians (25.22). — 4. One of the sons of Elam, and — 5. Of Zattu, who had taken strange wives (Ezr.lO.26,27). Jep'emy (iEsd.l.28,etc.,2.i ; 2Esd.2.i8 ; 2Mac.2.i,5,7; Mt. 2. 17,27.9) = Jeremiah, the prophet. Jeremy, Bpistle of. In Gk. MSS. this epistle usually follows Lamentations, but in the S>T., Lat., and A.V. it is reckoned as Ba.6 ; both being regarded as supplements to Jere- miah, under whose name it is quoted by Ter- tullian, Cyprian, and others. There is little doubt that Gk. was the original language ; Hoberg, however, still deems it a translation from Heb. Quite a different line is taken from that of Jeremiah's real letter to the cap- tives (Je.29), and ver. 3 conflicts with Je.29.io. It seems rather that an expansion of IO.1-15 is attempted. Jeremiah purports to ^^Tite to the captives starting for Babylon to warn them against the folly of the idolatry they would there see. The weapon of ridicule is freely employed. In repellent colours, with a view of counteracting its enticements, heathen worship is depicted as contemptible. The helplessness and uselessness of idols are set forth in detail, with a recurring assertion that they are not real deities ; not even, like ordinary things, serving the purposes for which they are designed {vv. 59- 63). After the commencement, the epistolary character of the piece is not very apparent, and it ends rather flatly by stating that the lot of just men with no idols is to be preferred. A tacit contrast to the worship of the God of Israel underlies the whole ; but it may be questioned whether the tone is well adapted to those who had already fallen into idolatry before the Exile. The only trace of prophecy is in vv. 50,51, where an abandonment of idols is foretold. Ver. 22 is interesting as contain- ing the sole Biblical mention of cats. [Cat.] The indications are insufficient to fix a precise date, the reference in 2Mac.2.2 to vv. 4,5, being very uncertain ; but 100 B.C. may be named as approximate. For bibliography see Baruch, Book of. [w.h.d.] Jepiah', a Kohathite Levite, chief of the house of Hebron in the tinie of David (iChr. 23.19,24.23). 39G JERIBAI Jeplbal', sou of llliKiau ; named amuiig tlic licrocs of David's guard in 1Ci1r.ll.46. Jericho (1 let). y'rifiO, " swcct-sniclling "), liiii; l\u: .•Vral). er Rika, at tlio niodorn site of Jciiclio. Till! termination in Van siiows aa old Canaanite dialect, preserving tlie nom- inative case ending. Jericho is noticed in .l"; chapters of O.T., 5 of Apoc, and 6 of N.T. The name occurs 12 times between Num.22.i and Dent. 34. \ as tiiat of a city near the Jordan. In Dent. 34.3 tlw; lleh. speaks of " the ktkkdr of the hitfalh y'rihu, the city of palm-trees " (cl. Jndg.l.if),3.i ? ; 2Chr.28.15). It was a royal Canaanite city (Jos.2.3,12.()) with walls (8.20), and had water near it (I6.1) : probably it was a trading centre having an inn. Such inns were kept by women, but not regarded as res|)cct- able places, c. 2100 n.c, as noticiul in the laws of Hannnurabi (Nos. 108-110). This agrees witirtiie view that Hahab (Jos.2.i) was an " iim-ke(!per." who received the spies as tra\ellers. Tiiougii tint curse on the man who should rebuild Jcrielio as a walled city with gates (6.2r) ; 1K.I6.3.1) is saiil to have been fulfilled six centuries after Joshua's time, it appears that the place was inhabited long before David's reign (Judg.3.i3 ; 2Sain.lO..'i ; iChr.19.5), and by [irophets in the reign of Ahaziah after it was rebuilt (2lv.2.s). The water was then bad till healed by Elisha (vv. 18,10), and came from a spring (ver. 21). Hence the modern site at er Riha cannot be that of O.T., which is believed to have been at the great mounds above 'Ain rs Sulldn, 3 miles W. of Gii.c.AL, which lies N. of er Riha, but is described as in the " cast border of Jericho" (Jos.4.ii)). The town lay in the "l)lains" (Uirbholh, ver. 13), but close to the foot of the "mountain" (2.i6) to which the spies escaped. It was in the lot of Benjamin (18. 21). the N. border ascending to the " slope of Jericho on the north" (ver. 12). .'\t Jericho king Zedekiah was ca|Uured by tlie Habylo- nians, after escaping from Jerusalem (2K.25.5 ; Jc. 39. 5,52.8) in 58S n.c. It was ri'iuhabited after the Captivity (l':/.r.2.3> ; Ne.3.2). The " rose of Jericho " (ICcdus. 24.14) is mentioned only in the (ik. age, when the city was held bv the (ireeks (iMac.9.50), c. 160 n.c, but afterwards by Simon, tlie brother of Judas Maccabaeus, who was murdered near it at Docus ('.'1;« ed DCik) in 135 "-c- (16. 11, 14.15)- Pompey, in 63 n.c, passed through Jericho, which was then famous for its palms and balsam. The palm gardens were irrigated, and Jos(^phus speaks also of the myrobalanum (the zaqqum tree of thi; ,\ral>s, from the berries of which oil is still made) and of the henna in its plains. These gardens were given by Antony to Cleopatra about 32 n.c. (14 Ant. iv. i; 15 Ant. iv. 2). Thecitv which Ib^od rebuilt was not on th(! site of the' old town, but was fortified by a citadc^l called Cvpros— probably at Beit Jubr, a small fort at the foot of the moun- tainsbythe Jerusaleniroad(i6 .'Ih/. v. 2, etc.). Jericho stood in the i)lain, but close to the mountains, while old Jericho was at the spring (4 Warx viii. 1-3). So also in 333 a.d. (Bordeaux Pilgrim) the later Jericho was li mil<-s from the old town at the spring. This Mer.jdian city -visited by our Lord— had a palace and a hippodrome [ly Ant. vi- 3, x. 6). JEROBOAM The sycomort; fig (Lu.l9.i,4) still grows near Jericho, and the date palms are noticed in the Mishna (Pesakhim iv. 8). The village er Riha is th(! Jericho of the Middle Ages, and between it and 'Ain es Sulldn there are still gardens and trees by the stream where the song of birds is heard. A single palm remains at the village, and a few stunted palm-trees farther N. [Naaran], while wheat, barley, maize, millet, aiul indigo are grown, with tobacco, cucumbers, figs, and vines. There were five aqueducts at various levels, from springs in the Qelt ravine, wateriiig the site of Herodian Jericho, and seven others ir- rigating the plain to N. These; were repaired in the Middle Ages, when sugar-cane was grown by Mosh^ms and I-Yanks ; but remains of the older Roman masonry are found in them. One aqueduct led to Cvpros, and an- other to a large tank near the Herodian town {Surv. W. Pal. iii. pj). 172, 173. 184, iqo, 205, 222, 224, 227). The climate of Jericho is tropical, and cultivation dei)ends entirely on artificial irrigation. See also Mt.2O.29 ; Mk.lO. 46; Lu. 10. 30, 18. 35. [c.R.c] Jerlel', a man of Issachar. one of the six heads of the house of ToLA at the census taken by l)a\i(l (iChr.7.2). Jenljah' (1Chr.26.31) = Jeriah. Jeplmoth'. — 1. Son or descendant of Bela (iChr.7.7). Perhaps the same as — 2, who joined David at Ziklag (12. 5). — 3. .-X son of Becher (7.8), and head of another Benjamite house. — 4. (24.30) - J laucMOTii, 2. — 5. (25.4) = jKKicMoru, 3. — 8. Son of Azriel, " prince " of Naphtali inthe reignof David (27. 10). — 7. Son, probably by a concubine, of David. Ills daughter Mahalath was one of the wives of Rcliobc >am ( 2Chr. 1 1 . 1 8 ). — 8. \\\ overseer of the tempie-olferings in Hezt^kiah's reign (31.13). Jeploth', one of i\w. elder Caleb's wives (i Chr.2.i8). The text is defecti%-e. [R.n.G.] Jeroboam (? may he plead the people's cause). — 1. TIk; first king of the divided king- dom of Israel ; son of an I'lihraimite named Nebat. When Soloiunii was constructing the fortifications of .Millo underneath the citadel of Zion, his sagacious eye discovered the strength and activity of the youthful Jero- boam, whom he accordingly a|ipointod super- intendent over the com|)ulsorv labour exacted from the tribe of ICiihraim (rK.ll.28), which was so distasteful a burden to the northern section of the kingdom. Jeroboam aspired to royal state, and at last was perceived by Solo- mon to have such designs, which were probably aided by the Krowiiig disatTection of l^ijliraim, as well as by the alienation of the jirophetic order from the lu)US(! of St)lomon. The at- tempts of Solomon to cut short Jeroboam's suspected designs occasioned the latter's flight. When leaving Jerusalem, he encountered .\\\'\- jah, the prophet of Sliiloh. The I. XX. has two accounts of this period, both evidently based upon Heb. originals, but only one of them agreeing substantially with the Masso- retic text. According to this latter account (which, however, is jirobably, where it stands, an inti-rpolation, as interrupting the narrative of Jerobo.im's rebellion), the prophet, who was dressed in a mnv outer garment, stripped it olT aad tore it into 12 pieces. He gave jo of these JEROBOAM to Jeroboam, with the assurance that, on con- dition of his obedience to God's laws, he would establish for him a kingdom and dynasty equal to that of David (iK. 11. 29-40). According to the other Gk. account the same parable is acted by Shemaiah the Enlamite with 10 pieces of a new, unwashed garment, but at Shechera, not Jerusalem, and in the time of Rehoboam, not Solomon. Jeroboam re- mained in Egypt till the death of Solomon (i K.II.40). It is at least doubtful whether his name should appear as heading the remon- strants at Shechem (1K.12.3), for cf. ver. 20. The revolt which ensued ended in his eleva- tion to the throne of the northern kingdom. The political disruption was thus complete. He now proceeded to impair the religious unity, a policy which tarnished his name and fame. He feared that the yearly pilgrimages to Jeru- salem would undo all the work which he effected, and accordingly took a bold step : jealous of the comparatively new sanctuary at Jerusalem — which, moreover, was geographi- cally unsuitable as a centre even for the un- divided kingdom — he provided the venerable holy places, Dan and Bethel, with golden figures of oxen, in imitation doubtless of the sacred figure at Heliopolis in Egypt, and so estab- lished a form of worship which continued till the end of the northern kingdom. At the same time he instituted new festivals and a new priesthood. It was while dedicating the altar at Bethel that a " man of God " from Judah is said to have suddenly appeared who denounced the altar, and foretold its dese- cration by Josiah and violent overthrow. The king, stretching out his hand to arrest the speaker, felt it withered and paralysed, and only at the prophet's prayer saw it restored, and acknowledged his divine mission. This story, together with the subsequent description of the fate of the man of God(iK.13), seems to have been inserted in the narrative at a time when his name and that of the " old prophet " of Bethel had been forgotten. It is doubtful to what exact date the story (iK.14) of the fatal Ulness of Jeroboam's infant son iDelongs. He sends his wife from Tirzah (or Zeredah) with gifts to inquire of Ahijah concerning him. In spite of her disguise, the blind prophet recog- nized her as she entered, and warned her that there was a doom on the house of Jeroboam not to be averted. The mother returned, and, as she came to the threshold of her door, the child died. Jeroboam does not seem to have been successful in military matters. He was constantly at war with the house of Judah. But the only act distinctly recorded in this connexion is a battle with Abijah (Abijam), son of Rehoboam (2Chr.i3.16ff.), in which he was defeated. He died in the 22nd year of his reign (2Chr.i3.20), which (according to the chronology of Assyrian inscriptions) corre- sponds to 915 B.C., and was buried in his an- cestral sepulchre (iK.14.2o). The sacred his- torian rightly sees in him the source of per- manent political and religious disaster (iK.12. 30,13.34 ; 2K.i7.21f.). — 2. Jeroboam II., son of Joash, and the fourth of the dynasty of Jehu, was the most prosperous of the kings of Israel. He repelled the S3Tian invaders, took their capital, Damascus (2K. 14.28 ; Am.l.3-5), JEUITSALEM 397 and recovered the whole of the ancient domin- ion from Hamath to the Dead Sea (2K.I4.25 ; Am. 6. 14). Ammon and Moab were reconquered (Am. 1.13, 2. iff.), and the trans-Jordanic tribes were restored to their territory (2K.I3.5 ; i Chr.5.17-22). But it was merely an outward restoration. Material prosperity and splen- dour in the way of religious ritual were com- bined with flagrant moral corruption. His rapacity, oppression of the poor, self-indul- gence, and perversion of justice are denounced by the prophet Amos, who was charged to foretell the destruction of Jeroboam and his house by the sword (Am. 7. 9. 17). [a.w.s.] Jepoham'. — 1. A Kohathite I.evite ; father of Elkanah and son of Elihu (iSam.l.i), Eliab (iChr.6.27), or Eliel (34).— 2. A Ben- jamite, and founder of a family of Bene-Jero- ham (8.27). Probably the same as — 3. Father (or progenitor) of Ibneiah(9.8 ; cf. 3,9). — 4. A descendant of Aaron, of the house of Immer ; son, or descendant, of Pashur and father of Adaiah (9.12); apparently mentioned again in Ne.ll.12. — 5. A man of Gedor, some of whose sons joined David at Ziklag (12. 7). — 6. A Danite, whose son or descendant Azareel was head of his tribe in the time of David (27.22). — 7. Father of AzARiAH, 13 (2Chr.23.i). Jepubba'al (he that striveth with Baal), the surname of Gideon, given him when he had destroyed the altar of Baal (J udg.6. 32,7.1, 8.29,9.1, etc. ; iSam.l2.ii). Jepubbe'sheth (he that striveth with shame — i.e. the idol), in 2Sam.ll.21, for Je- RUBBAAL. Jepuel', Wilderness of. Jahaziel the Levite told Jehoshaphat that he should en- counter here the hordes of Ammon, Moab, and the Mehunims (2Chr.2O.16). [Berachah.] Jepusalem. (i) The Name. The con- flict of authorities as to the Heb. derivation of the name of Jerusalem has been set at rest by the discovery of the Amarna cuneiform tab- lets, amongst which have been found letters from a governor of Jerusalem of a date near to that of the Heb. conquest of Palestine. These letters show that the name of the city in those days was Uru-Salim, " the city of Salim," or " the city of peace." This agrees with the rendering of Gesenius, "the abode of peace." Jerusalem may then be considered as tlie Heb. equivalent of the original early name, and it may be that in very early times the name was Salim only, as Jewish tradition places the Salim (Shalem) of Melchizedek at Jerusalem (Gen. 14. 18 ; Josephus, i Ant. x. 2; 6 Wars x. i). In Ps.76.2 we read " In Salem also was his covert, and his dwelling-place in Zion." The Canaanite inhabitants of Jerusalem, dur- ing the period before the Heb. occupation of Palestine, were called Jebusites, but the city itself was called Jerusalem (Judg.l.7-21 ; Jos. 15.I-I2 ; 2Sam.5.6). In two instances only is it called Jebus, and then it is also called Jeru- salem (Judg.l9.io ; iChr.ll.4,5). After the Roman occupation, Jerusalem received the name of Aelia Capitolina from Adrian 135 a.d., which name it retained for several hundred years. After the Moslem occupation, about the loth cent., it was called Beit el-Muqaddas, " the holy house," and its modern name is el- Quds esh-Sherif, "the holy, the noble," amongst 398 JERUSALEM the Moslems, and Yerusalim amongst the na- tive Christians, the old name in the Arab. form. — The Position. The Dome of the Rook is in lat. 31° 44' 45" N., long. 350 13' 23" E. The modern city, though not so extensive, oc- cupies generally the position held by ancient Jerusalem, and many existing remains in various parts of the city can be identified, with certainty, with records of the past. The outer wall of the Haram esh-Sherif (" the noble sanctuary"), except a portion to the N., is identical with the outer wall of the court of the Gentiles of the temple of Herod, and in the city itself may be found portions of the first wail of the Jewish kings, and part of the third wall built by or after king Agrippa : the posi- tion of the city of David, which is Zion, is known. The mountain range of Palestine, on which Jerusalem is situated, runs N. and S., parallel to the Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea, and Jerusalem itself is about 15 miles distant from the Jordan and 36 miles from Jaffa on the Mediterranean Sea. The range is from 2,500 to 3,000 ft. above the sea, at its highest points, and about 3,800 to 4,300 ft. above the Dead Sea. It is (about Jerusalem) com- posed of cretaceous limestone, with here and there a deposit of red clay on the surface. It is so intersected by deep valleys and ravines that roads N. and S. are only practicable along the backbone of the country, or along the lower portions of the range on either side. There were no roads, but only tracks, in early days ; and we first hear of chariots being used at Jerusalem in the time of king Solomon. Jerusalem stands on the broad crest of the range, on a spur running E., and all the valleys around it run into the Dead Sea ; but there are valleys running into the Mediterranean im- mediately W. of the high land N.W. of the city. The hill country of Judah and Benja- min (the boundary between which passes through Jerusalem) has few springs, and is not naturally fertile ; but it has been made highly fertile by the hand of men. The red loamy deposit and detritus from the mountain sides has, in past ages, been washed by the rains to the bottom of the deep valleys, and has lain in narrow and deep bands of tiie richest soil — capable of little cultivation where it lies, on account of the violent rush of water from above. By the labour of man this soil has been brought up, time after time, and stacked against the mountain sides in terraces, where it intercepts the annual rainfall and conducts it into the interstices of the niountaius — thus increasing the capacity of the springs, and preserving the valley land from sudden denu- dation by cloud bursts and storm waters ; and these terraces are capable of the highest cul- tivation. Tims almost all the hill country of Palestine mayljc fertile or barren, according to tiie condition of the people and the form of government. If the people are industrious, and encouraged to improve the land, in peace and security, it becomes at once a land flowing with milk and honey; i)ut if the terraces are allowed to fall into decay, the country relapses again into a condition only fit for nomadic tribes. In early days, when the country was only used for pastoral purposes, the natural springs were centres where the shepherds met JERTTSALEM together, with their flocks ; and as civilization increased, these centres became the sites of rising townships. If, therefore, we seek for the remains of the earliest cities of the past, we must search for springs of water, near which we may find them. In later days, when the battering-ram had come into perfected use, other considerations affected the sites of cities. Although Jerusalem is spoken of at the time of David as in two parts, there is no information that there was more than one spring of water; and we may look upon the rising ground over the fountain of the Virgin as undoubtedly the site of Zion, the city of David. From the account of the early attacks on Jerusalem by Judah and Benjamin, it would appear to have been inhabited by both tribes (Jos. 15. 63, 18. 28 ; Judg.l.2i) ; but the account of the boundary line (Jos.l5,18.i6) states that after passing En-rogel ("the Virgin's Fount") it passed along the valley of the son of Hinnom to the S. side of the Jebusite — thus placing Jerusalem with- in the border of Benjamin. Jewish traditions, however (Talmud, Zebakim liii. 2; Yoma xii. r), place the boundary S. of the inner court of the temple, E. and W., leaving Zion, the city of David, in Judah. This may have been owing to a rectification of the boundary due to the king of Judah having captured Zion. The spur on which J erusalem stands is an oblong, about 2,000 yds. from N. to S. and 1,000 yds. from E. to W., with deep ravines com- mencing on either side of the neck of the spur to N.W. at Scopus, and running round it and meeting near the pool of Siloam. The northern and southern portions of the oblong are not occupied by houses, so that the inhabited portion of Jerusalem is roughly speaking a square, with each side 1,000 yds. The whole oblong is separated into two distinct hills by a valley (the Tyropoeon) running nearly N. and S. The eastern hill has a small spur at- tached to it, part o{ which just comes within the city wall to N.E. The remainder of the eastern hill is narrow, and curves round the western hill in the shape of the " moon when she is gibbous" (5 Wars iv. i). The northern part is called Bezetha ; S. of this is the site of the citadel, or Antonia ; S. again is the site of the temple, the palace of Solomon, the city of David, until the pool of Siloam is reached. The hill on the W. is divided into two parts by a valley running E. and VV. from the present Jaffa (iate, into the Tyropoeon Valley. The southern portion is the upper city, and along its N. side runs the first wall built by David and Solomon. In the N. part is the second wall, the holy sepulchre, the third wall (of Agrippa), and the ground called " the camp of tiie .Assyrians." The N. side of Jeru- salem was the weak point after the invention of the i)attering-ram, as the ground was there sufficiently level for its use. — (2) The Annals of the city. In considering these, nothing strikes one so forcibly as the number and severity of the sieges which it underwent. During the 15 centuries which elapsed be- tween the conquest of Palestine by Joshua and the destruction of the temple by Titus, the city was besieged no fewer than 17 times, twice it was razed to the ground, and on two other occasions the walls were levelled. The X X UJ I- < _l JERUSALEM first siege mentioned in the Bible took place almost immediately after the death of Joshua, when Judah and Simeon fought against it and took it, but could not drive the Jebusites out — and they dwelt together in Jerusalem. The same is related of Benjamin (Judg. 1.8,2 1 ). For nearly four hundred years the Jebusites remained masters of the citadel, until David, who had reigned over Judah in Hebron for seven years, came against them, in his consolidation of the kingdom of Israel. The Jebusites (thinking that they were secure in their stronghold) scoffed at the army of Judah around them. Then David offered the post of chief captaincy of his army to the man who should get up by the gutter and smite the Jebusite. Joab succeeded in doing so. So David took thestronghold of Zion, which was then called "the city of David"; and he dwelt there, and built round about from Millo. This citadel, Zion, was probably placed on the eastern hill, near to the spring of water, the Virgin's Fountain, whence a secret passage cut in the rock leads on to the face of the hill above. David brought the ark into Zion, and (with the assistance of Hiram, king of Tyre) built his own house there. The site of the Temple was chosen at the threshing-floor of Araunah the Jebusite. David was permitted to make preparations for it, but the building of it was entrusted to his son Solomon. Solomon (who began to reign c. 1017 B.C.) was seven years building the temple, and he also built his own palace, and the house of the forest of Lebanon, and Millo, and the walls of Jerusalem, and three fenced cities. For this purpose he raised a levy of 30,000, employed month by month in Lebanon, and he had 150,000 labourers and hewers in the mountains ; and the officers over all numbered 3,300. Solomon's " ascent " to the temple aroused the astonishment of the queen of Sheba (iK.10.5). After the revolt of Israel from Rehoboam, Shishak, king of Egypt, came up against Jerusalem, and took away the treasures from the temple and from the king's house, and the shields of gold that Solomon had made. And Rehoboam made shields of brass in lieu, and gave them in charge of the guard at the door of the king's house. In the reign of Asa, the Cushite king Zerah of Ethiopia invaded Palestine with an enor- mous host, and threatened Jerusalem (c. 943 B.C.). Asa, trusting in God, went boldly out to meet them ; and they were smitten and the Ethiopians fled (aChr.li. 13). Then Asa, with Judah and Benjamin and with strangers from Israel, made a covenant to serve the Lord of their fathers, and to put away the idols, and renew the altar of God. But in three years (c. 940 B.C.) Asa put this covenant on one side, and took treasure out of the house of the Lord and of the king's house to secure the help of Benhadad, king of Ass^Tia, against Baasha, king of Israel. In the reign of Jehoram (c. 886 B.C.) Edomand Libnah revolted, and separated from Judah. The Philistines and Arabians came up against Jerusalem, sacked the king's house, and carried off all his sons except Ahaziah. Ahaziah was slain by Jehu at Samaria (c. 885 B.C.), and his mother (queen Athaliah) arose and slew all the seed-royal of the house of JERUSALEM 399 J udah, and usurped the throne of J udah. But Joash, the young child of Ahaziah, was saved from among the slain, and hidden in the temple for six years. In the seventh year there was a great ceremony in the temple, and the Levites came up around from all Judah, and the child Joash was proclaimed king, and made a cove- nant to do right ; and queen Athaliah was slain. In the reign of Amaziah (c. 839 b.c), Jehoash, king of Israel, marched on Jerusalem, and cap- tured Amaziah and all the gold and silver in the temple and in the king's house, and carried them back to Samaria, and he broke down the wall of Jerusalem from the gate of Ephraim to the inner gate, 400 cubits. Uzziah (c. 810 B.C.) repaired the walls of the city, and built towers at the Corner Gate, Valley Gate, and at the turning of the wall. He made engines, invented by cunning men, to be placed on the towers and bulwarks, to shoot arrows and great stones. He had 300,000 fighting men, and warred successfully against the Philistines and Arabians. Jotham (c. 756 B.C.) built the High Gate of the temple, and on Ophel, the citadel of the temple, he built much. In the reign of Hezekiah (726 b.c) the advance of the As- syrians made it necessary to make all prepara- tions for the defence of judah and Jerusalem. Shalmaneser IV. of Assyria took Samaria (721 B.C.), and carried Israel captive into Assyria, and re-peopled the country with people from Cuth (the Samaritans of after-times). Eight years after (713 b.c) Sennacherib, king of As- syria, took all the fenced cities of Judah, and laid Hezekiah under a heavy tribute of silver and gold, which had to be taken from the temple and the king's house. Three years after, Sennacherib sent a great host of Assyrians against J erusalem, with threats of taking j udah into captivity; but Hezekiah humbled himself in the house of the Lord, and asked advice of the prophet Isaiah. At this time occurred the disaster which overtook the Assyrian on the frontiers of Egypt, and Sennacherib and his host retired in haste to Assyria. Manasseh (698 B.C.) began his reign at 12 years of age, and reigned 55 3'ears, and did evil, making altars for Baalim, and worshipping the host of heaven. And the king of Assyria (677 b.c ) came against Judah, and carried away Manasseh captive to Babylon. But there he humbled him- self greatly before the Lord, and was brought to his kingdom at Jerusalem. Then he knew that the Lord was God. On his return he built a wall without the city of David, on the west side of Gihon, in the valley, even to the entering in at the Fish Gate, and compassed about Ophel, and raised it up a great height. After the death of Amon, Josiah (grandson of Manasseh) succeeded at 8 years of age (641 B.C.), and he reigned well 31 years. At the age of 16 he began to seek after God, and purged Judah and Jerusalem from the high places and groves. During his reign the law was dis- covered in the temple. And as Necho, king of Egypt, went through Palestine to fight against Charchemish by Euphrates, Josiah went out against him and was slain. The king of Egypt mulcted Judah of a heavy fine, and made Eliakim king (610 B.C.). Against him came Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon (607 e.g.), and carried him in fetters to Babylon with 400 JERTTSALEltf the vessels of the Lord's house. Jehoiachin (his son) reigned a few months, and was also carried to Babylon, and Zedekiah (his brother) was made king over Judah by the king of Ass>Tia (599 B.C.)- He rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar, and the king of the Chaldees came and slew the people, old and young, and took all the treasures of the house of God to Babylon, and burnt the house of God and also the palaces, and broke down the wall of Jeru- salem, and the land was left desolate and kept sabbath to fulfil 70 years. It is related (2 Mac. 2. 4) that the prophet Jeremiah carried away the ark, and the tabernacle, and the altar of incense, and hid them in a cave in mount Nebo, E. of Jordan. The 70 years' captivity are reckoned to commence from 606 b.c, when Judah became tributary to Babylon, in the JERUSALEM the first stone of the temple laid amid the joy ful acclamations of the multitude, but the tears of the old men who had seen the first house. Whilst the temple was being built, unexpected difficulties were caused by the Samaritans, who wished to unite in common worship with the Jews, and used their influence in the court of Persia to delay the advancement of the building. It was not till the second year of Darius (520 b.c) that the building of the temple was recommenced, and in 5 years it was completed (515 b.c). But there were absent the ark, the prophetic Urim and Thummim, the Shechinah (or divine presence), and the celestial fire on the altar. In the reign of Artaxerxes (457 b.c.) a second migration of Jews took place from Babylon to Jerusalem under Ezra, who was invested with reign of Jehoiakim. In 586 b.c the remnant of the Jews about Jerusalem fled to Egypt, and Jerusalem was left without inhabitants. In 574 B.C. the prophet Ezekiel, at the river Chebar, Babylonia, in a vision saw the restoration of the temple of Jerusalem, an account of which is given in the book of Ezekiel. In 561 b.c. (2K.25.27) Evil-mcrodach, king of Babylon, liftf;d up tlic head of Jehoiachin, king of Ju- dah, out of prison, and spake kindly to him, and gave him a daily allowance for the re- mainder of his life. In the first year of Cyrus, kingf)f l'ersia(536 b.c), who liad rcccntlycap- tured Babylon, the welcome edict was issued commanding the restoration of the exiled Hebrews to their native land. The number wliich assembled under Zerubbabcl, the de- scendant of th(!ir kings, the grandson of the hereditary high-priest, were 42,360. On their arrival they restored the worship of God, tlie altar was set up, the feasts re-established, and the powers of a governor to collect money and to establish magistrates and judges throughout Judaea. During the 12 years of his governor- ship he re-established the Jewish nation, but as yet the city of J crusalem was left open and defenceless. In tlic 20th year of .\rtaxcrxes (444 B.C.), the cup-bearer to the king, Nehe- miah, a man of Jewish descent, was suddenly made governor of J iidaca, with a commission to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem with all possible expeditii)n. Tliis was probably owing to Persia being bound to abandon the maritime towns, owing to an humiliating agreement con- cluded at Criidus witli the Atlienian admiral : Jerusalem, standing back from tiie coast, thus becoming a post of the utmost importance, in relation to the line of commimication with Egypt. The walls of Jerusalem were rebuilt with great expedition witliin the year, and after tiicir solemn dedication tlie temple services were reformed, and a separation was made SKETCH OF JERUSALEM AT THE TIME OF VESPASIAN. 70 A.D. References to nii/iibers upon plan. 1. East Gate. 2. Meah r-'^'^'lf/,, Hananeel-I^ mIH^V Fish Gate. Corner Gate. Ephraim Gate. ( Gate of Furnaces. ' ■ 1^ Hippicus. Valley Gate. / Dung Gate. 5- ( Bethso. 10. King's Garden. 11. Gate between two walls. 12. .Sepulchres of David. Ophlas of losephus. Priests and Nethi- JERUSALEM. Plan of site and walls of modern city. 'AttalMn p. 400] JERTJSALEM from the mixed multitude. After this, Ne- hemiah governed Judaea till 432 B.C. After the return of Nehemiah to Persia, affairs soon fell into disorder, and this was accentuated (409 B.C.) by the defection of Manasses, son of the high-priest, who married a daughter of Sanballat, and became high-priest of a rival temple on the mountain of Gerizim. During the wars between Greece and Persia the go- vernment of Jerusalem fell into the hands of the high-priests, until the time of Alexander the Great (332 b.c), who (after demohshing Tyre and Gaza) demanded the surrender of Jerusalem. But the anger of Alexander was averted by the timely action of Jaddua, the high-priest, who (with his priests) went forth to meet Alexander, and conferred with him. Alexander entered Jerusalem (it is said) and accorded to the Jews certain privileges. After the death of Alexander (323 b.c), Palestine was seized by Ptolemy Soter, king of Egypt, and many Jews were carried to Alexandria and settled there. In 3T4 b.c. Antigonus of Syria seized Palestine, and in 301 b.c it again reverted to Ptolemy. It was again seized (203 B.C.) by Antiochus of Syria. After many vicissitudes the infamous Antiochus Epiphanes (170 B.C.) captured the temple, plundered and polluted it, and the total extermination of the Jews was determined on. For this purpose an army was sent (168 b.c), which pillaged and burnt the city and destroyed the walls, and the temple was reconsecrated to Zeus Olympius (2Mac.6.2). Then arose the heroic family of the Maccabees (Hasmonaeans), of priestly descent, from Modin in Palestine, who (by their lofty patriotism, valoiur, sagacity, and self-devotion for many years) made the name of the Jews famous amongst nations. The battles of the Maccabees were fought on the outskirts of the country, and it was not until the retreat of Lysias, the lieutenant of An- tiochus Eupator, that they ventured to Jerusalem, where the temple was recon- secrated, and the worship of the Lord re- newed (165 B.C.). The citadel N. of the temple was still held by the soldiers of An- tiochus (the Macedonians) ; but otherwise Jerusalem was in the hands of the Maccabees, and it was strengthened and converted into a fortress by J udas Maccabaeus (iMac. ; 12 Ant.). In 161 B.C. Jonathan succeeded his brother, and in 141 b.c Simon, another brother, freed the Jews from foreign rule, and the Macedonian garrison evacuated the citadel to the N. of the temple. The rock on which it stood was then reduced in height (13 Ant. vi. 7), so that it did not dominate the temple, and a tower (the Baris) was built alongside the temple wall at the N.W. corner, where Simon and his followers resided (1Mac.i3.52). John Hyrcanus succeeded his father Simon, and he took fiurther steps to seciure the safety of the city. Then Antiochus Sidetes, king of Syria, besieged Jerusalem, but gave it up again, on obtaining hostages and a tribute. In 107 B.C. Aristobulus succeeded his father (John Hyrcanus), and ruled both as high- priest and as king (2Mac.l.io). His brother, Alexander Jannaeus (105 b.c), who succeeded him, was much engaged in wars outside Jeru- salem ; c. 95 B.C. the Pharisees and Sadducees JERXTSALEM 401 caused great disturbances with their animosi- ties, and the severity with which Alexander treated them made him so unpopular with both parties that they called in the aid of the king of Syria. After much lighting, Alex- ander was successful (13 Ant. xiv. 2), and crushed out all further opposition by his extreme severity, until 79 b.c when he died. His two sons (Hyrcanus and Aristobulus) quar- relled (69 B.C.). The former called in the assis- tance of Aretas, king of Damascus, and Aristo- bulus took refuge within the fortifications of the temple. Then Scamrus, the lieutenant of Pompey, interfered, and Pompey himself (65 B.C.) advanced from Damascus by way of Jericho on Jerusalem. Aristobulus went out to greet Pompey, with a large sum of money ; but he was thrown into chains, and Hyrcanus opened the city gates to Pompey. The ad- herents of Aristobulus in the temple resisted, and underwent a siege from the N. After an obstinate resistance for 3 months, Pompey became master of the temple, demolished the walls of the city, and laid a tribute on it, and continued Hyrcanus as high-priest, without the title of king (63 B.C.). Jerusalem became the seat of one of the five senates (or Sanhedrim) of the Jews, 56 b.c In 54 b.c the rapacious Crassus pillaged the temple, and took the con- tributions of the Jews throughout the world (10,000 talents). Herod, the son of Antipater, made his first appearance at Jerusalem, as procurator of Judaea, by order of the Senate ; but a Parthian army, with Antigonus, son of Aristobulus, suddenly appeared, outwitted Hyrcanus, overpowered Herod, and pro- claimed Antigonus king. In 3 months Herod returned from Rome as king of Judaea, and (39 B.C.) appeared before Jerusalem with a Roman army, under Silo, pitching his camp to N.W. of the city. The siege was raised, and again renewed with a larger army of over 50,000 men, and the city capitulated 36 b.c Herod put down the Hasmonaean (or Macca- baean) party with a firm hand. Cleopatra visited the city 34 b.c, and there was a serious earthquake 31 b.c Herod now encouraged foreign practices and usages amongst the Jews, and built a theatre. He built the Antonia, N. of the temple, and greatly strengthened Jerusalem by the three great towers Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne at the western end of the first wall, and there he also built his palace {i5Ant. viii. 5 ; 5 Wars iv. 3). At the Passover, 19 b.c, he announced to the people his intention of rebuilding the temple, and completed the work in 3 years. The great courts and cloisters, however, were not com- pleted till 9 B.C. He died 4 b.c, and was suc- ceeded by Archelaus. When Tiberius com- menced his reign a new procurator was sent to Jerusalem, Val. Gratus, who held office till 26 A.D., when he was replaced by Pontius Pilate till 35 a.d. In 40 a.d. P. Petronius arrived in Jerusalem, with an order to place a statue of Caligula in the temple ; but this was not carried out. With the accession of Claudius (41 a.d) came an edict of toleration of the Jews. Agrippa the tetrarch, grandson of Herod, began the building of a massive new city wall on the N. side of the city c. 43 a.d., to protect the buildings beyond the old second 26 402 JERUSALEM wall ; but he was not permitted to complete it, and it was continued subsequently with smaller stones (5 Wars iv. 2). His son (king Agrippa) built a palace in the upper city, near the Xystus, 56 A.D., and the temple courts were completed 64 A.D. Jewish discontent led to revolt against Rome (after the death of Agrippa), and Cestius Gallus, president of Syria, having retreated in panic from the walls of the city, it only remained for the emperor Vespasian to re-establish Roman power in Palestine. Titus, with his army, arrived before Jerusalem 70 A.D., on the day of the Passover ; on account of which festival Jerusalem was densely crowded with visitors, to the number of 600,000, according to Tacitus (Hist. v. 13). The Jewish army consisted of 8,400 Zealots, under John of Giscala and Eleazar, holding the temple courts and Antonia, with 10,000 Jews and 5,000 Idumeans under Simon Bar Gioras, who held the outer and second wall, his head- quarters being Herod's palace nearPhasaelus — in all about 24,000 men — quite sufficient, if they had been united under one head, to have held the very limited extent of the northern defences of Jerusalem against the Roman force brought against them. The army of Titus consisted of 4Jegions and auxiliaries, amount- ing to about 36,000 infantry and 4,000 cav- alry. After making his preliminary arrange- ments, Titus commenced the siege on April i, from which date the various advances are counted. On the 15th day the outer wall of Agrippa was taken from the W., and on the 2oth day the second wall was also taken from the W. Banks were now raised against the Antonia and against the first wall, close to the tower Hippicus. Against this latter point no progress was made, and the advance was made through the Antonia. The banks were raised by the Romans and destroyed by the Jews time after time, until the Antonia was taken by surprise on the 72nd day. In the meantime (on the 44th day) a wall of circumvallation was made round the city to cut off communications from the outside, and to prevent the escape of fugitives. The daily sacrifice failed on the 84th day. The attack was now made on the N. wall of the temple courts, and between the 89th and 05tli days the Jews and Romans alternately burnt the N. and W. cloister. On the 104th day the engines battered the inner temple courts, and on the 105th day the temple was burnt and the lower city plundered. On the 134th day the upper city was taken and burnt, and the order given for the destruction of the walls of Jerusalem. The captives taken amounted to 95,000 (6 Wars ix. 3), the city was left desolate, and the Roman army moved down to Caesarea. The number of persons killed during this siege is said by Josephus (ibid.) to have amounted to over one million. After the desolation of Jerusalem by Titus it disappears from history for 50 years, and little is known of it until the time of the pre- tended Messiah, Harcochcba (135 a.d.), who at the head of a large force of Jews revolted against Rome, and occupied the ruins of Jeru- salem. It required a strong force of Roman troops to liring the revolt to an end, and- it is stated that 580,000 Jews perished by the sword, and tliat Judaea was desolated. Jcru- jERXrSALEM salem emerged out of obscurity (136 a.d.) when the emperor Adrian gave it the name of Aelia Capitolina, and raised up a new city, where Jews were forbidden to enter under pain of death. The more peaceful Christians were permitted to establish themselves within the walls, and Aelia became the seat of a flourishing church and bishopric. — Christianity Estab- lished. At the beginning of the 4th cent., from motives of state policy, the Christian religion was established in the Roman empire, and Jerusalem became a centre of interest to the head of the Christian Church, the emperor. In the year 326 a.d. the empress Helena, with her son Constantine the Great, visited the Holy City. The shrine of 'Astarte, which occupied the site of the present Holy Sepulchre, was swept away, and history relates that (on excavating below the foundations of the shrine) the sites of the Crucifixion and of the Holy Sepulchre were found, and buildings were erected over them. The Jews were now permitted to visit Jerusalem once a year to lament over the site of the temple. In 362 a.d. the emperor Julian gave permission to the Jews to rebuild the temple, but they failed in doing so. During the 4th and 5th cents., Jerusalem was a centre of attraction for pil- grims, and after the Council of Chalcedon (451-453 a.d.) it became an independent patri- archate. In 529 A.D. the emperor Justinian founded a splendid church on the site of the present Mosque el-Aksa. In 614 a.d. the city was attacked and taken by the Persian mon- arch Chosroes II., and after a struggle of four- teen years the imperial arms were again vic- torious, and in 628 a.d. the emperor Heraclius entered Jerusalem. — The Moslems. Mohammed commenced his successful career of conquest 630 A.D., and at first was inclined to consider the Jewish shrine at Jerusalem as the Moslem qiblah (i.e. direction in which to turn for prayer) ; but owing to some defection of his Jewish followers he suddenly at the Qiblatein {c. 625 a.d.) veered round and made Mecca the qiblah. From time to time, how- ever, during conflicts between the Arabs and Syrians, Jerusalem has again been chosen as the temporary principal qiblah of the Moslem faith. During the reign of Heraclius, the suc- cessors of Mohammed continued to expand the Moslem empire, and the Khalif Omar, with his lieutenants, swept over Syria and Palestine, and in the year 637 a.d. captured Jerusalem from the patriarch Sophronius. Omar visited Jerusalem, and allowed the Christians various privileges and the use of their shrines, and he and his successors built the Qubbet es-Sakhrah (" the Dome of the Rock ")over the protruding stone which was judged to be the Holy Place of the Jewish worshij). This qubbeh is in the form of a magnificent waly. oratory, or tomb, after the Moslem conceptions, and exists to the present day. With the fall of the Abassides of Baghdad (969 a.d.), the city passed into the hands of the Fatiinate conqueror Mue?, whose capital was Cairo. Under the sway of this dynasty the Christians suffered very great privations and wrongs, which culminated in the reign of the mad khalif el-Hakim (loio a.d.), under whose orders the Holy Sepulchre was burnt down. It was, however, soon rebuilt. THE ENVIRONS OF JERUSALEM Scale of Miles Biblical names Bethlehem Modern names Beit Lahn* p. 402] JERTffSALEM In the year 1072 a.d. hordes of Turkomans, Kurds, and Seljuks swept over Palestine and occupied Jerusalem. — The Crusades. The suf- ferings of the Oriental Christians under the Seljuks so excited the sympathy of those of Western Eiurope (1094 a.d.), that Peter the Hermit, when he commenced to preach a cru- sade after his return from Palestine, had no difficulty in raising a rabble army, which marched through Europe into Asia but did not reach Palestine. Owing to the factions and want of cohesion of the Moslems, subse- quent armies of the Crusaders gained posses- sion of the Holy City, and held it with vary- ing success for about 100 years, until the time of Saladin, when they were compelled to withdraw (1187 a.d.). Jerusalem was nom- inally annexed to the kingdom of Sicily, 1277 A.D. It passed under the sway of the Ottoman sultan Selim I., whose successor Suleiman built the present wall, 1542 a.d. Mohammed 'Ali, pasha of Egypt, took pos- session in 1834 until the Fellahin rose up and seized it in 1840. After the bombardment of Acre it reverted to the sultan of Turkey. — (3) Topography. Waters of Jerusalem. The spur of the range on which the city stands gradually rises to N.W., and narrows until (at a distance of a mile from the city wall) it is only 200 yds. wide ; it then broadens out again, and continues as high land in the direction of Kuloniah and Lifta, where there is a strong fountain. It can be seen on reference to the geological section E. and W. through Jerusa- lem (Surv. W. Pal., "Geology "), that there can be no flow of water through the rocks into the spur on which Jerusalem is situated, except through the neck or narrow portion of the spur on N.W., as the strata are nearly horizontal : and any water finding its way towards Jeru- salem would flow down the sides of the sur- rounding valleys : moreover, the trend of the nearly horizontal strata E. and W. is some- what away from Jerusalem. Further, there are no geological faults or folds of the ground in the vicinity, and there are no indications which would lead to the supposition that there are any ducts or channels by which subter- ranean heat or other agencies could force water to the surface from below. We may arrive then at the conclusion that the supply of water to Jerusalem must have depended on : {a) the rainfall within a mile or two of the city, either collected in tanks or reservoirs, in natural wells, or issuing as springs on the sides of the valleys. And a contoured map will show that the only places where rain water can col- lect are at the Birket Mamilla and N. of the Damascus Gate, (b) Water brought in ducts along the surface of the ground, as has been done from 'Ain 'Atan and its neighbourhood, a distance of some 25 miles, but as the crow flies only 7 miles. Remains of some of the aqueducts are existing, and one is still in use. (c) Underground shafts and ducts cut in the rock below the surface, along the line of the narrow neck of spur to N.W., from the high ground in direction of Kulo- niah or Lifta. Of (c) we have at present no direct indication, but we have many infer- ences that the water was brought into the city in some manner from the N.W. In the time jEiltrSALEM 403 of Ahaz (741 B.C.) we have an account of the conduit of the upper pool in the highway of the fuller (Is. 7. 3). Again, we have the ac- count of the great host sent by the king of Assyria, against king Hezekiah (710 e.g.), camping by the conduit of the upper pool in the highway of the fuller's field (2K.I8.17; Is. 36. 2) ; and we know from Josephus that the traditional camping ground of the Assyrians was N.W. of the city, just within the third wall (5 Wars vii. 3). We have also the account of the precautions taken by king Hezekiah in order to confound the king of Assyria, who was coming against Jerusalem (726 and 710 B.C.). Hezekiah stopped the waters of the fountains which were without the city, and the brook which overflowed through the midst of the land (2Chr.32.3) ; for, he said, why should the king of Assjnria come here and find much water ? Again we are told that Hezekiah made a pool and a conduit (2K.2O.20); he gathered together the waters of the lower pool, and made a ditch between the two walls for the waters of the old pool (Is.22.9-11), and he stopped the upper watercourse of Gihon, and brought it straight down to the W. side of the city of David (2Chr.32.30). We have here two, if not three, distinct acts of king Heze- kiah, and they may be classified as follows : (i) The surface waters on the W. of the city, collected at the Birket Mamilla, which natur- ally flowed down the western valley of Jeru- salem, were diverted easterly, and brought into the city to N. of the first wall, and stored in the great pool outside the second wall (Amygdalon of Josephus), the present pool of Hezekiah. Whether there was any overflow from this down into the Tyropoeon Valley we have at present no evidence, (ii) The surface waters of the high ground N.W. of the city, which were brought into the city before the time of Heze- kiah by the conduit of the fuller's field, still continued to be brought in after he had con- cealed the other waters from the Assyrian — the remains of the conduit is to be found at various points in the Russian Hospice : it may not have been part of Hezekiah's work, (iii) The gathering of the waters N. of the Damas- cus Gate and bringing them into the temple by the surface duct now leading into the pool Struthion (at the Convent of the Sisters of Zion), N. of the Antonia, or by a subterranean channel through the royal caverns and under the Antonia. (iv ) The stopping of the upper water- course of Gihon, from the upper pool somewhere N.W. of the city, and bringing it down along the Tyropoeon Valley, instead of permitting it to overflow through the midst of the land. This water was probably led down to Siloam along the great rock-cut passage or aqueduct dis- covered under the marble pavement of the street W. of the city wall. Below the level of the Virgin's Fountain there is a far larger area from which waters can be collected about Jeru- salem : so that the waters issuing from Bir Eyub, and lower down the Kidron Valley, may have been voluminous in wet seasons. To carry these waters off, concealed from an enemy outside, secret ducts would be required ; and these were discovered and followed for about a mile down the valley below Bir Eyub in 1 869-1 870. The exact method by whick 404 JERtrSALEM the springs to the N. of the city were stopped, and the waters gathered together, must remain a matter of conjecture until the old ducts and tunnels are discovered ; but we have certain knowledge that in very early days such work was carried out not only in India and Syria, but also in Jerusalem itself. Witness the rock-cut passages up to Zion, and that leading from the Virgin's Fountain to Siloam. Also the extensive system of water ducts tunnelled through the rock to collect waters for the pools of Solomon, near Urtas. — The Citadel. The Akra (7; " \Kpa). In considering the topography of Jerusalem, too much stress must not be laid upon the assumption that the term Akra, with the definite article, means one particular spot throughout history. " The Akra " means nothing more than "the citadel " ; and the term "the citadel" may mean only the stronghold, or tower, or last resort of one particular portion of a fortress ; and in the siege of a large forti- fied place, several points in succession may become the citadel, or stronghold. There may have been citadels to different sections of Jeru- salem in the time of Josephus. At the close of the siege of Jerusalem he speaks of Titus having taken all Jerusalem except the upper city (6 Wars viii. 4), and that on bringing his banks against the walls of the upper city, the seditious retired into " the citadel " (the Akra), by which he clearly means the stronghold about Hippicus and the royal palace, in the upper city. Yet elsewhere he says that the citadel (the Akra) sustains the lower city on the eastern side (5 Wars iv. i) ; and again he states that the citadel, or city of David, was the Akra in the time of David (7 Ant. iii. r). Evidently Josephus spoke of " the Akra " as we should speak of " the citadel " at the pre- sent day. The traditional site of the Akra of Josephus, assuming that there was only one, JERUSALEM is on the hill immediately X. of the upper city, and W. of and nigh to the temple. This site has been accepted by many wTiters as the only solution of the topography under the cir- cumstances ; but the present writer is now satisfied that the term " the Akra " cannot be confined to one spot only, and that it changed with the times. At Jerusalem the term " the citadel " was first applied to the stronghold of Zion ; then, when the temple was built, and the rock N. of it was crowned with towers, that rock became " the citadel" ; when this rock was partially removed, the Baris, or tower attached to the N.W. of the temple court, became the citadel (1Mac.i3.52); then, again, the Antonia ; and lastly, when the temple was captured, the great towers about Hippicus in the upper city became the citadel.— T/it; Posi- [ tion of Zion. 2Sam.5.7 and iChr.ll.5 fix Zion j as the city of David, the castle or stronghold, [ the Akra captured by king David. Zion was ' a castle of some capacity, for David dwelt there, his wives lived there, and part of the place was sacred as the abode of the ark and place of worship of the people, and the royal sepulchres were nigh. The position of Zion is indicated by the position of the shaft on the hillside, S. of the temple, which leads down to the Virgin's Fountain. After the building of the temple by Solomon, there was a transfer of residences ; and Zion was no longer the place of worship, or the house of the king, or of his wives. The rock N. of the temple became the citadel, and it seems probable that the name of Zion and " the city of David " may gradu- ally have been transferred to this rock, Mount Zion "on the side of the N., the city of the great king" (Ps.48.2). Certainly in the time of the .Maccabees the rock N. of the temple was the city of David (iMac. 1.33,2.31,7.32,14.36), and the rock and the temple mount was Mount Zion (i Mac. 4. 37-60, 5.54,6.48,62, 7.33,10.11, 14.27)- — r/i<; Position of Millo. [MiLLO.] Whether the word Millo is derived from an archaic Jebusite word or from a Heb. root signifying a " filling," it is evi- dently used in the Bible to denote some ram- part, mound, or citadel in or about Jerusalem, but not necessarily the same work tliroughout all history. It appears to be used in the same sense as Ophel. a tumour or tower, but at a different period : and both words may have the signification of " the citadel " or stronghold. King David built round about Millo and in- ward (2Sam.5.o ; iChr.ll.H). Josephus (5 Wars iv.). in speaking of the first wall on the N. extending frt)m the tower Hipjiicus to the council house in the W. cloisters of the temple, states that it was built very strong, because David and Solomon and the following kings were very zealous about it. So strong it was in the time of tiie Romans, that Titus failed to make any impression ujion it with the batter- ing-ram (5 Wars ix. 2 ; 6 viii. i); and when he had captured the temple througli the .\ntonia he preferred to exert his engines on the F. side of the upper city, to attacking any further the N. wall. In the absence of every other clue, this N. wall and filling may have been the Millo of the time of David. The great works of Solomon were his house, the Millo, the walls of Jerusalem, and the walls of three fenced J Jim. £artbolnineTv erhaps near the Jaffa Gate, the wall then ran nearly due S. for 1,000 cubits (about 600 yds.), when it bent to E., at the Dung Gate, Bethso, or gate of the I'^ssenes (5 Wars iv. 2), and thence it continued to the Ft^untain Gate near the pool of Siloani, where were the steps lead- ing up to the city of David. The wall bent at the old pool, leaving it outside, and bent again at Siloani, so that here the two faces of the wall were opposite each other, with tiie pool be- tween ; and here was the gate between the two walls (2K.25.( ; Je.39.,i) and the king's gar- den. Then the wall i)ent round the swell of the eastern hill, by the stairs that go down by the city of David and tiie palace of Monobasus. It then went by the sepulchres of David (Ne.3. 16), and thence by the pool that was made to the house of the mighty. The two places last JERUSALEM mentioned are uncertain. The remainder of the description of the wall refers to the E. wall of the temple and the fortifications of the citadel. The armoury at the turning of the wall was probably on the citadel N. of the temple. The houses of the iiriests, the tower which lieth out near the court of the prison, Ophel, the residence of the Nethinims, the Horse Gate, Miphkad, were all E. and N.E. of the temple enclosure. — The Sepulchre of David. It was on Zion, the city of David — within the walls, because the high-priest H\Tcanus (when besieged by Antiochus) opened the sepulchre to get treasure. King Herod also opened the sepulchre, and is said to have placed at the mouth a marble monument (7 Ant. xv. 3 ; 13 \iii. 4 ; 16 vii. i). " His sepulchre is with us to this day" (Ac. 2. 29). It is said to have fallen in ruins at the time of Hadrian (Dion Cassius, Ixix. 14). The sepulchre is likely to be situated on the eastern slope of the hill, to the S. of the Virgin's Fountain. — Pools and Con- duits. The Birket es-Sultan, situated in the Wady Rababeh, on the W. side of the city, to the S. of the Jaffa Gate, is said to have been constructed as late as the 12th cent., and may be left out of account. The Birket Mamilla, the pool of Hezekiah, the pool of Siloani and old pool have already been referred to. The Birket Israil (on the N.E. of the Noble Sanctuary) is possibly " the pool that was made" (Ne.3. 16); but it has had extensive filling in all round it since early days. It stands in a deep ravine at the N.E. angle of the temple, and is probably the piscina prohatica, near the Sheep Gate. The pool Struthion (5 Wars xi. 4). situatedto the N. of the Antonia, is now a double arched tank under the Convent of the Sisters of Zion. The secret passage, Strato's tower, leading from the .Antonia to the temple, was discovered in 1867. The most ancient rock-cut passage is that leading from the city of David to the Virgin's Fount. In later days (probably in the time of king Heze- kiah, the waters of the Virgin's Fount were brought into the pool of Siloam by a tunnel cut in the rock, 1,700 ft. long. The other conduits to be alluded to are that under the vicarage of Christ Church, leading from David's Tower eastward, and the various channels bringing water from 1-Uam into Jeru- ?alem. — The Third Wall. This wall was com- menced by king .Agripiia the tetrarch in 43 a. d., and was so strong and formidable a defence, that when it was about 13 ft. in height, the work had to be suspended for fear of Claudius Caesar. It was completed at a later date with smaller stones (s Wars iv. 2). It probably oc- cu|>ied nearly tlie site of the present N. wall of Jerusalem ; but there are indications of a wall some yards further to the N.W. At the N.W. angle stood the octagonal tower Psephinus, where now stands Qal'at JAlud ((ioliath's Castle), on high ground running up towards Scojius, and just within the wall the site of the camp of the Assyrians. At the Damascus Gate are the remains of an old city gate, and to the v.. there is a deep cutting through Bezetha, and the entrance to the royal caverns. — The Royal Caverns. These caverns, f)r quarries, extend under a great part of the hill Bezetha, and the floor is above the level of the platform of the JERUSHA Noble Sanctuary. It is supposed that the stones for the building of the temple were quarried here, and brought to the temple by a rock-cut tunnel under the Antonia. The council house stood at the end of the N. wall, adjoining the temple cloisters; and at the same spot, close to the causeway (Wilson's Arch), stands the Mahkama, or seat of the cadi, at the present day. The Xystus, or gymnasium (Josephus, 2 Wars ix. 3), occupied a position under the cliff E. of the upper city, and between the causeway and Robinson's Arch. The palace of Agrippa II., overlooking the inner temple court, stood at the N.E. angle of the upper city, S. of the causeway and above the Xystus. — The Holy Sepulchre. The tradi- tional site of the Holy Sepulchre can be traced with certainty so far as the 4th cent. All evi- dence goes to prove that the present site is that which was recovered by the empress Helena and built over by Constantine. Euse- bius, bishop of Caesarea, who wrote 311-338 A.D., was living in Palestine at the time of the recovery of the Holy Sepulchre, and was present at the dedication of the church of the Resur- rection, 336 A.D. There can be no shadow of a doubt that the present site of the Holy Sepul- chre is the same as that recovered in 326 a.d. Beyond there can only be conjecture. The site is, so far as can be judged, outside the second wall of the Roman period. There is reason to suppose that there may have been some tra- dition amongst Christians concerning the true site : but all is conjecture. There is an enor- mous mass of literature on the subject ; but as yet there are no convincing arguments against the existing site, or in favour of the alternative sites which have been proposed N. of the city, and just beyond the third wall. [c.w.] Jepusha' (2K.15.33), Jerushah' (2 Chr.27.i), daughter of Zadok, and mother of Jotham, king of Judah. Jesaiah'. — 1. Son of Hananiah, and grandson of Zerubbabel (iChr.3.2i). — 2. A Benjamite, ancestor of Sallu (Ne.ll.7). Jeshaiah'. — 1. A temple-musician ; one of the six sons of Jeduthun (iChr.25.3,15). — 2. A Levite in the reign of David, descended from Moses (iChr.26.25). — 3. Son of Athaliah, 3, and leader of the Bene-Elam who returned with Ezra (Ezr.8.7). — 4. A Merarite who re- turned from captivity with Ezra (Ezr.8.19). Jeshanah', a town mentioned with Beth- el and Ephraim as taken from Jeroboam (2Chr.i3.19). Now the village 'Ain Sinia (Clermont-Ganneau), 3J miles N. of Bethel. [Shen.] [c.r.c] Jeshapelah' (1Chr.25.14). [Asarelah.] Jeshebeab', head of the 14th course of priests (iChr.24'.i3). Je'shep, son of Caleb ben-Hezron (iChr.2. 18). Jeshimon' {the waste; Num.21. 20, 23. 28 ; iSam.23.19,24,26.1,3), the desert W. of the Dead Sea, visible from Pisgah, and from Peor, both E. of that sea. [c.r.c] Jeshishai', an ancestor of the Gadites dwelling in Gilead in the reign of Jotham (iChr.5.14). Jeshohaiah', a Simeonite chief who took part in the raid of Gedor (iChr.4.36). Jeshua'. — 1. Joshua, the sou of Nun JESSE 407 (Ne.8.17).— 2. The correct form (R.V.) of the name Jeshuah. — 3. (2Chr.3i.15, where R.V. also has this form; Ezr. 2. 36) = Jeshuah. — 4. Son of Jehozadak, first high-priest of the third series, viz. of those after the Babylonish cap- tivity, and ancestor of the fourteen high-priests his successors down to Joshua or Jason, and Onias or Menelaus, inclusive. [High-priest.] Jeshua, like his contemporary Zerubbabel, was probably born in Babylon, whither his father Jehozadak had been taken captive while young (iChr.6.15, A. v.). He came up from Babylon (in the first year of Cyrus) with Zerubbabel, and took a leading part with him in the re- building of the temple, and the restoration of the Jewish commonwealth (Ezr.3.2ff. ; Hag. 1.1,12,14). Besides the great importance of Jeshua as an historical character, from the critical times in which he lived, and the great work which he accomplished, his name Jesus, his restoration of the temple, his office as high-priest, and especially the two prophecies concerning him in Zech.3 and 6.9-15, point him out as an eminent type of Christ. — 5. Head of a Levitical house, one of those which returned from the Babylonish Captivity, and took an active part in the restoration. The name is used either for the whole family or successive chiefs of it (Ezr. 2. 40, 3. 9, 8. 33 ; Ne.3. 19,8.7,9.4,5,12.8, etc.). — 6- A branch of the family of Pahath-moab, one of the chief families, probably, of the tribe of Judah (Ne. 10. 14, 7. II, etc. ; Ezr.2. 6,10.30). Jeshu'a, one of the towns re-inhabited by the people of Judah after the return from cap- tivity (Ne.11.26). Perhaps the ruin S'aweh, E. of Beer-sheba. [c.r.c] Jeshu'ah, a priest, head of the 9th course in David's reign (iChr.24'.ii). [Jeshua.] Jeshupun' (Deut.32.15,33.5,26 ; Is.44.2), used four times as a designation of Israel, all the passages being poetical. The etymology is obscure, but the form of the word seems directly to allude to the first four letters of " Israel," and is probably derived from ydshar, "to be upright." It would thus denote the nation under its most righteous aspect, and accordingly Vulg. renders rectissimus. The termination is probably intensive, rather than diminutive, although at least one Gk. version translates 'IcrpaeXtcrKos (LXX. Tj-yawriix^vos)- The name seems to be used when the writer is idealizing Israel, or when he would blame them for their failure to attain the ideal. As Calvin says, " By using the name of ' the Upright ' for Israel he censures in an ironic way those who had lapsed from uprightness." [b.f.s.] Jesiah'. — 1. A Korhite, one of the mighty men who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.6). — 2. (iChr.23.2o) = IssHiAH, 2. Jesimier, a Simeonite chief at the raid on the Hamites in Hezekiah's reign (iChr.4.36). Jesse (yishay), son of Obed (Ru. 4. 18-22 ; iChr.2.5-12) ; commonly, and even by his son David, designated " Jesse the Bethlehemite " (iSam.16.1, 18, 17.58) —but his full title is " the Ephrathite of Bethlehem - judah " (17.12). He is an " old man " when we first meet him, with eight sons (16.io,17.i2), his wife having perhaps been first married to Nahash ; her daughters Abigail andZeruiah(2Sam. 17. 25) 408 JESSUE are called the sisters of Jesse's sons (iChr.2. i6). Jesse's wealth included a flock of sheep, under the care of David (iSam. 16. ii, 17-34. 35). When David's rupture with Saul had finally driven him from the court to the cave of AduUam, " his brethren and all his father's house " joined him. Anxious for their safety, he took his father and his mother into the country of Moab, and deposited them with the king (22. i -4), and thereafter they appear no more in Scripture. While "son of Jesse" was a contemptuous term for David in his lifetime (iSam.20.27,22.7,8.9,25.10 ; 2Sam.20.i ; iK. 12.16), the phrase "root of Jesse" is a Messianic title (Is.ll.i-io), which reflects dignitv in later usage into the former term of contempt (Ps. 72. 20; 1Chr.lO.14, 29. 26; Ac.l3. 22), and is the origin of the "Jesse tree" of ecclesiastical art. [c.r.d.b.] Jes'sue (iEsd.5.26), Jesu (iEsd.8.63) = Jeshi'a, 5. Jesui' (called Isui, Gen. 46.17 ; Ishuai, i Chr.7.30; R.'V.Ishvi), third son of Asher, whose descendants, the Jesuites, were numbered " in the plains of Moab by Jordan near Jeri- cho " (Num. 26. 44; cf. 63). Jesupun. [Jeshurun.] Je'sus, the Gk. form of Joshua, or Jeshua, a contraction of Jehoshua {Jehovah is help or Saviour). — 1. (iEsd.5.5, etc., 6.2,9.19 ; Ecclus. 49.i2) = Jeshua, 4.-2. (iEsd.5.58,9.48) = Jeshua, 5. — 3. Joshua son of Nun(2Esd.7.37 ; Ecclus.46.i; iMac.2.55 : Ac. 7. 45 ; Heb.4.8). Jesus, called Justus. [Justus, 3.] Jesus Christ. Introduction. Since St. Paul's epistles, which interpret the Person of Christ in terms of Deity, are historically prior to the earliest gospel we possess, it follows that the latter was created within a community already convinced of Christ's divinity, and was read in the light of that presupposition. The Gospel can only be rightly appreciated when approached that way. Accordingly we accept the Pauline interpretation as the key to the narrative. " The value of St. Paul's re- cord is not impaired by the consideration that he never saw Jesus in person" (A. Neumann, Jesus, p. 5). He was intimate with St. Peter. St. Mark gives no biograj^hy, no chronology, no itinerarium ; he collects separate fragments, narratives, and sayings. In the Synoptists the sequence is often logical rather than chrono- logical. {Cf. St. Luke's preface.) St. John's gospel omits the first 31 years and is only con- cerned with some 40 days. But even in St. Mark (l.i) Jesus is not the Proclaimer but the Contents of the gospel (Wellhausen, Evang. Marci. p. i). — I. The Preparation, (i) Birth. Davidic origin for the Messiah was the univer- sal Jewish belief. Without compliance with this, Jesus' claim couldfnever have been ac- cepted. Whatever difficulties the genealogies present, this is attested in R0.I.3 ; Ac. 2.30 ; Rev.5.5 {cf. Bovon, Theol. N.T. i. 198; Jn.7.42). Even in the 2nd cent, the grandchildren of Jude, the Lord's brother, were brought before Domilian as members of the faiiiilv of David (Hegesippus in Euseb. Hist. Eccl. iii. xx. ; cf. also Zfickler, in Hauck, s.v. " Jesus Christ "). The position of the Virgin-birth in N.T. is natural, assuming its truth. It could not be utilized for evidential purposes. As Pctavius JESUS CHRIST says, Virgin-birth does not necessarily imply divinity ; but that a divine Person should so enter history is most suitable (3 De Trin. vi. p. 599). For Bethlehem, see Ramsay, Was Christ born at B. ? The reserve and sobriety of the canonical narratives are strikingly contrasted with the grotesque and immoral caricatures of the apocryphal legends. (2) At the age of 12. The one incident in the 30 years' preparation. The record relates a development (i) thoroughly human, (ii) apart from error, (iii) apart from sin. The first participation in the sacrificial worship in His Father's house is the natural crisis when thoughts of unique relationship with the F'ather, hitherto unuttered, found expression. Cf. B.Weiss, Life of Christ i. 180-302 ; Barth, H auptprobleme, p. 260. (For Galilean home life and ideals, see Sanday, Research, p. 52.) The unrecorded period from 12 to 30 un- doubtedly matured that profound knowledge of Scripture, especially of Psalms and Prophets, so conspicuous afterwards; and also His self- consciousness. (On the question of the limi- tations of our Lord's human knowledge, see our art. Kenosis; and Mason, Conditions of our Lord's Life on Earth ; Hall, The Kenotic Theory ; and Bernard, Mental Characteristics.) " During this period Joseph had probably died. He was evidently somewhat advanced in life when he married Mary. He had at that time children, sons and daughters, from an earlier marriage. There is no good reason to doubt the earliest traditions that Mary retained her perpetual virginity " (Briggs, New Light, 172). [James; Mary the B.V.] (3) The Baptism. As the Transfiguration recognizes His exemption from the neces- sity of death, so St. John Baptist recognizes His exemption from the necessity of baptism. Both are experiences of sinners. But if for redemptive purposes He could undergo the one, so also the other. Both were converted to new significance by His sinlessness. In His Baptism He claims solidarity with the race, and accepts His vocation as Messiah. Accord- ingly He meets with the heavenly approval. At the head of a penitent nation the Messiah appears. His mission begins when divinely recognized, not before. Criticism sometimes infers from the form of expressions in Mk. 1.9- 1 1 (" He saw . . . Thou art") that the Vision and Voice were purely subjective experiences, restricted to our Lord alone (Spitta com- pares a similar contrast in Ac. 9.7 and 22.9 ; Streiifragcn, p. 135). But, as Merx observes, if this criticism makes a psychological explana- tion easy, it ignores the value of the Voice and the Dove to the bystanders {Die Evangelien der Markus und Lukas. 14, quoted in Spitta, p. 135) ; see St. Mark's account of the Trans- figuration (Mk.9.7), and Jn.i2.30. {Cf. WeU- hausen, p. 75.) (4) The Temptation. If the Baptism is the conscious entrance on Messianic office, the Temptation is the deliberate re- jection of all methods except the highest by which that office could be discharged. See our art. Temptation of Christ. — II. The Ministry. Located by Synoptists in Galilee (duration, apparently one year, terminating in the death at Jerusalem) ; by St. John largely in Jerusalem, three Passovers being recorded. But if the Synoptic narrative is JESUS CHRIST " timeless " (Bousset, Jesus, p. ii), no con- clusion can be drawn from its omissions. The Synoptists seem to require the Jerusalem ministry ; for la) the Crucifixion is not ac- counted for, if Christ had not previous! 3' taught there ; (b) His lamentation over Jerusalem im- plies a visit ; (c) the Pharisees could not be condemned, in the parable of the Wicked Hus- bandman, for rejecting an offer which was never made (see W. Richmond, Gospel of the Rejection, p. 25). The Temptation suggests another visit. The withdrawal northward is estimated at 8 months (Prof. Burkitt, Gospel Hist, and its Transmission, p. 93). The duration of St. John Baptist's imprison- ment was probably not brief {cf. Sanday, Research, p. 98). St. Luke also manifests a preference for Judaea over Galilee (see the re- markable reading in 4.44. J udaea is probably correct. Of. Westcott and Hort's notes and R.V. marg. ; Spitta, Streitfragen, p. 15). Christ's ministry begins out of that of St. John Baptist, with the proclamation of the kingdom and the call of disciples by the lake of Galilee. Capernaum becomes His home (Mk. 1.21-3. 12 ; Jn.2.12). Then follows a Jerusalem episode with the cleansing of the temple (Jn.2.i3ff.). " The improbability of two cleansings is not so great," says Garvie, " as at first sight appears " (Studies, p. 170). The intention of the two is not identical. Here comes the visit of Nico- demus (ch. 3) and the return through Samaria (4.1-42) to Galilee [vv. 43ff.). — III. The Teach- ing of Jesus was progressive. (For the ethical teaching, see Sermon on Mount ; for general characteristics, see Parables.) The progress of ideas does not necessarily coincide with change of place or time. Their development must depend on the hearers' capacity. To identify Christ's utterances with His human knowledge at any special time is a superficial procedure, not necessarily true of any teacher, least of aU of Him. The narratives describe One far-sighted and recollected ; never surprised into a contradiction ; never correcting earlier intuitions by maturer thought ; encircled by affectionate but ignorant adherents, who blun- deringly but vainly strive to make Him sub- stitute their ideals for His. There is progres- sive instruction, but no change of plan. His principal themes are four : the kingdom ; the Christ ; His Death ; His relation to the Father. (For characteristics, see Wendt, Teaching of Jesus ; R. J. Drummond, Apos- tolic T. and Christ's T.) (i) The Kingdom. Every Israelite would understand that the Messianic kingdom was intended (cf. Schiirer, Times of J.C. D. ii. vol. ii. p. 171 ; Wendt, T.J . i. 371). It is described as spiritual, not political ; inward, as a disposition of individuals, yet external, as a social community ; subjectively realized in character, objectively a precious gift ; developing intensively, extensivel)^ (cf. parables of Leaven and Mustard Seed), yet pos- sessing outward Umitations (as in the net cast into the sea). It is an association into which men press and which they earnestly take by storm. " Undoubtedly," says a most indepen- dent critic, " the evangelist is thinking of the visible kingdom of God — i.e. of the Chmrch " ( J . Weiss, Die Predigt J. vom Reiche Gottes, p. 48). Christ's necessarily self-restricted mission to JESTJS CHRIST 409 Israel in no way conflicts with the universality of the kingdom (cf. Mt.i5.24, Mk.7.27, with Mt.21.43, Lu.12.i-i2, Mt. 8.11,12). [Kingdom of God ; Church.] Bovon, Theol. N.T. i. 257, Wendt, T.J. ii. 197-iqq, and Knowling, Testimony, p. 341, sufficiently answer Harnack's Expansion, p. 40. Briefly, then, our Lord's teaching on the kingdom may be summarized as follows: (i) "The idea of a divine dispensation under which God be- stows His full salvation upon a society of men, who on their part should fulfil His will in true righteousness " (Wendt, T.J. i. 173). (ii) " The kingdom of God is the highest boon bestowed by God, the community founded through His self-revelation in Christ " (Ritschl, Unterricht, p. 3). (See further, B. Weiss, Bibl. Theol. N.T. ; J. Weiss, Die Predigt Jesii vom Reiche Gottes (1900) ; Wendt, T.J . vol. i. ; Vincent Rose, Revue Biblique (July i, 1899), and Studies on the Gospels.) (2) The Claim to be the Christ. This was seriously compromised by prevalent Messianic ideas. Men expected political emancipation. The Jewish apocalyp- tic books describe the Messiah as granting life to the nations who have submitted to Israel, and destroying their oppressors with the sword (Baruch, Ixxii.). The prevalent ideal was un- doubtedly a kingdom of glory in Palestine, with its capital at Jerusalem, over which the Messiah presides (cf. Schiirer, Times of J.C. D. ii. vol. ii. pp. 126-187). The dead were to rise out of their graves and share the Messianic privileges ; but the whole conception was ter- restrial. It seems that our Lord's contem- poraries had no idea of a suffering Messiah (ib. 186-187). Certainly this conception of the Messiah, glowing with the passions of national fanaticism, had Uttle in common with that of our Lord except the name. Yet He could neither refuse the traditional terms nor accept the popular interpretation. Hence His embar- rassments in teaching. He could not answer with a simple affirmative a direct inquiry as to His Messianic claims. Hence that habitual reserve, that refusal to permit announcements of His Christhood, that preference for retire- ment over publicity, which so mystified and irritated oiu: Lord's unbelieving relatives, caused His opponents plausibly to charge Him with making them to doubt, and prompted the inquiry of St. John Baptist. Hence His flight in the moment when the people wanted to make Him king. All this, and more, was necessi- tated by His and their conflicting ideals. When the certainty of His final sufferings refuted the popular expectations we find this reserve dis- appearing ; and then, before the authorities of the nation, is heard the clear assertion of His Messianic claim. Recent liberal critics have expressed themselves profoundly moved by the grandeur of the manner in which this Messianic idea is accepted by our Lord and spiritualized, emptied of all its earthly political national elements, until at last the temporal monarch in the palace at Jerusalem is con- verted into the tragic figure on the cross (cf. Wernle, Beginnings of Christianity, i. 49). In this light must be considered our Lord's self- chosen habitual designation — the Son of Man. Prof. Charles (Bfe.o/£nocA,App.B, pp.312-317) says that the title in Daniel (7.13) seems merely 410 JESUS CHRIST symbolical of Israel, but in the book of Rnoch denotes a supernatural person. In this book the Son of Man is represented as seated on the throne of the divine glory (Ixii. i ) and exercising universal judgment over mankind (Ixii. 3). " This title, with its supernatural attributes, of suiiorhuman glory, of universal dominion and supreme judicial power, was adopted by our Lord " (cf. Jn.3.13, etc.). But, while retaining its supernatural associations, it, as employed by Christ, " assumed a deeper spiritual signifi- cance of self-emptying and self-renunciation " (Charles, pp.315, 316). His supernatural claims were " vindicated, not after the external Juda- istic conceptions of the book of Enoch, but in a revelation of the Father in a sinless and re- demptive life, death, and resurrection" [ib. p. 316). To this we must add that the O.T. usage of the term " Son of Man " generally indicates a member of the human race, with peculiar em- phasis on the lowliness and weakness inherent in man as such (Job 25.6 ; Ezk.2.1,3 ; Dan. 8. 17). This is one reason for its adoption by our Lord. To Him it designated Messianic dignity and human weakness. In many instances we could not substitute the personal pronoun for this title without losing an essential element in the thought (Wendt, T.J. ii. 139-148). Thus the title paved the way to the conception of a suffering Messiah. It is probable that these O.T. associations of the term would render the Jews reluctant to adopt it as a title of the Messiah. Thus it seems true to say that " Christ's claims were for the greater part of His ministry veiled behind the term ' Son of Man ' " (Briggs, New Light, p. 91). But there is much more than this. No religious mind can fail to be impressed by the deliberate selection of a term so universal in its character. Whereas He might have chosen to describe Himself as David's Son, He passed beyond the highest of merely Israelite expressions, and selected a term capable of conveying the vastly loftier conception of the representative of humanity. No Christian mind will consider this as acci- dental. (See further, Wendt, T.J. ; B. Weiss, Uibl. Theol. N.T. i. 173 ff- ; Ottley, Incarna- tion, pp. 71-74.) — IV. Our Lord's Relation to the Law of Israel. His personal recognition of religious authority may be seen in His entrance upon His ministry at the Levitical age of 30 ; in His attendance at the Jewish festivals; in His injunction about submission to the direc- tions of the scribes ; in His strong affirmation that He had not come to destroy, but to fulfil. On the background of this obedience and submission stand out all the more strik- ingly His independence of rabbinical inter- pretations of the law and His attitude to- wards the sabbath. Popular criticisms on this begin very early in St. Mark (see 2.23-28, 3.1-6). A more or less official inquiry fol- lows in 7. iff. by " certain of the scribes which had come from Jerusalem." Arbitrary human enactments received an attention which was not bestowed upon the command- ments of God. Certainly our Lord set moral law higher than ritual observance, or rather insisted that brotherly love is a condition essen- tial to any acceptable worship of God. But He by no means depreciated its ritual observance. On the contrary, assuming the JESUS CHRIST condition of brotherly love fulfilled. He said, " and then come and offer thy gift." — V. The Miracles. (See esp. the dissertation of C. L. Nit/sch in De Discrimine Revclationis, pp. 30- 5-(.) Christ, says Nitzsch, affirms that Hisdivine mission can be understood from His miracles (Jn. 5. 36,10.37 ; Mt.11.4), yet elsewhere Christ deprecates miracles (Jn.4.48). The con- tradiction is solved by the principle that He would confirm faith but not compel it. Similar narratives are not necessarily double accounts of one incident. " Who would be surprised to find two very similar cases in a physician's diary ? " (R. J. Drummond, Apost. Teaching and Christ's T. 93). Christ's miracles may be classified in an ascending scale — over inanimate nature, physical disease, mental disorders, death in its various stages. Psychology throws much light, but leaves much wholly inexplicable, except when the Pauline interpretation of the Person is accepted. In- cidents might be differently reported in the present century and in the apostolic age, but it is impossible to sever the miraculous element from the portrait of the Christ without altering that portrait beyond recognition. Moreover, word and work correspond. And rejection of this element ultimately rests, not on historic criticism, but on theoretical presuppositions, which include a non-Christian view of God and the world. [Miracles.] (C/. Liitgen, Gottes Sohn und Geist.pp. 24ff.) — VI. The Train- ing of the Twelve. ( C/. Bruce, Training of XII. ; Latham, Pastor Pastorum ; Scott-Holland, Creed and Character ; Bp. Gore, Church and Ministry, pp. 36 ff.) "To deny that Christ did undertake to found and legislate for a new theocratic society ... is indeed possible, but only to those who altogether deny the credi- bility of the extant biographies of Christ " (Ecce Homo). Our Lord did not commit either Himself, or His Revelation in its in- tegrity, to the miscellaneous throng, but to the selected few [cf. J n. 2. 2 3 -2 5). The mo- mentousness of the selection of the Twelve is suggested by Christ's self-preparation (a night in prayer, Lu.8.12); the method (from the dis- ciples summoned together, \er. 13); the triple record (Mt.lO ; Mk.3 ; Lu.6) ; the purpose assigned (Mk.3. 14) ; the number selected (sug- gestive of founding a new Israel) ; the con- nexion with the Sermon on the Mount (as a consecration of the Twelve) ; the instructions devoted to the Twelve ; the permanence of the body so created. Bcngel's phrase is most applicable here, " Primac origines licclesiae Christianae." The constituent elements of this body are profoundly suggestive of variety in unity. The pessimistic St. Thomas, the reflec- tive St. John, the sanguine St. Peter, the conservative tax-gatherer, the radical Zealot, illustrate the diversity of temperament and l)oliti<'al ojiinion which the Church was to contain and combine. These disintegrating elements Christ drew into a unity, never after- wards broken, both with Himself and with one another ; witii the result that after His Ascension a consolidated society remained. The training of the Twelve docs not imply the neglecting of the crowds. Christ is represented as " having compassion on the mtiltitude," giving instructions through all the towns in JESUS CHRIST Galilee, answering questions, enlightening in- dividuals, composing parables especially for their edification. Wherever sorrow, suffering, and sin confronted Him, there He would minister. These ministrations were the inevitable response of perfect humanity placed in such conditions. Yet they were more or less incidental. But the training of the Twelve was His deliberate purpose with a view to futiure issues. The process of the training of the Twelve included the following : set instructions, e.g. Sermon on the Mount, in- tended chiefly for the inner circle ; interpreta- tion of parables and of difficult sayings left unexplained among others ; the lessons of His miracles ; the gradual self-revealing under the changing conditions of the daily life ; the practical training in their mission to preach. Meanwhile, among the crowds, the first popu- larity, caused by His miracles and teaching, and fostered by hope of His compliance with their ideals, passed into dislike, as the incom- patibility became more plain. After the feeding of the 5,000 a crisis came, and the instruction on the Bread of Life alienated many and tested the few (Jn. 6. 60-67). As oppo- sition increased, Christ withdrew, with the Twelve, into heathen territory (Mk.7.24ff.) to mature their faith, amid external security. The question at Caesarea Philippi was a crisis in their training (Mk.8.27). But their develop- ment must not be forced by asking it too soon. The psychological moment had to be ascer- tained. Even when it came, it was preceded by a preparatory question. From the recog- nized inadequacy of other men's estimates of His Person, the Twelve were led to give ex- pression to a higher estimate. St. Peter's answer in St. Matthew's version is, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God " (Mt.l6. 16). The answer in St. Mark is simply, "Thou art the Christ" (Mk.8.29). Criticism has not unnaturally inquired whether the phrase "Son of the living God" is an equivalent, or an ad- dition of a profounder thought. We must neither assume that St. Peter at this stage realized the full metaphysical conception of the Nicene Creed, nor that a brilliant momentary insight into the profoundest truth was not granted him. He manifestly reached a higher stage of utmost significance. Here was an objective truth and a subjective disposition on which our Lord could build. It is a crisis of triumph. Our Lord wins the response for which He had kept the Twelve so long in daily training. His prohibition of the declaration of a truth soon declared by Himself creates no difficulty. The official announcement must come from Himself. — VII. The character of Jesus may be fitly considered here, as part of the self-revelation to the Twelve, and also as the basis of the third main principle of His in- structions ; viz. those on His redemptive work. Briefly, the portrait drawn by the evangelists is one of human perfection, (i) They sketch a career lived at the confluence of three strongly marked races — the Roman, the Greek, and the Jew — yet exempt from the onesidedness of all. The character is free from national limitations, whether contemporary parties, Sadducaean, Pharisaic, Herodian, or national characteristic fanaticism and exclusiveness, from which none JESUS CHRIST 411 of His apostles were exempt. Galilean ideals may have preserved more spiritual types than those of Jerusalem, but the former were none the less immeasurably beneath the ideals ascribed to our Lord. Contrast Christ's Messianic conceptions with those of the Twelve. We scarcely think of Jesus as a Jew, for what He took of Israel was exclusively the good — its ethical monotheism, which in taking He refined, exalted, and completed. The aliena- tion from Christ's ideals was as complete in Galilee as in Judaea. All His disciples are conspicuously marked by the narrowing effect of their environment. He alone remains un- scathed. It is the pre-eminently human in Him which triumphs over the local and the national. His character embodies His title — the Son of Man. It has been truly said that this superiority to the local and the temporary is little less than a moral miracle. (2) Where- as human excellence develops in antagonistic types, according as self-discipline, altruism, or Godward devotion predominates, producing therefore characters conspicuous chiefly for self-control or philanthropy or religious spirit, the Character depicted in the gospels in- cludes all these types and combines them into one. Moreover, it blends opposite virtues in perfect proportion. It is equally remarkable for gentleness and strength ; for the combina- tion of inexorable rectitude of judgment with the tenderest pity and compassion. There is severity without hardness, and tenderness which is never weak. The masculine and the womanly graces are fused together in Him. Anything more compassionate would sacrifice rectitude — more inexorable, mercy. It is worth reflecting, which of Christ's moral decisions has subsequent experience found occasion to revise ? The moral infallibility of judgment is in itself absolutely unique. Men do not think the same invariably even of St. Paul. (3) Christ's moral self -consciousness is unclouded. Nothing veils the perfect com- munion with the Father. Yet His moral standard was that of the Sermon on the Mount ; His moral insight is shown in the fact that in His presence the least deviation from inner rectitude stands detected, judged, condemned. Nevertheless there is a serene consciousness of superiority to sin. Witness the narrative of the Temptation, which must have come from Himself ; the absence of the penitential element from His prayers ; the self -isolation from sinful humanity ; the consciousness that the sinful world cannot defile Him, but can be delivered by Him. (Mk.10.i8 cannot be reasonably utilized to contradict the entire N.T. descrip- tion.) This character is either the product of imagination or of reality. That it is not the former seems demonstrated partly by the apostles' incompetence, partly by the fact that the portraiture of a perfect character has apparently never been attempted elsewhere in literature. It is an effort for which genius and moral elevation feel incapable. [C/. Goldwin Smith, Lectures in Moral History, and the com- ments on the same in Liddon's Elements of Religion ; Robertson, Sermons, 2nd ser. xviii. ; Gore, Bampton Lectures ; Sanday, Research ; Luthardt, Apologetic Lectures ; Carson, Re- union Essays ; Caird, Fundamental Ideas.] — 412 JESUS CHKIST VIII. His Redemptive Work. The process of instruction was now advanced to (i) pre- dictions of His Passion. Hints had been given before (Mk.2.2o ; Jn. 1.29,2.19), but remained an enigma until the Resurrection explained them. The predictions are three, (i) At Caesarea Philippi, on the basis of St. Peter's confession (Mk.8.31), the Passion is affirmed to be a divine necessity (Sf?, Lu.9.22 ), but accompanied by an equally clear announcement of His Re- surrection {cf. Mk.8.34). (ii) At the Trans- figuration (IVIk.9.1-13), which came just in the crisis of depression caused by the prediction of His Death. Here the obvious lesson was the divine approval of the Master's course, and an injunction to hear His teaching. The Disciples saw Christ refuse the painless transition into glory. [Transfiguration.] They hear the con- versation on the decease shortly to be accom- plished in Jerusalem. His attitude wins the Father's approval (Lu.9.31). Then came the second announcement of His Death — again as- sociated with the Resurrection (Mk.9.9 ; cf. 30- 32). (iii) As Jerusalem was approached (Mk.lO. 32; Mt. 20.17 ; Lu.l8.31). Here His resolute determination and solemnity of purpose amaze them. Thus the Messiahship is steadily unfolded to the apostles as a conception involv- ing death. As Bengel finely says, He was dwelling in His Passion. The disciples met each prediction with resistance : at the first, St. Peter protested with all his power ; at the second, they were afraid to ask Him ; at the third, the idea is still unintelligible. Not because they could not understand the terms, but because the ideas conflicted with their Messianic preconceptions. (Contrast Spitta's crit. in Streitfra^cn, p. 107.) {2) Next, instruc- tions as to the significance of His Death. They are fragmentary and few, yet definite. On this last journey to Jerusalem He spoke of " giving His life a ransom for many " (Mk.lO. 45, Xvrpov avrl TToWGiv). Holtzmann (Lj/eo/ /esws, p. 387) illustrates from Josephus (14 Ant. vii. i), where the treasurer Eleazar gave Crassus a massive golden beam from the temple at Jerusalem as a \vTf)ov avTL irduTwv — a ransom to save the rest. Thus Jesus Christ will give His life in order that the many may preserve theirs. The term \iiTpov signifies in the LXX. the price paid to redeem a firstborn son from death (Num. 3. 46), or a captive in war (Is. 45. 13), or a slave (Lev. 25.51). No \vTpov or satisfaction could be ac- cepted in behalf of a murderer (Num. 35. 31). Rich men cannot deliver their relati\'es from death by payment of a ransom (Ps.49.7). The prayer of Eleazar (4 Mac. vi. 23) has, " Make my blood an expiatory offering for tlicm, and take my life as their ransom." And the his- torian praises the Maccabees because " they became as it were a ransom [or expiation] for the sin of the nation " (xvii. 20). (See Barth, Hauptprobleme, p. 199 IT.) These illustrations show what our Lord's expression would con- vey to His contemi)oraries — namely, that His Death would secure their deliverance from sin. It is the Death of the Righteous for the un- righteous. The whole narrative of the Passion putsithisjinterpretation upon it — e.g. the prayer from the Cross that the nation may be forgiven. Our Lord lays reiterated emphasis on the fact JESUS CHRIST that His Death is divinely ordained (dd ovtu) yefeadai, Mk. 26.54. 56 and Lu. 24.26). Viewed externally, it was the necessary result of J ewish hostility ; viewed inwardly, it was the pre- determined will of God. Jesus was born ex- pressly to die for mankind. In the last week of His earthly life He consummated the pur- pose for which He came. He went to die that the Scripture might be fulfilled that thus it must be. In other words, He affirmed that only through His Death could the eternal counsel of the Father be achieved {cf. Weber, Ziim Zorn Gottes, pp. 242 ft.). — IX. The Jerusa- lem Ministry, (i) The journey thither {cf. Lu.9. 51-I9.28 — not, however, chronologically ar- ranged ; B. Weiss, L.C. iii. 162), probably through Samaria (cf. Lu.9.51-56,10.25-37,17. 1 1 - 1 9 ). Definitely resolute to enter J er usalem, and not to die elsewhere (Lu. 13. 31, 32). (2) The Feast of Tabernacles (J n. 7-10) gives this episode with wonderful insight into what must have been the popular feeling after the rejec- tion in Galilee (7.12,13-52). Here, at the centre of Israel's religious life, He declared His pre-existence. This led to the first open at- tempt to kill Him. But His time was not yet. (3) The Festival of the Dedication (IO.22-41) continued the self-revealing under circum- stances of widening hostility. The irritated challenge of 10. 24 was answered with a claim to unity with God (ver. 30) which provoked another attempt to stone Him, on the ground "Thou, being aman.makest Thyself God" (ver. 33). J.H.Newman's admirable expositionof the passage which follows, in which our Lord tem- porarily asserts a minor claim, not to retract the former, but to find a common basis, should be carefully studied {Parochial Sermons). .Augustine's dictum remains profoundly true : " Intellexerunt Judaei quod non intelliKunt .\riani." Probably to this period belongs the dilemma concerning the Christ as David's Son and David's Lord (Mk. 12. 35-37). (4) The brief withdrawal from Jerusalem (Jn. 10. 40,41) into the territory beyond Jordan, " where John was at the first baptizing." " These two or three months in Peraoa were the last time of refresh- ment He would enjoy before being involved in struggle and death " (B. Weiss, L.C. iii. 202). (5) The entry into Jerusalem is described by Wellhausenasapopular movement, rather than designed by Christ {Mark, p. 94). Yet the riding upon an ass was distinctly Messianic (Zech.9.9 and Jn.i2.12ff.). Certainly the entry signi- fied one thing to the people, another to Christ — as St. Luke's record of His tears over J erusalem suggests (Lu.19.41-44). Then followed the day of ()uestionings. Herodian, Sadducee, Pharisee, are successively answered. The denunciations of unreality, begun in indigna- tion, are closed in tears (Mt. 23. 13-39). The indescribably tender wistfulness of the final passage reveals the spirit underlying the whole. After this, the temple was left for ever. Then came the eschatological predictions from the mount of Olives (Mt. 24,25). It has been re- cently nrged(by the Bp. of Gloucester, Warbur- tonian Lectures for 1903-1907, O.T. in the New) that our Lord's discourse on tlie nioiuit of Olives refers wholly to the Fall of Jerusalem and contemiiorary incidents. AnythiuR which our Lord describes in these verses was taken JESTTS CHRIST by Him straight from the prophetical books of O.T., and " as in those books the language is not to be held to predict literal portents to be looked for in the physical heaven, but should be symbolically understood as figurative ima- gery applied to the destruction of cities and empires of the world, so here also it should be taken in the same way and be given no other meaning." [Old Testament.] Further re- ferences to His Death ensued. Christ asso- ciated the anointing at Bethany with His Burial (Mt.26.i2) ; spoke of the beloved son cast out and killed and of the wheat which must die (Jn.12.24). Meanwhile, events moved with rapidity. Shortly after the Lazarus-raising, the Sanhedrin followed Caiaphas' advice, and determined that Christ's Death would secure the nation. That made the Death, humanly, a question of opportunit3^ which Judas pro- vided [cf. Briggs, New Light, p. 92). (For the Betrayal, see Judas Iscariot ; for the Trial, see Pontius Pilate ; Herod.) — X. The Redemp- tion, (i) With the institution of the Eucharist came further instruction about His Death. Passover, Eucharist, and Death are all drawn closely together. The phrase in Mk.i4.24, " This is My Blood of the Covenant, which is shed for many," must have suggested to the hearers, considering their antecedents, the in- auguration of a new covenant between God and man contrasted with the old {cf. 1C0r.ll.25). Mt.26.28 adds " for the remission of sins," " showing that he understood the covenant to be a covenant between God and the many, by which remission of sins was secured to them " (Allen on St. Matt. p. 276). The Blood was no mere sign of this remission, but (as Meyer says) reconciling, sacrificial Blood. The Blood is instrumental in effecting the covenant. We may agree with Weiss(L.C. iii. 23i)that Christ's words must at the least have conveyed that " as the blood of the Paschal Lamb once pro- tected the children of Israel from the aveng- ing angel, His atoning Blood was to be the means for averting God's judgment from the guilt-laden people." The Synoptists suggest that the institution of the Eucharist and the Passover coincided ; St. John that the institu- tion was the day before, in which case the Crucifixion and the Passover coincided (Jn.l3. 1-29). The exact chronological relationship, which is uncertain, is insignificant compared with the doctrinal relationship of the ancient Passover and the New, which our Lord dis- tinctly affirmed. [Eucharist.] (2) No part of the narrative is so consecutive and elaborate as the Passion history. The evangelists rivet attention on Christ's Death. In awful reUef is set Gethsemane. (For primitive interpolations in St. Luke [22.43,44], cf. Westcott and Hort's Select Readings, pp. 64-67 : " These verses and the first sentence of 23.34 may be safely called the most precious among the remains of this evangelical tradition which were rescued from oblivion by the scribes of the second century.") No explanation is given by the evangelists while recording the fact. They describe the scene and report the words which He was heard to utter. The terrible mental distress is denoted by €Kda,ul3e'.(Tdai (St. Mark), aSruxovelv (St. Matthew ; cf. Lightfoot, Phil. ii. 26), and by the whole description in Lu.22.43,44. The JESUS CHRIST 413 interpretation given by the primitive Chris- tian consciousness is Heb.5.7-10, where the writer " had doubtless chiefly in view the scene in Gethsemane " (Delitzsch, Hebrews i. 243). Plainly in Gethsemane is the be- ginning of the Passion. He prayed to be saved from death. But for what reason ? All interpretation must depend on personal convictions as to His work and personality. Was this a purely physical recoil from death ? If so, our Lord has been surpassed by hundreds of His martyrs, whose cross has been preluded by no Gethsemane (contrast, e.g., St. Ignatius). It will ever be incredible to the believer that Christ here merely illustrates the maxim that the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. No interpretation can, on apostolic principles, be adequate, unless it takes into account the moral significance of His Death as redemptive, the sinlessness of the Sufferer, and the awful association with human sinfulness — to Him mostabhorrentand terrible — which His charac- ter as Redeemer would involve. " It was the whole abyss of death itself into which the Lord looked down when He offered this supplica- tion " (Delitzsch, Heb. vol. i. p. 248). New- man's wonderful description of the Agony, as caused by the redeeming self-identity of the Sinless with the sinful, is the kind of interpreta- tion which the apostolic principles require. It is a moral and spiritual revulsion, rather than a merely physical recoil, which caused Gethsemane. (See Delitzsch on Heb. [5.7], vol. ii. p. 248; Meyer on S/. Matt. p. 562; Barth, Hauptprohleme, p. 224 ; Bruce, Humiliation, p. 2 jy. Denney, Death of Christ, is less satisfactory here. For a most attenuated account, see Wendt, T.J . ii. 248. On the omission of the incident from St. John, see Bovon, Theol. N.T. i. 142; and note especially Jn.l8.11 and 5. 30. Garvie, Studies, pp. 3838.) (3) Christ's Death. " To expect from Jesus Himself a theory of the Atonement and to reject the sub- sequent apostolic doctrine of the Cross where- ever it goes beyond the words of Jesus is to ignore the necessary condition for such a sacri- fice of vicarious love " (Garvie, Studies, p. 421). The description of the Crucifixion was written for men already instructed in the significance of the Death. The cry of dereliction becomes intelligible if, in perfect sacrificial homage to righteousness, Christ's sympathetic self-iden- tity with sinful mankind became so complete that He seemed to experience the isolation from the Father which is, in the sinner, self-inflicted. If Jesus shared Israel's belief in the relation between death and sin. His experience of the one while consciously exempt from the other must, for Him, have invested death with a unique significance. All exposition by sinners of a sinless redemptive experience must of neces- sity fall miserable beneath the reahty ; but no exposition can be so futile as that which for- gets that it is interpreting a sinless experience. (For our Lord's words spoken from the Cross, see Seven Words, The.) (4) Resurrection and Ascension. That Jesus did not remain in death, among the dead, but rose, and after His Resurrection was seen by a number of His disciples, is the common conviction of primi- tive apostolic Christendom. Here SS. Peter and Paul perfectly concur. It is thoroughly 414 JESXrS CHRIST perverse to infer from the discrepancies of the accounts in the gospels the unhistoric char- acter of the event. Rather we see that a fact can stand perfectly secure even when all the narratives of it include conflicting elements (see Oskar Holtzinann, Christus, p. ii8). [Resur- rection; Ascension.] — XI. Christ's Relation to the Father. This is best considered last, when the process of self-revelation is complete, and we contemplate a finished career. If, as we have seen, the instruction of the Twelve was progressive, the greatest jiroblem, that of Christ's personality, could only be fullv de- clared as the consummation of all else. (For the supernatural claims in the Sermon on the Mount, see Lyttelton and our art. s.v.). Our Lord's theology began with the Jewish concep- tion of God as the Father, filled with a depth of meaning to which the O.T. offers no real parallel. Synoptic testimony yields the fol- lowing on Christ's personal relation to that Fatherhood : Jesus does not regard Himself as one of the numerous sons of God ; He is conscious of Himself as the Son, in a sense which is absolute. When He says, " So also shall My Heavenly Father do also unto you ..." (Mt.l8.35), the implication is isola- tion from mankind and unshared proximity to the Father. Cf. Lu.22.2') (" 1 appoint imto you a kingdnm, as My Father hath appointed unto Me") and Mk.l2.i (the only and beloved son). The central Synoptic passage in this connexion is of course Mk.ll.27 and ff. Even Holtzmann says, "Jesus realizes that He alone knows God. This, notwithstanding Israel's ancient belief, that it had received a revelation of Him in the law and in the prophets " {L.J. p. 284). We should rather agree with Bovon that the text is " un passage . . . dont le caractere et la con- ception sont strictement Johanniques " {Theol. de N.T. i. 167). This full, unique, mutual knowledge on the part of the Father and the Son contains the most profound implications. It is hopelessly inadequate to say that such a Sonship differs in degree but not in kind from that possible to the generality of men. " He felt," says Bousset (/^sws, p. 179), " that He stood in such closeness of communion with God the Father as belonged to none before or after Him." "Jesus is convinced," saj's Harnack, " that He knew God in a way in which no one ever knew Him before. . . . In this conscious- ness He knows Himself to lie the Son called and instituted of God, to be //le Son of God, and hence He can say. My God and My Father, and into this invocation He jnits something which belongs to no one but Himself. How He came to this consciousness of the unicjue character of His relation to God as a Son . . . is His secret, and no psychology will ever fathom it " (What is Christianity ? p. 128). Harnack adds the curious sentences, " Here all research must stop. . . . No one could fathom this mystery who had not had a i)arallel experience " (p. 120). Certainly Incarnation does not admit a parallel experience, aiul we must agree that no one could fathom the mystery. But this " con- sciousness of unique relation to God as Son " which is " Christ's secret," and which " no psy- chology will ever fathom," may well suggest that nothing l)ut Incarnation can really accoimt fur it. Moreover, is it not possible to believe a JESITS CHRIST fact where one cannot fathom a mystery ? Indeed, unless the possibility of Incarnation be denied on a priori grounds, the greatest weight may well be conceded to the primitive Chris- tian consciousness which believed itself forced to that conclusion. F"or we have to remember, as Harnack elsewhere says, that " we must not be content to exhibit the mere image of Jesus Christ and the main features of His Gospel. We must not be content to stop there, because every great and powerful personality reveals a part of what it is only when seen in those whom it influences. . . . We must look at the reflection and the effects which He produced in those whose leader and master He became " (op. cit. p. 10). Now, the effect which Christ produced on the apostolic community is assuredly be- lief in His literal equality with the Father. It is of course quite true that the Christology of the Marcan narrative is vastly simpler in form than that of the Fourth Gospel ; and that the individual estimate of the evidence will be modified by the value attached to the latter document ; true also that the expression, " Son of God," is capable, like the term "Father- hood," or " God," of being filled with deeper or shallower contents. Hut it will always be most difficult to prove that the deeper contents were absent from the earlier forms of apostolic thought, and still more from the Intention which created Christianity, if at any rate God in any real sense was in Christ. Three stages of meaning are readily traceable in the expression " Son of God " : adoption, which all might share and therefore none need dispute ; official or Messianic, belonging to the selected Head of the chosen race ; personal or essential, denoting literal equality, which is the only sense which will do justice to the Gospel facts and claims, as it certainly is that affirmed by St. Paul and the Fourth Evangelist, and accepted by the consciousness of the primitive Christian com- munity. It is incontestable that in St. John the expression " Son of God " is filled with the pro- foundest contents conceivable. The Christian community was founded on belief in Jesus as the Christ and as the divine Son of God. The latter is proved by the prayers addressed to Him. And that theology alone is really Chris- tian which acknowledges these two truths. (Liitgert, Gottcs Sohn unci Geist, p. 4.) — XII. It is impossible to appreciate tlie Biblical data on the life of Jesus without considering the rela- tion between the teaching of Christ and the teaching of the apostles. Christ's teaching was involved in various limitations, (i) The re- cipient's capacity. (2) The circumstances, since He spoke in anticipation and not in retrospect. (3) His mission, which was, not so much to preach the (iospel as so to live that there might be a Ciospel to preach. (4) Psychological : self-revealing is not confined to words, but is achieved in a thousand subtle, indefinable ways. A personality can only be fully known by hisself-imprrssidii upon his contemporaries. Now, Christ wrote nothing. His metiiod of self-revealing to a chosen circle manifests a fearless confidence in the adequacy of their iiltimati- testimony to His Person and work. Christ (Aidcntly anticijiated that His teaciiing would reach the vast mass of mankind through other lips than His own. Therefore, to accept jestjs the r'ATHER 01* sirach: the apostolic interpretation of His worth is only to obey the intentions of Christ Himself as declared in the method of His procedure. No severance of the Master's teaching from that of the apostles is in accordance with the Master's mind. It is in the apostles as fash- ioned by the influence of Christ that the full exposition of His own teaching and principles is really to be found (Jn. 16.12,13 ; cf. B. Weiss, Bibl. Theol. i. 47 ; R. J . Drummond, Apostolic Teaching and Christ's Teaching). [God ; Incarnation ; Mediator ; Saviour ; Sacrifice; Coming, Second; etc.] [w.j.s.s.] Jesus the father of Sirach, and grandfather of the following (Ecclus. prol.). Jesus the son of Sirach is described in Ecclus. 50. 27 (cf. prol.) as the author of that book, which in the LXX., and generally, is called by his name the Wisdom of Jesus the son of Sirach, or simply the Wisdom of Sirach. The same passage speaks of him as a native of Jerusalem ; and the internal character of the book confirms its Palestinian origin. Je'thep. — 1. Jetiiro, the father-in-law of Moses (Ex. 4.18). — 2. The firstborn of Gideon's seventy sons (Judg.8.20). — 3- The father of Amasa, captain-general of Absalom's army. J ether is merely another, and probably more correct, form of Ithra (2Sam.i7.25). He is described in iChr.2.17 as an Ishmaelite, which again is more probably correct than the " Israelite " of the Heb. in 2Sam.l7, or the " Jezreelite " of the LXX. and Vulg. in the same passage. — 4. The son of Jada, a de- scendant of Hezron, of thetribeof Judah (iChr. 2.32). — 5. The son of Ezra, whose name occurs in a dislocated passage in the genealogy of Judah (4.17). — 8. Chief of an Asherite family of warriors, and father of Jephunneh (7.38). Probably = Ithran (ver. 37). Jetheth' (Gen. 36. 40), a descendant of Esau, and a "duke" or "leader" in Edom. [c.r.c.] Jethlah' (R.V. Ithlah), a city of Dan (Jos. 19. 42). The site is doubtful, [c.r.c] Jethpo'(Heb. yiOfro; or yether in Ex.4.i8), the father-in-law of Moses, otherwise Reuel, 2. The latter name may have been ancestral, and Reuel, or Jethro, the " priest " (kohen) of Midian [Madian] in the Sinaitic Desert, was probably descended from the son of Esau, i. Jethro signifies " excellent," and Reuel has a similar meaning, " friend of God." His son HoBAB (Num. 10. 29) was a " connexion " by marriage of Moses [hothen, Judg.4.ii), and the " father-in-law of Moses" is otherwise called a Kenite(l.i6). [Kenites.] Jethro (Ex.3. i,4.i8, I8.1-12) gave his daughter Zipporah (2. 21) to Moses, and she was sent back to him (18. 2) with her two sons (vv. 3,4). He met Moses again at Rephidim (17.8, 18. i), and acknowledged Jehovah as the greatest of Elohim (18. 10-12) to whom he offered sacrifices. He advised a definite organization of the congregation (vv. 14-26), and then returned to his home (ver. 27). The old difficulty as to his being called both Reuel and Jethro (and not Hobab) would be easily explained if the original records were written in cuneiform [Writing], for the differ- ence between It-ru and R'eu-ili in that script is a matter of a single short stroke which would easily be omitted, or otherwise obliterated. The fact that the Heb. scribes preserved this JEWS' LANaTTAGE, IN THE 415 discrepancy, which was early noticed by the Rabbis, is one of the cases which prove their scrupulous preservation of the text, [c.r.c] Jetup' (Gen. 25. 15 ; iChr. 1.31,5. 19) = Itu- raea. Jeuel'. — 1. A man of Judah, of the Bene- Zerah (iChr.9.6).— 2. (iEsd.8.39) = jEiEL, 7. Jeush'. — 1. An Edomite " duke " ; son of Esau, by Aholibamah the daughter of Anah (Gen.36.5,14,18; iChr.1.35). — 2. A Benjamite, son of Bilhan (7. 10, 11). — 3. A Gershonite Levite, of the house of Shimei (23. 10,11).— 4. Son of Rehoboam (2Chr.ll.19). Jeuz', a Benjamite in an obscure genealogy (iChr.8.10), apparently son of Shaharaim and Hodesh his third wife, and born in Moab. Je^v. The use of this term, which applies properly to persons belonging to Judah, ap- pears to be entirely subsequent to the destruc- tion of the Northern Kingdom. It is probably owing to this circumstance that we do not find it used in contrast with the northern tribes, but only in opposition to the Gentile peoples (Je. 34.9). After the return from the Captivity it is still used by writers at Jerusalem in its original sense (Ne.4.i2 ; Zech.8.23). But at a later period the book of Esther illustrates an extended meaning of the term, and it occurs as the common title of all who belonged to the Heb. family, the predominant surviving element thus giving its name to the whole (Esth.3.13). In the N.T. in general the title has the same meaning. With St. Paul, however, it has a religious as well as a national associa- tion. It stands in connexion with the observ- ance of the Mosaic Law, and is used of those Judaic Christians who insisted upon its obligation. These are referred to without qualification as " the Jews " (Gal. 2. 13), and the observance by Gentiles of the ceremonial of the law is described as judaizing (Gal. 2. 14). But from another point of view St. Paul uses the term as a title of honour for those whose religion is spiritual, and not merely the perform- ance of external ceremonies (Ro.2.28f.). The same idea occurs in Rev. 2. 9. A quite different use again is found in the Fourth Gospel, where "the Jews" are those of the chosen people who have rejected Christianity and banded themselves together in definite opposition to it (Jn.6.41, etc.). [Jewry.] [j.c.v.d.] Jev/'els. [Precious Stones.] Jewr'ess, a woman of Hebrew birth, or a Judaeanwoman. [Jewry.] Applied to Eunice (Ac.l6.i;c/. 2Tim.3.i5)andDrusilla(Ac.24.24). Je^v'ish, an epithet applied contemptuously by St. Paul to Rabbinical legends (Tit. 1. 14). Jewpy (Dan.5.13; R.V. Judah). The Jews are first noticed in 2K.I6.6 (Heb. y<'hu- dhtm), where "men of Judah" are meant; and false criticisms have been due to the misunderstanding of the name C^ovdaioL), which is used in the Fourth Gospel in its strict sense as applying to the inhabitants of Judaea, and not in the modern sense as meaning all Israel. [Jew; Judea.] [c.r.c] JeAvs' lang-uag-e. In the (lit. " Jew- ishly " ; for the Heb. must be taken adverbially) . It was applied to the Heb. language before the Captivity (2K.18.26,28; 2Chr.32.i8; Is.36.ii, 13) as well as that after it (Ne.i3.24), which latter was Aramaic. [Semitic Languages. ] 416 JEZANIAH Jezanlah', the soa of Hoshaiah, the Maachathite, aad one of the captains of the forces, who after the fall of Jerusalem joined Gedaliah at Mizpah. In the events which followed the assassination of that officer Jezaniah took a prominent part {Je.40.8,42.i). The Azariah of Je.43.2 is apparently to be identified with Jezaniah, who is called Jaazaniah in 2 K. 25. 23. Jezebel, daughter of Ethbaal, wife of Ahab. Her marriage with Ahab marks a turning-point for evil in the history of Israel, and indirectly in Judaea, for Athaliah was Jezebel's daughter. She combined wickedness and sensuality with the sternest and fiercest qualities inherent in the Phoenician people. In her hands her husband became a mere pup- pet (iK.21.25). The first effect of her influ- ence was the establishment of the Phoenician worship of Baal and Astarte (16.31,32,18.19) and the destruction of the prophets of Jehovah (I8.13 ; 2K.9.7). When at last the people, at the instigation of Elijah, rose against her prophets, and slaughtered them at the foot of Carmel, and Ahab was terrified into submission, she alone retained her presence of mind, and her only answer was a message of defiance to Elijah, " So let the gods do to me, and more also, if I make not thy life as one of them by to-morrow at this time" (iK.19. 1,2). The next instance of her power and unscrupulousness is found in the story of Naboth. She wrote a warrant in Ahab's name and sealed it with his seal. To her, and not to Ahab, was the an- nouncement made, " Naboth is stoned and is dead," and she bade her husband take posses- sion of the vineyard ; and on her accordingly fell the prophet's curse, as well as on her hus- band (21.1-24). She survived Ahab 14 years, and still, as queen-mother, was a great person- age in the court of her sons, and, as such, be- came the special mark for the vengeance of Jehu. With undaunted spirit she determined to meet the destroyer of her family. As he neared J ezreel she stood at the window over the city gate, arrayed in royal robes, and, looking down upon him, flung out the taunt, " Is it well, thou Zimri, thy master's murderer?" (2K.9.31, R.V. marg.). At Jehu's command the eunuchs hurled her from the window, and she fell in front of the usurper's chariot. Her blood was sprinkled on the palace wall and on the horses of J ehu. The merciless destroyer passed on, and the last remains of life were trampled out by the horses' hoofs. During the banquet held to celebrate his success, Jehu remembered the fallen queen and commanded that she should be buried. But only " the skull, and the feet, and the palms of her hands " remained (9.30-37). Her name became a title of reproach for any who indulged in idolatrous practices (Re\.2.20). [NiCOLAITANES.] [h.c.b.] Jeze'lus. — 1. (ilCsd.8.32) = jAiiAZiEL, 5. — 2. (iI-:sd.8.35) = JiaiiEL, 8. Je'zer, third son of Naphtali (Gen. 46. 24 ; Num. 26. 49 ; iChr.7.13), and ancestor of the Jezenites, who were numbered in the plains of Moab. Jezlah', a descendant of Parosh, who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.25). Jeziel', a Benjamite archer who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.3). JOAB Jezliah', a Benjamite chief of^the sons of Elpaal (iChr.8.i8). Jezoap', son of Ashur by Helah (iChr.4.7). Jezpahiah', the Levite choir-leader at the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.i2.42). Jezpeel' (= God sowed). — 1. A town near the border of Issachar (Jos. 19. 18) ; now Zer'in, a village on the N.W. slope of Gilboa. Here Saul was killed by the Philistines (iSam. 29. 1, 11), and here Ishbosheth succeeded him (2Sam.2.9). The " fountain [Heb. 'ayin] by J ezreel," where Saul camped, was no doubt the fine spring N. of the village. J ezreel was included in Solomon's fifth district (iK. 4.12), answering to Issachar. It was the home of Naboth, whose vineyard adjoined Ahab's palace (18.45,21.1,23). Rock-hewn wine-presses still remain on the hill E. of the village. The site commands a view of the valley of J ezreel, up which the watchman on the tower saw Jehu advancing. The chariots of the two kings met him probably in the flat ground N. of the city ; and Ahab's son was afterwards cast into the field of Naboth (2K. 9-17-37) with Jezebel, while Ahaziah escaped N. [GuR.] Elijah doomed Jezebel to be eaten by dogs " by the wall of Jezreel " (1K.2I.23), but Ahab's doom was remitted (fu. 24,29), fall- ing on his son, though his own blood was lapped by dogs at Samaria (iK. 22.38). Hosea (I.4-11) refers to Jehu's cruelty, and promises an " answer " to the prayers of Jezreel (2.22). The Valley of Jezreel {'emcq yizr^'il) is the broad vale running E. to Jordan (Jos. 17. 16 ; Judg.6.33 ; Ho. 1.5). — 2. A. town in the moun- tains S. of Hebron (Jos.i5.56; cf. iChr.4.3), the home of David's wife Ahinoam (iSam.25. 43, etc. ). The site is unknown. — 3. The eldest son of the prophet Hosea (I.4). [c.r.c] Jez'peellte, applied to Naboth only (iK. 21. iff. ; 2K.9.2i,25). [Jezreel, i.] Jezpeeli'tess, applied only to David's wife, Ahinoam (iSam.27.3,30.5 ; 2Sam.2.2, 3.2 ; iChr.3.1). [Jezreel, 2.] Jibsam', son of Tola, the son of Issachar (iChr.7.2). Jidlaph', a son of Nahor (Gen. 22.22). Jimna' (Num.26. 44), Jimnah (Gen. 46. 17), the firstborn of .\sher, called Imnah in iChr.7.30 ; ancestor of the Jimnites. Jlphtah', a city of J udah in the Shephclah (Jos. 15. 4^). The site is unknown, [c.r.c] Jiphthah-el', Valley of (Jos.19.27)- [Dabbasheth.] Joab'. — 1. Son of Zeruiah, David's sister (iChr.2.ifi). and brother of Abishai and Asahel. Nothing is known of his father excejit that his sepulchre was at Bethlehem (2Sam.2.32). We first iiear of Joab on the occasion of the strife at (libeon between David's and Ishbosheth's men (2.i2ff.). Abner, who commanded the latter, w.is defeated, and on his retreat reluct- antly killed .\sahel. Joab voluntarily gave up the jjursuit and returned to Hebron, but his vengeance was only postponed. Some time afterwards Joab heard that Abner, who had quarrelled with Ishbosheth, had in his absence paid a visit to David, and been received into favour (3.23). He remonstrated with the king, and then, unknown to Davitl, inunedi- ately sent messengers after Abner, who was overtaken by them at the well of Sirah. Not J-OAB Suspecting treachery, Abner returned at once to Hebron, and as he entered the gate, Joab took him aside, andstabbedhimtodeath(3.27). [Abner.] There was now no rival left in the way of Joab's advancement, and at the siege of Jebus he was appointed for his prowess chief captain of the host (iChr.11.6 ; 2Sam.8.i6). In this post he served the king with undeviat- ing fidelity. He had a chief armour-bearer of his own, Naharai, a Beerothite (2Sam.23.37 ; iChr.11.39), and ten attendants to carry his equipment and baggage (2Sam.l8.15). He had the charge of giving the signal by trumpet for advance or retreat (18. 16). He was called by the almost regal title of " lord " (11. 11), " the prince of the king's army " (iChr.27.34). His usual residence was in J erusalem, but he had a house and property in the country (2Sam.l3. 23), in the "wilderness " (iK.2.34), probably on the N.E. of Jerusalem (cf. iSam.l3.i8 ; Jos. 8.15,20), near an ancient sanctuary, called from its nomadic village " Baal-hazor " (2Sam. 13.23 ; cf. with 14.30), where there were exten- sive sheepwalks. (i) His great war was that against Axamon, which he conducted in person in three campaigns, (a) Against the allied forces of Syria and Ammon. (b) Against Edom. The decisive victory was gained by David himself in the " valley of salt," and celebrated by a triimaphal monimaent (8.13). To Joab it fell to complete the work, and he remained for 6 months, extirpating the male population,whomhethenburied(iK.ll.i5,i6). (c) Against the Ammonites. They were again left to Joab(2Sam.l0.7-i9). Atthesiegeof Kab- bah, the ark was sent with him, and the whole army was encamped in booths or huts round the beleaguered city (ll.i,ii). After a sortie of the inhabitants, which caused some loss to his army, Joab took the lower city on the river, and then, in a magnanimous spirit of loyalty, sent to urge David to come and take the citadel, so that the king himself might have the honour of the victory (12.26-29). (2) In the entangled relations which grew up in David's domestic life, Joab bore an important part, (a) His unscrupulous conduct in cormexion with Uriah is related in 11. 1-25. (b) His success in reinstating Absalom in David's favour after the miurder of Amnon in 14. 1-20. (c) At Absalom's rebellion he remained loyal. He accompanied the king beyond the J ordan, and in the final battle of Ephraim assmned the responsibility of taking the rebel's life, in spite of David's injunction to spare him. For this politic act David transferred the captaincy of the troops to Amasa, who had been Absalom's commander-in-chief (18.2,11-15,19.13). (d) At Sheba's revolt, Amasa proved himself incap- able, and David appointed Abishai to take the command of the army. Joab went with his brother, and in the heat of the pursuit encoim- tered Ajnasa, whom he treacherously slew at the " great stone " in Gibeon (20.1,4-13). (e) Having removed his rival, Joab took the lead, Euid speedily brought the campaign to a successful issue (2O.14-22). (/) On David's determination to number his people, Joab's strenuous remonstrance was in vain (24.2-4). (3) Joab's end was moiu'nful. At the close of his long life, his loyalty, so long imshaken, at last wavered. " Though he had not turned JOASH 417 after Absalom he turned after Adonijah " (iK. 2.28). This probably filled up the measure of the king's long-cherished resentment. The revival of the pretensions of Adonijah after David's death was suflScient to awaken the suspicions of Solomon. J oab fled to the shelter of the altar at Gibeon, and was there slain by Benaiah.-^2. Son of Seraiah, and descendant of Kenaz (iChr.4.14). — 3. Head of a family, not of priestly or Levitical rank, whose descen- dants, with those of Jeshua, were the most numerous of all who returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.6,8.9 ; Ne.7.11 ; iEsd.8.35). [h.c.b.] Jo'achaz (iEsd.l.34) = jEHOAHAz, 2. Joa'chim. — 1. (Ba.l.3) = Jehoiakim. — 2. A " high-priest " at Jerusalem ; " the son of Chelcias " — i.e. Hilkiah (Ba.1.7)- Joacim (Joakitn, R.V.)..^1. (iEsd.l.37) = Jehoiakim. — 2. (I.43) = Jehoiachin. — 3. A high-priest, the son of Zorobabel= Joiakim (5.5).— 4. The high-priest "who was in Jeru- salem" (Jth.4.6,14,15.8). — 5. The husband of Susanna (Sus.iff.). — 6. The father of the B.V.M. in apocryphal gospels. [c.r.d.b.] Joada'nus, son of Jeshua (iEsd.9.19) ; apparently called Gedaliah in Ezr.10.i8. Joah'. — 1. Son of Asaph, and chronicler, or keeper of the records, to Hezekiah (Is. 36. 3, 11,22). — 2. Son of Zimmah, a Gershonite (i Chr.6.2i). — 3. Third son of Obed-edom (iChr. 26.4), a Korhite, and one of the doorkeepers appointed by David. — 4. A Gershonite, the son of Zimmah, in the time of Hezekiah (2Chr. 29.12). — 5. The son of Joahaz, and keeper of the records, or annalist, to Josiah (2Chr.34.8). Joahaz', father of Joah, 5 (2Chr.34.8). Jo'anan (iEsd.9.i) = Johanan, 8. Joan'na, son of Rhesa (Lu.3.27) — i.e. son of Zerubbabel — the Hananiah of iChr.3.19. Joanna, " wife of Cbuza, steward of Herod" (Lu.8.3), a lady of the court of Antipas ; one of the group of women who accompanied Jesus on His circuit in Galilee between Nain and Capernaum, and, later, visited His tomb only to find it empty (Lu. 24.10). Chuza may have been the nobleman whose son Jesus healed, in which case Joanna's gratitude is explained. Dr. Sanday suggests that she may have been the channel through which the story of the Virgin Birth was com- municated from Mary, the mother of Jesus, to St. Luke. [c.r.d.b.] Joan'nan, surnamed Caddis, eldest brother of Judas Maccabaeus (iMac.2.2) ; called John (iMac.9.36ff.) and Joseph (2Mac.8.22,10.i9). He was slain by " the children of Jambri." Joapib'. [Jehoiarib.] Jo'ash (L"yi''), son of Becher (iChr.7.8). Joash' (ti'NV), a contraction of Jehoash. — 1. Son of Ahaziah king of J udah, and the only one of his children who escaped the murderous hand of Athaliah. His history is contained in 2K.11,12, 2Chr.22.io-24. After his father's sister Jehosheba, the wife of Jehoiada, had stolen him from among the king's sons, he was hid for six years in the chambers of the temple. In the 7th year of his age a successful revolu- tion placed him on the throne, and freed the country from the tyranny and idolatries of Athaliah. For at least 23 years, while Jehoiada lived, this reign was very prosperous. Except- 27 418 JOATHAM ing that the high places were still resorted to for incense and sacrifice, pure religion was re- stored, and contributions were collected and the temple repaired ; andthe country seems to have been free from foreign invasion and domestic disturbance. But, after thedeathof Jehoiada, Joash fell into the hands of bad advisers, at whose suggestion he revived the worship of Baal and Ashtaroth. Rebuked for this by Zechariah, the son of Jehoiada, Joash caused him to be stoned to death in the very court of the Lord's house (Mt.23.35). The vengeance imprecated by the murdered high-priest was not long delayed. That very year, Hazael king of S>Tia came up against Jerusalem, and car- ried off a vast booty as the price of his depar- ture. Joash had scarcely escaped this danger, when he fell into another and fatal one. Two of his servants, taking advantage of his severe illness, probably in consequence of wounds re- ceived in battle, conspired against him, and slew him in his bed in the fortress of Millo. J cash's reign lasted 40 years. — 2. King of Israel, son of Jehoahaz, and for two full years contemporary with the preceding (2K.I4.1 ; cf. with 12.1,13.10). On his accession the king- dom was in a deplorable state from the devas- tations of Hazael and Benhadad, kings of Syria. When J oash visited Elisha on his death- bed, the prophet promised him deliverance from the Syrian yoke in Aphek {2K.i3.17ff.). He then bid him smite upon the ground, and the king smote thrice and then stayed. The prophet rebuked him for staying, and limited to three his victories over Syria. [Elisha.] In accordance with this prophecy Joash defeated Benhadad three times, and re- covered from him the cities which Hazael had taken from Jehoahaz. The other great mili- tary event of Joash's reign was his successful war with Amaziah king of J udah. The grounds of this war are given fully in 2Chr.25. The two armies met at Beth-shemesh, that of Joash was victorious, put the army of Amaziah to the rout, took him prisoner, brought him to Jerusalem, broke down the wall of Jerusalem, and plundered the city. He died in the 15th year of Amaziah king of J udah, and was suc- ceeded by his son Jeroboam II. — 3. The father of Gideon, and a wealthy man among the Abiezrites(Judg.6.ii,29-32,7.i4,8.i3,29,32). — 4. Apparently a younger son of Ahab, who held a subordinate jurisdiction in the lifetime of his father, or was appointed viceroy during his absence in the attack on Ramoth-gilead (iK. 22.26; 2Chr.l8.25). Or he may have been merely a prince of the blood-royal or, as Kawlinson suggests, a state officer. [Mal- ciiiAii, 8. 1 — 5. A descendant of Shelah the son of J udah, but whether his son or the son of Jokim, is not clear (iChr.4.22). — 6. A Ben- jamitc, son of Shemaah of Gibeah (I2.3), who joined David at Ziklag. — 7. An officer in David's household (27.28). Jo'atham (.Mt.1.9) = Jotham, 2. Joazab'dus (ii:sd.9.48) = Jozabad, 7. Job |(.m-W' ' 'rt Tliat alllii lions were oltfii lu rmittrd, not as iMirt'ly pUliilm cliltrartcrT (4) The next imitii relates "that Jehovah intervened in the de- bate, although He did not explain to Job what was the real cause of his sufTerings. The .\\- mighty pointed out man's iun^irance. even witii JOS rpt^pRr^ f" rr^3»tArg picK^^H nnf^er his eye. JThis was a practical demonstration thai li man could be so ignorant as to matters which naturally fell under his own observation, it was but folly to expect him to be able to compre- hend superhuman things, which (by the pro- vidence of God) were shut out from his know- ledge. In the speech of Jehovah the problem of suffering is not, indeed, solved, nor even clearly stated. But the appearance of the Almighty in the thunder-storm was enough to convince Job of the sin and presumption of which he had been guilty. Hence the patri- arch at once acknowledges his sin. He abhors himself, and repents in dust and ashes. (5) The last portion of the book then relates that the friends, who had blindly striven to uphold the Almighty's justice, were condemned for their unjustice towards Job, who interceded for them ; while the patriarch was compensated for the trials, to which he had been subjected in order to prove the disinterestedness of true faith in God before the great adversary and before men. There are many points in this history of the unseen conflict waged between the tempter and the tempted which are of very great importance. The " sons of God " who presented themselves on certain days before Jehovah, ought not to be regarded as angels [Sons of God], although such an interpreta- tion is not impossible. But if Scripture be ex- plained by Scripture, the long line of passages beginning with Gen.6.1-4, and embracing Deut.l4.i ; Is.1.2,43.6 ; Je.S.ig ; Ps.73.i5 ; Pr.14.26, etc., justifies that phrase being inter- preted the "professors of religion on earth." It should be borne in mind that there is an " accuser of the brethren " often spoken of as present on such occasions, keenly observant of any halting or transgression on the part of the professed people of Jehovah (as in Zech.3.1-3 ; Rev.i2.7-11). He is sometimes significantly referred to as " the lying spirit " (the Heb. has the article in iK.22.22), in reference to his well-known character. Cf. Rev. 20. 3, 8 ; and our Lord's description of him as a liar and a murderer from the beginning (Jn. 8. 44). A. B. Davidson was, therefore, unfortunate in re- garding Satan in the prologue to the book of Job as presenting himself before God to report to God, or to receive commissions from God. Satan is everywhere in Scripture represented as an evil power, as an accuser or an adversary — an opponent both of God and man ; and, " strong " as he is in some respects, there is a " stronger " than he, without whose permis- sion Satan is unable to " hurt " the people of God. For, notwithstanding all his efforts, he is compelled (malicious though he be) to act in subordination to a higher power ; and can only bring to pass such afflictions as God's hand and counsel has fore-ordained (Ac.4.28). The theory that Satan was an evil power intro- duced into Jewish theology after the Exile, has led modern scholars to err widely in inter- preting many passages of the O.T. The O.T. books more or less distinctly reveal the great facts of sin and salvation. They contain a light which shines more and more unto the perfect day- Hence we refuse to ignore the passages which, until comparatively recent years, have been regarded as pointing out Him JOB 419 through Whom salvationhasbeen wrought — the great Messiah — the testimony of Whom is the spirit of prophecy. Consequently, we coincide with those interpreters who see a reference to that Redeemer in Job 19.21,23-26, although, most probably, not there to the resurrection. A life after death is referred to, and that is all that could have been expected in such early days. — The date of the book of Job is a matter never likely to be satisfactorily cleared up. The deportations of peoples from one country to another, which was so char- acteristic a feature of the Assyrian rule, and which seem to be referred to in 12. 14-25, may fairly lead to the conclusion that the book was written in that period. There are quo- tations from it in Ps.8.5. Similarities may be traced in Ps. 72. 12, 13 (cf. Job 29.12). Of course the reverse may be true, and the writer may have imitated the Psalmist, or both may have drawn from a common source. Passages closely like have been pointed out in Jeremiah. There is no reference in the book to tabernacle, temple, or Levitical law. The scenes with which the writer was best ac- quainted were those of the desert ; but the locality of Uz is, to say the least, doubtful. But the idea that it was written before Moses rests upon foundations which have long since been shown to be more than doubtful. Job, as an historical personage noted for his piety, is mentioned in Ezk. 14. 14,20. He and his thxee friends do not seem to have been Israelites. Elihu alone seems to have been connected with the family of Abraham, though it is quite possible that the name Ram may be an ab- breviation of Aram. The critical questions, apart from those connected with the prologue and epilogue, have mainly to do with the speeches of Elihu, the authenticity of which has been much discussed by scholars in all ages. The subject is so complex, that it is impossible to treat it fully in a short compass. Able and orthodox scholars have Written on both sides. The pendulum is beginning to swing back again, in favour of Elihu's speeches forming an integral part of the book, when a critic of such ability as Budde has expressed himself in favour of the genuineness of that portion. — The literature of the book is most extensive. Apart from casual notices of the work, e.g. under J as. 5. 11, the exposition of Gregory the Great (d. 604) is of not a little im- portance ; Spanheim (1672) has much of in- terest; Schultens' Liber Jobi (1737), in 2 vols., was a masterly work for that date ; Prof. S. Lee, of Cambridge, in 1837 and Schlottmann in 185 1 contributed valuable commentaries; E. Renan in 1865 wrote on the book; Heiligstedt contributed to Maurer's Comm. the portion on Job in 1847 ; C. P. Carey wrote a large comm., but one which requires to be read with care, as its scholarship cannot be always depended on. A. B. Davidson wrote in 1862 an excellent work, which he left unfinished. In theCamb. Bible (1884) Prof. Davidson wrote a complete comm., but from a somewhat different standpoint. Of the German commentaries of Ewald (1854) an Eng. trans, was published by Williams & Norgate h) 1882. Bernard's Book of Job, edited by Cbraice, is a bulky volume, and not very dependable. Commentaries of 420 jobab Hengstenberg (1875), Ad. Merx (1871), F. Delitzsch (1876), Volck (1889), G. H. B. Wright (1883), S. Cox {1885), etc. [c.H.H.vv.] Jobab'. — 1. Youngest son of Joktan (Gen. 10.29 ; iChr.1.23), preceded by Havilah and Ophir. — 2. The second king of Edom (Gen. 36. 33 ; iChr.1.44). He was the son of Zerah ; and in a postscript to the LXX. of Job de- clared to be the same person as the patriarch. —3. King of Madon, routed by Joshua at Merom (Jos. 11. i). — 4, 5. Two Benjamites (iChr.8.9,18). . [f.j.f.-j.] Joche'bed, wife and aunt of Aniram, and mother of Moses (Ex. 6. 20 ; Num. 26. 59). Jo'da = Judah the Levite (iEsd.5.58 ; see Ezr.3.9). [HoDAViAH, 3.] Joed', a Benjamite, son of Pedaiah and ancestor of Sallu (Ne.ll.7). Joel {yo'i'l, Jehovah is God ; 'IwtjX). — 1. The writer of the book which stands second in order of the Minor Prophets. The only evidence as to Joel's date is the position thus assigned him ; and it is clear that he must be viewed either as very early, or else post- Exilic. There is no mention of the Assyrians or Babylonians, or, indeed, of any foe of Israel, save the Phoenicians and Philistines (3.4[4.4]), and Egypt and Edom (3.i9[4.i9]) ; but in no case does the allusion give us any clue to the date. There is much to be said for the view that Jehoshaphat's victory over Moab, Ammon, and Edom (2Chr.20) is referred to in J1.3 (4, Heb.) ; and if this be so, we ob- tain our anterior limit. On the other hand, the first point of contact of Assyria with Israel was the invasion of Pul in the reign of Mena- hem ; Pul being, doubtless, the same as Tig- lath-pileser, who invaded in the reign of Pekah. The earliest connexion with Judah was Sen- nacherib's invasion. We thus fix a date be- tween the reigns of Jehoshaphat (873-848 B.C.) and of Menahem (c. 748-740 B.C.). A pro- bable date is the early part of Joash's reign, while the strong-handed rule of Jehoiada guided things aright. We thus explain the absence of any allusion to a king. The real ruler was the priestly power behind the throne. The author was one to whom the temple and its services were dear. There is no reference to any idolatrous practice; but this also is in- telligible under the rule of Jehoiada. The only national sin spoken of is drunkenness, and that only incidentally (I.5). Some scholars, while accepting the two above limits, suggest the reign of Uzziah for the period of Joel, with (we think) less likelihood. Uzziah reigned (c. 792-740 B.C. ) much nearer to the time of the Assyrian in- vasion, and his contemporary, Amos, refers to the Assyrians by name. Again, one can hardly fancy that in the reign of so strong- handed a king, a prophecy would be altogetlier without some kind of reference to the reigning monarch. Of course, these negative argu- ments would allow of a post-lixilic date ; but to this it may be replied, that in that case the autlujr must have lived not long before the time of the editors of the Minor Prophets, who must have had sonae definite knowledge about him. Again, we should tiius have Joel a con- temporary of Haggai and Malachi, though in beauty of diction his Heb. stands much higlier than theirs. Some of the arguments urged for JOHANAN the late date do not seem to us to carry much weight. Ther?fHim(1.2,i4,2.i6,2.28L3.i]) may simply be old men, and not officials. The ab- sence of allusion to idolatry is explained by the thoroughness of Jehoiada's reforms (2Chr.23). Again, Joel's message is to Judah. But that of Amos was to Israel, and that of Elijah and Elisha almost entirely so (except 21.12). The reference to Greeks (Jl.3.6) is urged as a mark of late date ; yet not only are they certainly mentioned in an inscription of Sargon (c. 710 B.C.), but (long before) a Greek is said to be named in the Amarna letters (Sayce, Higher Crit. and Mon. p. 128). One argument can only be called ridiculous — viz. that the reference to the walls (2.7,9) points to a date after Ezra and Nehemiah. Presumably, all ancient cities had walls at all times ; otherwise they would have had small chance of survival. The prophecy pictures for us the ravages wrought by locusts (1-I-7), from which and from drought the land suffers (8-20), and he bids them fast and cry for God's mercy. In ch. 2 we have what is either another invasion of locusts, or an attack by human foes under the imagery of locusts — probably the latter. In vv. 18-27 we have the promise of abundant blessing on the repent- ance of the people, and 2.28[3.i] tells of the Messiah and of God's judgments of all nations. Joel is twice quoted in N.T. : 2.28f. in Ac.2.i7f., and 2.32 in R0.IO.13. Credner, Joel (183X) ; Ewald, Prophets of O.T. (Eng. trans.) ; Pusey, in Minor Prophets ; Meyrick, in Speaker's Comin. ; G. A. Smith, in Twelve Prophets, vol. i. ; Driver, in Camb. Bible for Schools and Colleges. — 2. Elder son of Samuel (iSam.8.2 ; iChr.6.33,15.17). — 3. A Kohathite (6.36), called Shaul in ver. 24.-4. A Simeonite prince (4.35). — 5. A Reubenite (5.4). — 6. A Gadite chief (5. 12). — 7. A chief of the tribe of Issachar (7.3). — 8. (11.38.) [Igal, 2.] — 9. A Gershomite chief in the reign of David (15-7,11); perhaps the same as— 10. The son of Jehiel (23.8,26.22).— 11. A chief of the half-tribe of Manasseh, W. of Jordan, in the reign of David (27.2o). — 12. A Kohathite Levite in the reign of Hezekiah (2Chr. 29.12). — 13. One of the sons of Nebo who had married foreign wives (Ezr.lO.43). — 14. The son of Zichri, a Benjamite (Ne.ll.9). [r.s.] Joelah', son of Jeroham of Gedor. He joined David at Ziklag (iChr.12.7). Joe'zep, a Korhite, one of David's captains at Ziklag (iChr.12.6). Jogrbehah', a city fortified by the tribe of Gad ( Num. 32.35 ) on the mountains ( J udg.8. 11). Nowtheruin7ion Jerusalem JOHANNES by the Chaldeans. He vainly warned Gedaliah against the plot of Ishraael, and after his murder was one of the foremost in the pursuit of his assassin, and rescued the captives carried off from Mizpah (41.ii-i6). Despite this, he and the captains feared the vengeance of the Chaldeans, and (notwithstanding the warnings of Jeremiah) retired into Egypt. — 4. The firstborn son of Josiah, king of Judah (iChr. 3.15), who probably predeceased his father or died with him at Megiddo. — 5. A Benjamite who joined David at Ziklag (I2.4). — 3. A Gadite warrior, who followed David (12. 12). — 7. The father of AzARi AH, 15, an Ephraimite (2Chr.28.12). — 8. Son of Hakkatan, and chief of the Bene-Azgad who returned from Baby- lon with Ezra (Ezr.8.12). — 9. The "son" of Eliashib, one of the chief Levites (Ezr.10.6 ; Ne.12.23) ; some identify him with Jonathan, II, who was grandson of Eliashib. — 10. Son of Tobiah the Ammonite, and husband of the daughter of Meshullam (Ne.6.i8). Johan'nes (iEsd.9.29) = jEHOHANAN, 4. John (in Apoc). — 1. Father of Mattathias, and grandfather of the Hasmonaean family (iMac.2.i). — 2. [JoANNAN.] — 3. Father of Eupolemus, an envoy from Judas Maccabaeus to Rome (8.17 ; 2Mac.4.ii). — 4. (Hyrcanus.) Son of Simon, and nephew of J udas Maccabaeus (iMac.l3.53,16.iff.) [Maccabees.] — 5. An en- voy from the Jews to Lysias (2Mac.ll.17). John. — 1. One of the high-priest's farriily, who, with Annas and Caiaphas, sat in judg- ment upon the apostles Peter and John (Ac. 4. 6). Nothing further is known of him. — 2. The Heb. name of the evangelist Mark (Ac.12.i2, 25,13.5,15.37). — 3. The father of Simon Peter (R.V., Jn.l.42,21.15-17). A variant of the name Jonas ; the latter is undoubtedly the reading in Mt.l6.17. [a.c.d.] John the Apostle. Of St. John's early life we know only that it was passed in fairly easy circumstances. His father Zebedee had hired servants (Mk.l.20), and must have been a well-to-do fisherman on the sea of Galilee ; and John was known to the high-priest, and had a house in Jerusalem (Jn. 18. 15, 19. 25). His mother Salome (Mt.27.56 ; cf. Mk. 15.40,16.1) ministered to Jesus of her substance (Lu.8.3), asked for her sons James and John to sit on either hand of Him in His kingdom (Mt.20.2i), and stood by the cross. If four women are meant in Jn.i9.25, Salome may well have been the Virgin's sister. St. John's age is no- where given ; but everything seems to show that he was young — perhaps a little over 20 — during our Lord's ministry. He seems to have followed the Baptist first, for there can be little doubt that Andrew and John were the two dis- ciples to whom the Baptist pointed out the Lamb of God (1. 37-40). They abode that day with Jesus, went with Him to the marriage at Cana, thence to Capernaum, and so to Jerusalem (2.2,12,22), and back through Samaria (4.8) to Galilee. The formal call to follow Jesus was given after this at the miraculous draught of fishes (Mk.l.20), and the choice as an apostle came later still (3.i7). Henceforth St. John is one of the three chief apostles who, only, are allowed to witness the reusing of Jairus's daughter (5.37), the Transfiguration (9.2), the prophecy on the JOHN THE APOSTLE 421 mount of Olives (13.3 ; Andrew a fourth this time), and the agony in the garden. St. Peter is always foremost; but St. John is " the dis- ciple whom Jesus loved," and reclining on Jesus' breast was able to throw back his head (Jn.i3.25) and ask the question which St. Peter could not. After the betrayal St. John seems to have followed with St. Peter, and obtained admission to the council hall by his acquaintance with Caiaphas. He must, indeed, have seen nearly the whole of the Passion, for he was standing by the cross when the Lord committed His mother to his charge ; and must have returned at once, for he wit- nessed the blood and water coming out at the thrust of the spear (19.26,27,34,35). After the Resurrection Mary Magdalene runs to Peter and John with the news that the stone is removed, and they go together to examine the empty sepulchre (20.2-8). St. John was also present at the second miraculous draught of fishes ; and when St. Peter asks, " What of this man?" the answer is, "H I will that he stay till I come, what is that to thee?" St. John did outstay the Lord's coming to judge Jerusalem. After the Ascension and the descent of the Holy Spirit, Peter and John go up to the temple to pray, and the healing of the lame man gives rise to a persecution by the Sadducees (Ac.3. 1-4.22). SS. Peter and John are next sent down to receive the converts in Samaria (8.14). Long afterwards James (the Lord's brother) and Peter and John were the three " pillars " at the time of the Apostolic Conference, c. 50 a.d. (Gal.2.9). This is the last direct mention of him in the N.T. He must, however, have left J erusalem some time before the outbreak of the Roman war in 66, though he cannot have reached Ephesus when the Pastoral Epistles were written (c. 63-66 A.D.). The next thing certain is that he was exiled to Patmos, and saw there the Reve- lation. This may have been under Domitian (81-96 A.D.), but Nero's persecution (from 64 A.D.) is more likely. His gospel, however, must certainly be placed in Do- mitian's time. To this we may add, on the authority of Irenaeus, that he lived to see the opening of Trajan's reign (98-117 a.d.). Traditions are many ; and some of them seem true, e.g. that of the robber, told by Clement of Alexandria ; and the story that he jumped out of the bath when he heard that Cerinthus was in the house is quite in charac- ter. Again, the account of the origin of his Gospel given in the Muratorian Fragment — that St. John was to write and all the rest to certify — exactly agrees with Jn.2i.24. But many traditions are doubtful, or worse than doubtful, e.g. that he came to Rome and was put into boiling oil at the Latin Gate in Domitian's time. St. John was not the mild character he is often considered to be, but emin- ently impetuous and stern. Not for nothing did the Lord call the sons of Zebedee sons of Thunder. James and John wish to call down fire on the Samaritans, and to forbid one " who foUoweth not with us" (Lu.9.49,54). Later on, he is everywhere at Peter's side. No other writer of N.T. speaks so sternly of heretics, and no man ever delivered a more tremendous defiance of the Roman Empire 422 JOHN THE BAPTIST JOHN, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. baptism of John and that accompanied with the gift of the Holy Spirit which our Lord afterwards ordained is clearly marked by St. John himself (Mt. 3. 11,12). As a preacher, he was eminently practical and discriminating. His mission — an extraordinary one for an extraordinary purpose — was not limited to those who had openly forsaken the covenant of God, and so forfeited its principles. It was to the whole people alike. Jesus Himself came from Galilee to Jordan to be baptized of John. After this event the Baptist's especial office ceased. But from incidental notices in Scripture we learn that he and his disciples continued to baptize for some time after our Lord entered upon His ministry (see Jn.3. 23,4.1 ; Ac. 19.3), and that St. John instructed his disciples as regards fasting (Mt.9.14 ; Lu.5. 33) and prayer (Lu.ll.i). But shortly after he had given his testimony to the Messiah, St. John's public ministry was brought to a close. In daring disregard of the divine laws, Herod Antipas had taken to himself the wife of his brother Philip ; and when St. John reproved him for this and for other sins (Lu.3.19), Herod cast him into prison. The place of his con- finement was the castle of Machaerus — a fortress on the E. side of the Dead Sea. Here reports reached him of the miracles of our Lord in Judaea. With a view perhaps of overcom- ing the scruples of his disciples, St. John sent two of them to Jesus to ask, " Art Thou He that should come ? " They were answered by a series of miracles wrought before their eyes ; and while Jesus bade the two messengers carry back to St. John as His only answer the report of what they had seen and heard. He took occasion, by a direct appeal to their own knowledge of his life and character, to guard the multitude against supposing that the Bap- tist himself was shaken in mind. Jesus further declared that St. John was, according to the true meaning of the prophecy, the Elijah of the new covenant, foretold by Malachi (3. i ). John was indeed to Herod what Elijah had been to .Ahab. Nothing but the death of the Baptist would satisfy the resentment of Herodias. A court festival was kept at Machaerus in ht)nour of the king's birthday. After supper, the daughter of Herodias came in and danced before the company, and so charmed the king that he jiromised witii an oath to gi\'e her whatever she should ask. Salome, iimmpted by her abandoned mother, demanded tlie iiead of John the Baptist. Herod gave instructions to an officer of his guard, who executed St. John in the prison. H. Reynolds, John the Baptist ; Hort. Jitdaistic Christianity ; Edersiieim, Life and Times of the Messiah ; Darwell Stone, Holy Bafiti'^in. John, Gospel ace. to St. I. Geniineness. {a) External Evidence. Few books of ancient times are so well attested as the Fourth Gospel. Of sub-aiiostnlic writers, Clement of Rome (gs) Barnabas, and (perhaps) Hernias (dates dis- puted) do not refer to it ; but Ignatius (c. 113) and the Teaching (80-130) show clear traces of some such teaching as we find in it. I'olycarp, in his short letter to tlie I'liilippians (c. 115), uses the F"irst Iqustle, whicli seems to be a post- the Baptist proclaimed to be at hand. But I scrijit totiiegospel, andiscertainly by thesame the fundj^inental distinction {jetween the | hand. I'apias (c. 140) also uses it, shows than we find in the Revelation. St. John was a born mystic, feeding on the mystic sides of our Lord's teaching, and shaping himself by it till his own style resembles the Master's. But on this see John, (Gospel acc. to. [h.m.g.] John the Baptist was of the priestly race by both parents, for his father Zacharias was a priest of the course of Abia, or Abijah (iChr. 24.10), offering incense at the very time when a son was jiromised to him ; and Elisabeth was of the daughters of Aaron (Lu.l.5). The divine mission of John had been the subject of prophecy. His birth — a birth not according to the ordinary laws of nature, but through miraculous interposition — was foretold by an angel sent from God, who proclaimed John's character and office. These revelations shook the faith of the aged Zacharias, who was pun- ished by temporary dumbness. Elisabeth, for greater privacy, retired into the hill-country, whither she was soon followed by her kins- woman Mary. Three months later, and while Mary still remained with her, Elisabeth was delivered of a son, six months before our Lord's birth. On the eighth day the child of promise, in conformity with the law of Moses (Lev.12.3), was brought to the priest for circumcision, and the friends of the family proposed to call him Zacharias, after his father. The mother, however, required that he should be called John — a decision which Zacharias, still speech- less, confirmed by waiting on a tablet " his name is John." The judgment on his lack of faith was then at once withdrawn. A single verse contains all that we know of St. John's history for the thirty years between his birth and the commencement of his public ministry : " The child grew and waxed strong in spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his show- ing unto Israel " (Lu.l.80). He was ordained to be a Nazirite from his birth (I.15). Dwell- ing bv himself in the wild and thinly peopled region W. of the Dead Sea, he prepared himself by self-discipline, and by constant communion with God, for the office to which he had been divinely called. His very appear- ance was a lesson to his countrymen ; his dress was that of the old prophets — a garment woven of camel's hair (c/. 2K.I.8), attached to the bodv by a leathern girdle. His food was such as the' desert afforded — locusts and wild honey. His supernatural birth, ascetic life, reputation for extraordinary sanctity, and the generally prevailing expectation that some great one was about to appear, sufficed, with- out the aid of miraculous jiower, for " John did no miracle" (Jn.lO.41), to attract a great multitude from " every quarter " (Mt.3.5 ; Lu.3.7). Brief and startling was his first exhortation to them : " Repent ye, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." Some score of verses contain all that is recorded of St. John's preaching, and the sum of it all is repentance ; not mere legal ablution or expiation, but a change of heart and life. Many of every class pressed forward to confess their sins and to be baptized. The preparatory baptism of John was a sign to the p<>oi)le that renunciation of sin and am<-ndment of life were necessary for admission into tiie kingdom of heaven, wliicli JOHN, QOSPEL, ACC. TO ST. traces of the gospel in the scanty remains of his writings, and almost certainly included passages from it in his commentary. Justin Martyr (c. 150-163) uses 3.4 and other pass- ages, and bases his whole system on the thoughts of the Fourth Gospel. His disciple Tatian (c. 170) made a harmony of our Four Gospels, and quotes the Fourth, while Theo- philus of Antioch (c. 182) expressly names John as its author. The earliest quotations which have come down to us are by the Gnostics. Basilides (c. 120) and the Ophites made great use of it ; also Valentinus (c. 140), and Heracleon, a Valentinian teacher (before 180), wrote a commentary on it. With the insigni- ficant exception of the Alogi, no heretics ap- pear to have disputed its authorship ; and of the rest, only Marcion rejected its authority. Later in the century Apollinaris of Hierapolis, Athenagoras, and the letter of the churches of Lyons and Vienne, accept it ; and the remark- able account of its origin given in the Mura- torian Fragment on the Canon seems based on a true tradition. The weightiest evidence of all remains. Irenaeus (c. 130-200) was a dis- ciple of Polycarp (69-155), and Polycarp was a disciple of St. John. There is no room for mistake in his distinct statement that St. John ^v^ote the Fourth Gospel. But his evi- dence implies much more than his own belief. He is so convinced that there are four gospels (confessedly, our four) that he actually argues that there cannot be more or less than four, be- cause there are four winds of heaven, etc. The argument is trifling enough ; but he could not possibly have used it if the Fourth Gospel had been disputed by any conspicuous church or teacher known to him. And he knew Poly- carp, Papias, and Pothinus, and perhaps another follower of the apostles, and could speak for the churches of Asia, Rome, and Gaul, and therefore practically for all the churches. The Fourth Gospel must have been fully known and generally accepted long be- fore the time of Irenaeus. It seems impossible to suppose that a forgery could have been so generally accepted under the eyes of Polycarp and many others, who must have been well aware of the fact if it had not been written by St. John, (b) Internal Evidence. The unity of authorship is evident, if we leave out the story of the adulteress (7.53-8. 11), which is probably an interpolation (found in A but omitted by N, B, and in a few MSS. placed after Lu.2i.38), and if we except Jn.21. 24 which is a certificate from others. That the writer was a Jew is clear from his familiarity with Jewish ideas, institutions, and parties ; also from the literary character and religious tone of the work, and from the use of the O.T. in it. That he was a Jew of Palestine appears from his independence of the LXX. version, and from many local allusions imply- ing such a familiarity with the country and its buildings as would have been impossible to a Jew of the Dispersion, or even to a Jew of Pal- estine who had not lived there before the des- truction of Jerusalem. There is no sign of the Alexandrian or of the Gnostic in his doctrine of the Logos. In fact, while his testimony that the Word became flesh is quite in the spirit qI Gen. 1.26, it utterly contradicts the first prin- JOHN, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. 423 ciples of Alexandrian and of Gnostic thought. The word Logos belonged to many schools of thought, and might be borrowed by an out- sider without committing himself to any one of them. St. John seems to be accepting, in a general way, both the Jewish belief that God speaks to men through a Person (the Memra or "Word"), and the Gk. conception of a divine reason [Logos) in the order of the world, and to identify the two ; and adds his own witness that this Word or Reason was incarnate in Jesus of Nazareth. [Philosophy.] That the writer was an eyewitness is his own express statement (Jn. 19.35,1.14), ("we beheld " : literally, as ijn.l. i) ; and there cannot be much doubt that he means himself by the disciple whom Jesus loved (Jn.13.23,19.26,21.7,20;— 20.2is not the same word), and by the second disciple in I.40. This is confirmed by 21. 24 — a certificate of contemporaries — also by the vivid and con- sistent characters of persons, and the numer- ous and careful details of time and place, by " eyewitness touches," and a great variety of unobtrusive coincidences with the Synoptists — in all a mass of evidence to which no second- hand writer could attain. And if the writer was an eyewitness, he must have been one of the Twelve, if only because no others were present in the supper-chamber ; and if he was one of the Twelve, we can hardly fix on ano- ther than John. The only difficulty is the statement that " John the Divine was killed by Jews," which seems falsely ascribed to Papias. Irenaeus tells us that John lived to the reign of Trajan ; and as the truth must have been familiar both to him and to Papias, they cannot have contradicted each other. But we have the words of Irenaeus in a Latin trans- lation of his own time, whereas those ascribed to Papias are only quoted by two late Byzantines, who seem to have got them from Philip of Side — a notorious blunderer. — II. Place and Time of Writing. It is generally agreed that the Fourth Gospel was written after the other three, not so much to supplement them, as to present the Person of the Lord from another point of view. So the writer passes over many well-known stories, like the Institution and most of the Galilean ministry, assuming them or alluding to them, but preferring first to develop the meaning of seven selected "signs," then to relate the discourses in the supper- chamber. All the evidence confirms the state- ment of Irenaeus, that St. John wrote it in his old age in Asia, so that we may roughly date it 85-95- — III. Contents AND Plan. The Fourth Gospel is essentially a prophecy : not in the sense of prediction, but as showing the eternal significance of the events of time. It is the epic of the contest of light and darkness. In the beginning the Word is already throned face to face with God ; and the eternal counsel was that things created should in Him be life. He was immanent in the world, and the world knew Him not. He came incarnate to His own people, and His own people received Him not. The Incarnation was the full and final manifestation of God ; and the glory of the incarnate Word shone out more and more brightly as the love of His disciples grew more and more firm, the hatred of the renegade " Jews " more and more bitter, till the revela- 424 JOHN, EPISTLES OF ST. tion reached its highest glory in the Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension — for St. John links these three together as one process of " glorifica- tion," or " lifting up from the earth." We have: (i) The Prologue (I.1-18), the Word eternal and incarnate. {2) The Narrative (1. 19-20.31), which sub-divides : (A) The Word revealed to the world (l.ic)-12.5o). (a) The Prelude (1. 19-4.54), including the Baptist's testimony (1. 19-34), the call of the first dis- ciples (1. 35-51), the first "sign" (at Cana) (2.1-11), Nicodemus (2.13-3.36), the woman of Samaria (4.1-42), the second sign (the noble- man's son) (4.43-54). {b) The Contest (5.1-12. 50), including the third sign (5) (impotent man) and discourse of the Son and the Father ; fourth and fifth signs (6) (the five thousand, the walk- ing on the water), and discourse of the Bread of Life, the feast of tabernacles (7,8) and dis- courses thereon ; the sixth sign (the man born blind), the investigation by the Sanhcdrin and discourse thereon (9,10); the seventh sign (Laza- rus) and its issues, and close of the public min- istry (11,12). (B) The Word revealed to His disciples (13.1-17. 26). (a) The Last Supper (13. 1-30), the last discourses (I3.31-I6.33), the prayer of consecration (17). {b) The Victory (18.1-20.31), including the betrayal (I8.1-11), trials (18.i2-19.i6), crucifixion (19. 17-42), and resurrection (20). (3) The Epilogue (21), in- cluding the additional sign (draught of fishes), the last charges, and the attestation. For the relation of this Gospel to the Synoptic Gospels, see our art. Gospels. [h.m.c] John, Epistles of St. I. Of the three epistles which bear St. John's name, the first is much the longest and most important. Its authenticity is also the least open to doubt. The earliest writers of the Church in both the E. and the W. (e.g. Papias, Polycarp, Irenaeus, Tert. and Clem. Alex.) have recognized it as his. It is by implication included as "re- ceived in the Catholic (Church) " by the Mura- torian Fragment (2nd cent.), and both Euse- bius and Jerome place it among the acknow- ledged books of the Bible. The internal evidence of literary style, subject-matter, and treatment serves to identify the author with the writer of the Fourth Gospel. [John, Gospel Acc. TO.] The two %vritings must therefore stand or fall together, though the natural signs of independence between them should not be overlooked (see Dr. Salmond's art. in Hastings, D.B. [5 vols. 1904]). In form it is an epistle, as it has always been called, though it is not addressed to any particular body of Christians ; and hence its ancient title "Catholic" ( = general, universal), which it bears in common with the epp. of SS. James, Peter, and Judc. In the W. " canc>nical " was often wTongly sub- stituted for it. It was probably written from Ephesus. and intended in tlie first instance for the churches of Asia. The curious designa- tion ad Parthos, due to St. Augustine, has been variously but always tmconvincingly explained. Its purpose was to strengthen be- lievers' hold on the Person and work of our Lord in general, rather than to combat specific heresies that had already arisen. Yet it is likely that such false tendencies as Docetism and Cerinthianism were to some extent in the apostle's mind as he wrote. The plaa he JOHN, EPISTLES OF ST. follows is by no means easy to determine with certainty. We cannot, however, do better than accept Westcott's outline, which is as follows : Introduction. The facts of the Gos- pel issuing in fellowship and joy (I.1-4). A. The problem of life and those to whom it is proposed (1. 5-2. 17). (i) The Nature of God and the consequent relation of man to God (I.5-10). (2) The remedy for sin and the sign that it is effectual (2.1-6). (3) Obedience in love and hght in actual life (2.7-11). (4) Things temporal and eternal (2.12-17). B. The conflict of truth and falsehood without and within (2.i8-4.6). (i) The revelation of falsehood and truth (2.18-29). (2) The chil- dren of God and the children of the devil (3. 1-12). (3) Brotherhood in Christ and the hatred of the world (3.13-24). (4) The rival spirits of Truth and Error (4.1-6). C. The Christian life : the victory of faith (4.7-5.21). (i) The spirit of the Christian life : God and love (4.7-2 r). (2) The power of the Christian life : the victory and witness of faith (5.1-12). (3) The activity and confidence of the Christian life : epilogue (5. 13-21). — II. and III. The second and third epp. (containing but 13 and 15 verses each) conform to the ordinary concep- tion of a letter ; for they contain the usual beginning and ending of such compositions. Though loosely included among the " Catholic " epistles (see above), they are both of a private, personal nature. The second is addressed "to (an or the) elect lady," or "to lady Electa," or " to the elect Kvria " — if the definite article should be supplied, possibly we have here a cryptic appellation of some Christian community or church (c/. iPe.5. 13) — and the third to "the beloved Gaius." The writer in both cases calls himself the elder (Gk. irp€(r(3i')Tepoi ; Vulg. senior), and it has been doubted, without much reason, whether the apostle would thus designate himself. The title seems to be one especiall} in use in the Asiatic churches, and not in itself unnatural in a private, unofficial letter. These two epistles have not been so un- hesitatingly accepted as authentic as the first. [Canon of N.T.] The Muratorian Frag- ment. Clem. Alex., Dion. Alex., and the old Lat. version are among the earliest authorities for them. On the other hand, the Peshitta- S>Tiac does not contain them, and the Syrian Church itself rejected them. Origen and Eusebius both acknowledge their doubt- fulness. Tlie internal evidence, however, corroborates the general judgment of the Church. The style and treatment are dis- tinctly Johannine, though here again some of the words and phrases are not found elsewhere in St. John's writings. Both epistles were probably wTitten from Ephesus soon after the first. In the former the " elect lady " and those associated with her — the pronouns are " ye," not " thou," in vv. 6-10, but apparently persons different from her " children " men- tioned in vcr. 4 are addressed — are warned against false teachers as to our Lord's Incar- nation, who would imperil their walking in love towards the brethren. In the latter the apostle (i) expresses his pleasure at the good report which reaches him of Gaius — especially of his hospitality; (2) contrasts the love of inter- JOIADA fering and dictating displayed by Diotrephes — probably in opposition to Gaius — with the more reasonable conduct of Demetrius, which has gained the approval of " all and of the Truth Itself " (viz. Christ). An extensive bibliography will be found in Dr. Salmond's art. in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), but for most purposes Westcott's Commentary throughout remains sufficient. [c.l.f.] Joiada', high-priest after his father Elia- shib (Ne.12.10,11,22,13.28). Joiakim', a high-priest, son of Jeshua (Ne.l2.io,i2). Joiapib'. — 1. A " man of understanding " who assisted Ezra in the arrangements for the return (Ezr.8.i6). — 2. [Jehoiarib.] — 3. An ancestor of Maaseiah, 9 (Ne.ll.5). Jokdeam', a city of Judah, in the moun- tains (Jos. 15. 56), apparently S. of Hebron. The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Jokim', a son of Shelah, son of Judah (iChr.4.22). Jokmeam', a city of Ephraim, given with its suburbs to the Kohathite Levites (iChr.6. 68). In Jos. 21. 22 KiBZAiM occupies theplaceof Jokmeam. The R.V. reads Jokmeam for Jok- NEAM in 1K.4.12, but this is topographically impossible as applying to the above, [c.r.c] Jokneam', a city of the tribe of Zebulun, allotted with its suburbs to the Merarite Levites (Jos. 21. 34). It was a royal city near Carmel (I2.22) by a river (the Kishon), and thus at the S.W. angle of the tribal lot. Now the ruin Tell Qeimiln, at the foot of Carmel, W. of the Kishon where it passes from the plain of Esdraelon to that of Accho. (See 1K.4.12, where R.V. reads Jokmeam.) [c.r.c] Jokshan', a son of Abraham and Keturah (Gen. 25. 2, 3 ; iChr.l.32), whose sons were Sheba and Dedan. Joktan', in the genealogies in Gen. 10 and iChr.l, the second son of Eber, the elder being Peleg, the ancestor of Abraham. Joktan is said to have had 13 sons, whose "dwelling was from Mesha as thou goest unto Sephar, a mount of the east " (Gen. 10. 30). Several of these have not yet been identified ; but the family of Joktan has generally been located in S. Arabia. Among the sons of Joktan are Hazarmaveth (Hadramaut), Sheba, Ophir, and Havilah. The Arab geographers identify Jok- tan with Qahtan, a people in the S. of the peninsula ; but this seems only due to an as- sumed similarity of name, and rests on no tra- dition earlier than the time when the Arabs became acquainted with Genesis. A Targum on iChr. derives J oktan from the Heb. root qfn, "to be little," signifying that he was inferior to Peleg, the ancestor of Abraham. There is a district in Arabia called Qatan, which may be connected with this name, and the Katanitae are mentioned bv Ptolemy. [f.j.f.-j.] Joktheel'. — 1. A city in the low country of Judah (Jos. 15. 38), named next to Lachish. —2. " God-subdued," the title given by Amaziah to the cliff (A.V. Selah)^the strong- hold of the Edomites — after he had captiu-ed it (2K.14.7;see 2Chr.25.ii,i2). This "rock" was probably Petra(LXX.). [Sela.] [c.r.c] Jo'na, father of St. Peter (Jn.l.42) who is hence called Simon Bar-jona in Mt.l6.17. Jona^ab'. — ],. Son of Shimeah, and nephew JONAH 425 of David. He was " very subtil," and his age naturally made him the friend of his cousin Amnon, heir to the throne (2Sam.l3.3). He gave him the fatal advice for ensnaring his sister Tamar (5). Later, when Amnon was murdered by Absalom, and the exaggerated report reached David that all the princes were slaughtered, Jonadab was already aware of the real state of the case (32,33). — 2. (Je.35 passim.) [Jehonadab.] Jonah. The writer of the fifth book of the minor prophets (sixth in LXX.) is identical with the prophet named in 2K.i4.25f., the son of Amittai of Gath-hahepher in Zebulon, who predicted to Jeroboam II. the reconquest of the kingdom of Israel from the Syrians (according to Kautzsch, 783-743 B.C.). His grave was shown in later times at his birth- place, Gath-hepher, the present El Mesh-hed ; and a modem tradition which places it at Nebi YUnus, opposite Mosul (Layard's Nineveh, p. 313), also recalls his memory. His book (which is proved by its incompleteness as a biography and by its position in the prophetic canon not to be a biography by some other hand) is intended to show )ofjL6M 6f described under their names, and the boundary throughout is formed by important natural features — high ridges and deep gorges. — 2. An ancestor of Kadmiel (Ezr.3.9) ; perhaps = HoDAViAH, 3. — 3. A Levite who had taken a foreign wife {IO.23); perhaps the same Judah as in Ne.12.8,36. — 4. A Benjamite, son of Senuah, Ne.ll.9. — 5. "Judah upon [R.V. ai] Jordan " (Jos.i9.34), on E. of Naphtali. [JUDEA BEYOND JORDAN.] [C.R.C] Judah, King-dom of. When the dis- ruption of Solomon's kingdom took place at Shechem, only the tribe of Judah followed the house of David. But almost immediately afterwards, the tribe of Benjamin is recorded as contributing its warriors to make up his army. JlJDAH, KINGDOM Of 435 1 Judah (2K.I2.18), by Jehoash of Israel {14. [ 14), by Ahaz (16.8), by Hezekiah (I8.15), and j by Nebuchadnezzar (24.13). With a frontier less exposed than that of Israel to powerful enemies, a soil as fertile, a population hardier and more united, a fixed and venerated centre \ of administration and religion, an hereditary ; aristocracy in the sacerdotal caste, an army always subordinate, a succession of kings which no revolution interrupted, Judah survived her more populous and more powerful sister king- i dom by 135 years, and lasted from 930 b.c. to I 536 B.C. (a) The first three kings of Judah 1 cherished the hope of re-establishing their I authority over the Ten Tribes ; for fifty years ; there was war between them and the kings of The former territory of Simeon (iSam.27.6; iK.19.3 : cf. Jos. 19.1, 2) and part of Dan (2Chr. 11.10 ; cf. Jos. 19. 41, 42) were recognized as be- longing to the southern kingdom, which in the reigns of Abijah and Asa was enlarged by some additions taken out of the territory of Ephraim (2Chr.l3.i9,15.8,17.2) ; and the growth of the kingdom of J udah is witnessed, so far at least as the numbers can be relied upon [Number], by the progressive increase of the army under successive kings. Unless Judah had some means besides pasture and tillage of acquiring wealth — as by maritime commerce from the Red Sea ports, or (less probably) from Joppa, or bykeeping up the old trade (1K.IO.28) with Egypt — it seems difficult to account for the wealth of the temple treasury, which was so great as frequently to invite the hand of the spoiler. The treasury was emptied by Shishak (I4.26), again by Asa (15. 18), by Jehoash of Israel, (b) Hanani's remonstrance (2Chr.l6. 7) prepares us for the reversal by Jehoshaphat of Asa's policy towards Israel and Damascus. A close alliance sprang up between Judah and Israel. Jehoshaphat, active and prosperous, repelled nomad invaders from the desert, curbed the aggressive spirit of his nearer neigh- bours, and made his influence felt even among the Philistines and Arabians, (c) Amaziah, flushed with the recovery of Edom, provoked a war with his more powerful contemporary Jehoash, the conqueror of the Syrians ; and Jerusalem was entered and plundered by the Israelites, (d) Under Uzziah and Jotham, Judah long enjoyed political and religious prosperity, but Ahaz became the tributary vassal of Tiglath-pileser. {e) Though already in the fatal grasp of Assyria, Judah had a chequered existence of more than another century after the downfall of the kingdom of 436 JWdAS Israel. Then the consummation of its ruin came in the destruction of the temple by Nebuzaradan, amid the wailings of prophets, and the taunts of heathen tribes released at length from the yoke of David. The history which centred upon the capital is related at length in our art. Jerusalem. Judas, the Gk. form of the Heb. name JUDAH. 1. (lEsd.9.23) = JUDAH, 3. 2. Sur- namedMaccabaeus. [Maccabees.] — 3. Son of Calphi, and one of the two captains of Jona- than's army who remained firm at the battle of Gennesar (1Mac.ll.70). — 4. A Jew at Jeru- salem who sent greetings to Aristobuli'S and the Egyptian Jews (aMac.l.io). Some identify him with Judas Maccabaeus, or with the Judas mentioned by Josephus (13 Ant. xi. 2, I Wars iii. 5). — 5. Son of Simon and brother of John Hyrcanus, murdered by Ptolemeus the usurper, either (c. 165 b.c.) with his father (iMac. 16) or (c/. esp. vv. 2,16, 19) shortly afterwards, as Josephus (13 Ant. viii. i) suggests. — 6. The patriarch Judah (Mt.l.2,3). — 7. A man residing at Damascus, in " the street which is called Straight " [Damascus], with whom Saul of Tarsus lodged after his miraculous conversion (Ac.9.ii). Judas, Juda, or Jude, the Lord's Brother. So mentioned in their lists of the four brethren by St. Mt. (13. 55), who places him last, and by St. Mk. (6.3), who places hini third, before Simon. As to his exact relationship to the Lord, see James. In default of statements to the contrary, it may be assumed that he was brought up at Nazareth, that he shared in the brethren's unbelief as to J esus ( J n. 7. 5), and their subsequent conversion (.^0.1.14). The attempt to identify him with "Juuas of James" depends upon the uncertain rendering of 'Ioi;5as'Ia/cai/3oi' (Lu.6i6.), by "brother of" (c/. J u. I ) instead of " son of." There is no suffici- ent reason for doubting that this Jude, the " Lord's brother," is the author of Ep. Jude. He is not otherwise mentioned in N.T., but Hegesippus (Euseb. H.E. iii. 19, 20, 32) says that his grandsons were brought before Domitian and sur\'ivcd till the reign of Trajan, [e.h.p.] Judas {of James), or Thaddaeus, or Lebbaeus. .According to St. Luke (6.16 = Ac.1.13), one of the Twelve was called 'lovSas 'laKui^ov, which usage requires us to render "Judas, son of James." In Mk.3.i8 he is called, according to the best MSS., Thaddaeus. In Mt.10.3 the best reading (NB) is also Thad- daeus alone, the words underlying A.V. (Ac/:f Kekiotii in Judaea ; and so tlie only iion-( i.ililcaii a])ostlc. Inferences from this as to his temperament JtTDAS ISCAHIOT are uncertain. His selection was with know- ledge of the issue (6.64). There is no more moral difticulty in this, than in any ordinary providential assignment co individuals of positions in which they fail. It is incredible that Christ was deceived in him. In any case, Christ dismissed him from the " upper room " knowing what he would do if dismissed. His character was avaricious and dishonest (12. 4). His ability is suggested by his appointment as treasurer ; by the dexterity with which he played a double part unsuspected by the dis- ciples ; and by the powerful nature manifested in his fall. When selected he probably pos- sessed undeveloped capabilities which might mature in either way. Like the others, he was entrusted with a mission in Galilee. They were sent out two and two. We are not told who his companion was. He also shared our Lord's exclusion from Galilee, and all His wanderings. As time revealed the Master's plan, the apostle's trial came. Christ's re- jection of the popular Messianic ideals, con- sequent loss of popularity and influence, and prediction of His death brought Judas to the crisis. If he originally joined our Lord from self-seeking motives, under the ordinary Messianic conceptions, he would now be re- quired (a) either to exchange those conceptions for his Master's spiritual ideals, and so to sup- press self-interest ; or (b) openly to abandon Him ; or {c) to remain, and force the Master's hand, by compelling Him publicly to assert Himself. He had not the love necessary for the first alternative, nor did he select the second. If the third alternative moved him, then his intention was not to ruin Christ's cause, but to accelerate His triumph, 'ihe first hint of betrayal is placed by St. John precisely where Christ's popularity decreased (6.64,70,71). Thenceforward develops the tragic struggle between Judas and his Lord, culminating in the ftual Jerusalem period. The withering of the barren tree, if universally applicable as a warning on the vanity of profes- sion without practice, was peculiarly significant for him. The lavish exjienditure of the sjjikenard was to hini unintelligible and pro- voking (12.5,6); only love could understand. St. Mark sharply contrasts the overture of be- trayal with tliis (Mk. 14. 10, II). Bitterly dis- appointed, moved by impatience, the plan of betrayal is consummated. The sum accepted shows that avarice was not exclusively his motive (I'2x.21.32). The crisis in the upper room forms a series of final appeals: (i) the appeal of service, in washing Judas' feet ; the proviso, " ye are clean, but not all," with the evangelist's comment (Jn.lS.io.ii) ; (2) the definite announcement that one of the Twelve would betray Him (Mk.l4.i.S); (3) the solemn statement tiia* non-existence were preferable to such a sin (21 ) ; (4) the appeal of friendship, in treating Judas as the honoured guest (Jn. 13.26) ; (5) tile dismissal, understood by none at the time, was a last ajipeal (13.2 7-29). i'^very appeal frustrated, Judas "went out," not merely from the upper room, but from Christ's discipleship. " It was night," fiKwi> Tvyxdvovcra ttjs yivofiivr)^ iv rrj \f'VXV 'ioi''5a vvkt6^ (Origen). Th(nigh it has been ques- tioned, there seems very strong moral proba- JUDAS OF GALILEE bility that the institution of the Eucharist was postponed until Judas had withdrawn. Christ's words at the actual betrayal (omitted in St. Mark), as given in St. Matthew, are either a question : " Wherefore art thou come," A.V. (Ad quid venisti, Vulg.) ; or a command : " Do that for which thou art come," R.V. ; though neither seems completely satisfying. In St. Luke Christ draws a contrast between the sign of love and the treacherous purpose. Judas " had neither expected nor intended that Jesus should be condemned to death " (B. Weiss, Life of Christ, iii. 344). "Judas now, seeing that this matter went further than he intended it, repented of his fall" (Bp. J. Taylor, Life of Christ, III. XV. 6, vol. ii. p. 673). If, knowing his Master's power, he believed that the arrest would be followed b}' some majestic manifes- tation ; then on Christ's refusal to exert such power, Judas realized that he had forced his Master into a crisis which meant destruction. Origen thinks that, if his repentance had been complete, he would have appealed for Christ's forgiveness. Yet, if he had entirely aban- doned the thought of good, he would not have repented on hearing that Christ was con- demned ; nor have gone to the high-priest ; nor have parted with his thirty silver pieces ; nor have made such confession, before such an audience (Origen on Jn.i3.22). If Judas knew that he had betrayed the innocent blood, did he also know that he had rejected divine revelation, and abandoned the Son of God ? Is he excluded from the prayer, "Forgive them, for they know not what they do " ? Mediaeval and modern thought would probably answer these questions differently. If the only un- pardonable sin is final impenitence, then this betrayal of Christ is not intrinsically unpar- donable. If he had lived and laboured for reparation, the judgment of conscience would not be difficult. It is the suicide which clouds the issue. For Patristic exposition see St. Jerome on Mt.26 ; St. Cyril Alex, on St. John and on St. Luke, Migne, vol. v. p. 912 ; Origen, I.e. ; B. Weiss, op. cit. ; Schmid, N.T. Theol. 62 ; Lichtenberger, Encyclopedic des Sciences Re- ligieuses, s.v. ; Oskar Holtzmann, Life of Jesus, 446; Bovon, Theol. N.T. i. 181 ; Garvie, Studies, pp. 261, 278, 287, 323 ; Cox, in Interpreter, July 1907 ; reff. by Otto Zockler s.v. in Hauck, ix. 31. [w.j.s.s.l Ju'das of Galilee, the leader of a popu- lar revolt " in the days of the taxing " (i.e. the census, under the prefecture of Quirinus, 6 or 7 A.D.), referred to by Gamaliel in his speech before the Sanhedrin (Ac. 5. 37). According to Josephus (18 Ant. i. i), Judas was a Gaulon- ite of the city of Gamala, probably taking his name of Galilean from his insurrection having had its rise in Galilee. His revolt had a theo- cratic character, its watchword being, " We have no Lord or master but God." That Ju- das himself perished, and his followers were dispersed, we learn from Gamaliel's speech alone. With his fellow-insurgent Sadduc, a Pharisee, Judas is represented by Josephus as the founder of a fourth sect, in addition to the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes. The sons of Judas also became the leaders of fanatical movements. Ju'das, surnamed B^psa'bas (R.V. JTJDE, GENERAL EPISTLE OF 437 Barsab'bas). a leading member of the Church at Jerusalem (Ac.i5.22), endued with the gift of prophecy (32), chosen with Silas to accompany SS. Paul and Barnabas as delegates to the Chiu-ch at Antioch, to make known the decree concerning the terms of admission of the Gentile converts (27). After employing their prophetical gifts for the confirmation of the Syrian Christians in the faith, Judas and Silas went back to Jerusalem. Nothing further is recorded of the former. It is possible that he was a brother of Joseph Barsabas. Jude, General Epistle of. (1) A uthen- ticiiy. Proceeding backwards from end of 4th cent., we find the epistle acknowledged by 3rd Council of Carthage, 397 a.d., and by Jerome, who, however, admits that it was rejected by many (de vir. ill. 4) on account of its reference to the book of Enoch. Eusebius places it among the books " spoken against and yet recognized by most" (H.E. iii. 25 ; cf. ii. 23). Origen quotes from it, but admits there were doubts (in Matt. xvii. 30). Clem. Alex, commented on it. Tertullian (de cult. fern. i. 3) mentions its reference to the book of Enoch. The Mura- torian Canon includes it, but implies the exist- ence of doubts. Thus there is no question of its existence from end of 2nd cent, onwards, even though it is omitted in the Peshitta. Earlier testimonies must be accepted with caution, but those who hold by the priority of Jude to 2Peter (for which see Peter, Second Ep. of), point to the latter as the earliest reference to Jude (J. B. Mayor, Jude and 2 Peter, p. cxvi). Any hesitation on the part of the early Church is easily explained by Jude's angelology and use of apocryphal writings. (2) Authorship. There is no sufficient reason for questioning th€ early tradition that the epistle was written by Jude, the Lord's brother. In ver. 17 the writer implies that he was not one of the Twelve, and he states as his claim to attention, that he was " a slave of Jesus Christ, and bro- ther of James" (ver. i). For some points of resemblance between the epistles of the two brothers, cf. Mayor, ibid. p. cxlix f. The com- parative obscurity of St. Jude makes it un- likely, as Jiilicher admits, that a forger would have chosen him for the purpose. (3) Date and Circumstances. There are no definite indica- tions of either, but it is implied (ver. 17) that his readers can no longer listen to the apostles, and the period is regarded (ver. 18) as the " last time." There is no mention of persecution, and the destruction of Jerusalem, if it had al- ready happened, would have been a more de- cisive instance of punishment than Sodom and Gomorrah (ver. 7). As the heretics attacked are still in the Church, the date must be an- terior to the development of discipline. Ac- cepting Jude as the author, we have to consider whether one who was probably born c. 8 B.C. could be writing an epistle much later than, say, 62 A.D. There is no evidence as to the place of writing or the locality of his readers. But the immediate cause of writing is given in vv. 3,4 — the intrusion of lawless men into the Christian society. An attempt has been made to identify these false teachers with the Car- pocratians (so Pfleiderer, Jiilicher, etc.) of 2nd cent., but Jude says nothing that is incon- sistent with the elementary antinomianism of 438 JUDEA apostolic times. He was evidently familiar with some of St. Paul's epistles. (4) Contents. After a salutation {vv. 1,2) and a statement of his reasons for writing {vv. 3,4), he de- votes the main portion of the letter to a de- nunciation of the Antinomians {vv. 5-16). In vv. 17-23 he first warns and then exhorts his Christian readers, closing with a splendid doxo- logy( vv. 24,25). (5) Style and Characteristics. For a careful study of the grammar of the epistle, see Mayor, Jnde and 2 Peter, ch. ii. The writer has a remarkable fondness for arranging his thoughts in groups of three — e.^. in vv. 20, 21, he urges " building up," " praying in," " looking for " — " the Holy Spirit," " the love of God," " the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ." He finds his warnings chiefly in O.T. incidents, but is also remarkable among N.T. writers for his use of apocryphal documents. Thus : (a) For a number of resemblances in Jude, both in diction and in matter, to the Book of Enoch, see Chase, Hastings, D.B. ii. 801, and the edition of Enoch by R. H. Charles (1893), who traces the use of the same writing by other N.T. writers. The chief quotation from it is in Ju.6, on the fall of the angels. (6) In ver. 9, which deals with the contest of Michael with Satan for the body of Moses, there is possibly a reference to the writing called the Assumption of Moses {cf. edition by R. H. Charles, 1897). See, besides writers quoted above : Zahn, Einleitung ; C. Bigg, St. Peter and St. Jude ; A. Plummer, St. James and St. Jude (in Expositor's Bible) ; E. H. Plumptre {Camb. Bible for Schools), [e.h.p.]. Judea, or Judaea. Originally the tribal lot of Judah, and thence extended to include Benjamin as belonging to the kingdom of Judah ; while, in the Gk. and Roman ages, the border was yet further N., including parts of Dan and of Ephraim. The Romans used the term loosely of all S. Palestine, so that the "Jews" came to include all Hebrews [Jewry]. In 146 R.c. three districts (or " toparchies ") were added to Judaea (1Mac.ll.34) on the Sa- maritan border, namely Apiierema {Taiyibeh), Lydda {Ludd), and Ramathem {er Ram). Josephus and Pliny (see 3 Wars iii. 5 and Hist. Nat. V. 14) mention 11 Jiidaean districts in all, including (with the above-named Lydda) Akrabatta {'Aqrabeh), on N.E. ; Gophna (Jufna), N. of Bethel ; Thamna {Tibneh), farther W. ; Joppa {Ydfa), with Jamnia {Yebna); Emmaus {'.Amwds); Jericho {er Riha) ; Herodium {Jebel Fureidis), S. of Bethlehem ; Eugedi {'Ain Jidy) ; Idumea (the Hebron mountains) ; and Bethleptepha (apparently Beit Nettif), near Idumea (see 4 Wars viii. i). Judaea also included natural districts called Daroma {dry, the older neghebh ; see Judah), Sarona (Sharon), Geraritica (Gerar), sh''phcld (Sephela), and Gebalene (the older hdr, or " mountain rcgif)n"). The N. border of Judaea was im- portant (since Samaria was not reckoned as being in the Holy Land), and the notices in Josephus, and in the Mishna, allow of its being very accurately determined. Josephus places the district of Akrabcne in Judaea (3 Wars iii. 4), its capital being 'Aqrabeh, 8 miles S.E. of Siiechem. He also (sect. 5) makes the S. Samaritaa border to be defined JUDGE by Anuath (the spring 'Ainah), belonging to Borkeos {Berqit, farther W.), these sites being on the main road from Jerusalem to Shechem, and 15 miles S. of the latter. [Asher.] He moreover speaks of Korea (r Wars vi. 5) as on the J udaean boundary, on the road from Beth- shean. This perhaps refers to the ruin Kerdwa, in the Far'ah Valley [Aenon], where it enters the Jordan Vale. These indications agree with those of the Mishna, since the beacon station of Sartabah {Rosh hash-shanah ii. 4), which was in Judaea, on the Samaritan border, is evidently the peak of Kurn Sar{abah, immediately S. of the Far'ah Valley. The villages of Beth Rima {Beit Rima), Beth Labban {Lubbon), and Keruthim {QuriHt) were in Judaea, since the wine thence was law- ful for use {Menakhoth ix. 5), which indicates the great valley Wddy Deir Balldt as the boundary. It rises far E., and passes just N. of Borkeos, reaching the plain at Antipatris, theborder city of Judaea (Tal. Bab. GitfinySa), Patris {Budrus, 6 miles S. of the boundary valley) being in Judaea (Tosiphtha, Demoii.). The Talmud draws the S. boundary of the Holy Land from Petra to the gardens of Ascalon (see Neubauer, Geog. dti Tal. p. 11), the exact border being at Yagur (p. 69), evi- dently el Jiirah, the village immediately N. of Ascalon. [Tamar ; Palestine.] [c.r.c] Judea beyond Jopdan (Mt.l9.i). This passage may read : " Came into the coasts of Judea by the region beyond Jordan " (see Mk.lO.i, "by the farther side of Jordan"). Josephus (12 Ant. iv. 11) uses a similar ex- pression as to the palace of the priest H^Tcanus (now ' Ardq el Emir) in Gilead, "between Arabia and Judea, beyond Jordan." As Samaria reached to the sea and to the Jordan, it was necessary for Galilean pilgrims, who would not enter a region considered to be outside the Holy Land, to cross Jordan N. of Beth-shean, and travel E. of the river till opposite Jericho. In Joshua (19. 34) we find mention of " Judah upon Jordan to- wards the sun-rising," as the E. border of Naphtali. But yhMhd hay-yardcn may be a clerical error for yhtrd — " the rise \_or, source] of Jordan " ; and the LXX. simply reads " to Jordan on the east." [c.r.c] Judg-e. (i) Originally the head of the pa- triarchal family judged his dependents (Gen. 38.24). Disputes between members of two families probably led to private war (Gen. 34). To avoid this, recourse was sometimes had to arbitration (Gen. 31. 32). Gradually the Elders (probably at first the heads of the various families) came to have jurisdiction in most cases, including even offences by a son against his father. (2) Mosaic age. (a) After the Exodus, Moses acted as judge. At the sugges- tion of Jethro he appointed "rulers of thou- sands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens " to deal with the easier cases, reserving the harder for himself (Ex. 18. 13-26 ; Deut. 1.9-18). From the phrase " heads of your tribes " (Deut. 1.15) it appears that these were elders, {b) While Moses sojourned in the mount his judicial work was transacted by Aaron and Hur, perhaps assisted by 70 ciders (Ex.24. 1 4). (f) Subso(]urntlv 70 elders were appointed to assist Moses (Num.11). Their JUDGES, BOOK OF duties are not specified, (d) Cases of Homicide were judged by the congregation — i.e. the local elders (Num.35.24f. ; Deut.l9.i2 ; Jos.20). This at once raises a presumption that the whole body of judgments in which the first law of homi- cide (Ex.21) occurs, was intended primarily for elders ; and this is confirmed by the frequent references of Deut. to elders as the ordinary judges (21.19,20,22.15-18,25.8) and the subse- quent history, (e) Deut. 17. 8-13 contemplates a supreme court for the decision of hard cases consisting of " the priests, the Levites, and the judge that shall be in those days" — i.e. appar- ently the successors of Moses, Aaron, and the seventy. Contempt of this court was punish- able with death. (/) In two classes of cases the priests performed quasi-judicial fimctions : (i) Ordeal of Jealousy, (ii) where certain offenders repented (Lev.5-6.7[5.26] ; Num.5. 5-8). Deut. 16. 18 commands the appoint- ment of judges in all the cities of Israel, but gives no clue to the method of their appointment or their duties. According to iChr.23.4,26.29, they were Levites in the days of the monarchy. Thus, apart from matters reserved for the priests, we see that ordinary justice was administered substantially by the local elders, while hard cases were to be reserved first for Moses and then for a supreme tribunal, which during his lifetime was dominated by him. (3) Later the elders are seen at work (Ru.4 ; iK. 21. 8-14). Judicial work was done by the Judges — at any rate in some cases (iSam.12.3, etc.). Under the monarchy the King exercised judicial functions (2Sam.l2. 5f.,14.4fr.,15.2 ; iK. 3. 16-28, etc.), sometimes even setting aside the ordinary law (2Sam.l4. 11). Side by side with the elders and the Levitical " officers and judges " are found princes, who appear to have exercised judicial functions (Ho. 13. 10 ; Zeph.3.3 ; Je.26.10-24, 37.15) ; but the Heb. word is the same as that translated rulers (of fifties, etc.). [Prince. 1 Jehoshaphat appointed judges throughout the fenced cities of Judah, and a court of Levites, priests, and heads of the fathers' houses in Jeru- salem, to decide certain religious matters under the presidency of the high -priest, and also diffi- cult civil and criminal cases referred to it by the local courts under the presidency of a lay- man (2Chr.i9.5-11). In the time of Jeremiah a priest, who was " chief officer in the house of the Lord," had jurisdiction over certain acts committed in the temple (Je.20.if.,29.26). Justice was usually administered in the gate. ^elohim is sometimes used of judges (iSam.2.25, etc.). [Priests ; Levites; Family.] Hamburger, Real-Encyklopddie-, i. 437-444. [h.m.w.] Judg'es, Book of, covers the period from the death of Joshua to the triumph of Samuel, for the Samson episodes probably synchronized with the oppression after the death of Eli. — Analvsis. There are three divisions : A, 1-2. 5 ; B, 2.6-16 ; C. 17-21. A has the same source as Jos. 12-24, but is concerned rather with the failure than the success of the Israel- ites. It is a later addition to B, which has its own introduction, 2.6-3.8. B consists of stories from many sources, fitted into a framework by a compiler who wished to teach how sin brings punishment and repentance leads to deliver- JXJDGES, BOOK OF 439 ance (2. 16-19 and passim). C is an appendix, added by another compiler, who wished to show how ill were the days before the monarchy (18.1,19.1,21.25). He has preserved two stories of the earliest times, both (like Ruth) connected with Bethlehem. — Date and Sources. C appears to have been compiled when the monarchy had justified itself, and the old days were beginning to be forgotten. But B was influenced by Deut., and must therefore be subsequent to that book. A was compiled from the same source as Jos. 12-24 and must be dated before Joshua superseded that source. The whole is probably pre-Exilic, if we allow for subsequent modifications and corruptions of the text. The sources are Very ancient, and the compilers were scrupulous in their use of documents, e.g. B in the stories of Abimelech and Samson might have utilized these stories to enforce his moral, but did not. He was con- tented to transcribe them. C did not attempt to rewrite the narrative of the Benjamite war, though its confusion is probably due to a very primitive attempt to combine two narratives in one. Even advanced critics admit the antiquity of the documents [vide Moore (Comm.) on the song of Deborah, Kautzsch [Lit. of O.T.) on the parable of Jotham, Day {Social Life of the Hebrews) on Abimelech, Wellhausen (Hist.) on Jephthah's sacrifice, Budde (Richter und Sam.) on Samson, Driver (Intro.) on the Benjamite War]. Speaking of the stories as a whole, Moore WTites that they " are manifestly drawn from a living tradition, not from antiquarian lore ; they reproduce the state of society and religion in the early days of the settlement in Palestine with a convinc- ing reality which is of nature, not of art " (Comm. p. xvii). It is hard to reconcile this admission with the author's theory as to the exceedingly composite character of the text, or with a long succession of redactors work- ing for five centvuies. — Chronology. The time notices in the book are the work of the compiler B. They are not complete, but (if merely added) imply a period of some 350 years. It is, however, at present impossible to harmonize this period with other parts of the Bible, or with views accepted by many Egyptologists. Hevvey (Speaker's Comm.) conspicuously faUs. Keil (Eng. trans., 276-293) is ingenious, but not convincing. Most recent commentators only allow some 150 years for this period, and regard some of the judges as contemporaneous. [Chronology.] — The History. Ancient his- torians are concerned with unique events and exceptional personalities. Their books in con- sequence mislead modern readers. For in- stance, many fail to note in this book that the times of peace and prosperity are longer than the times of war and oppression. Institutions and religious practices that are normal have but incidental notice ; great exploits and great crimes, idolatry, and lawlessness are described at length. Joshua tells us how Israel entered Palestine as a host under one leader, subdued the centre and the S., exclusive of the sea plain, and defeated the allied kings in the N. Judges incidentally proves how complete was the con- quest of the centre and S., for the Israelites were only troubled by external foes. It records the revival of the northern confederacy ; but 440 JUDGES, BOOK OF Deborah and Barak broke its power for ever. As long as Israel remained aggressive it was united — Judah helped Simeon, Ephraim Dan, Ehud blew his trumpet in mount Ephraim — but as they settled in districts, geographically distinct, disintegration began. The common tie of race was not so strong as the more immediate claims of family, clan, and tribe. The tie of common faith was neutral- ized by the growth of local superstitions and reverence for local Baalim. The common sanc- tuary at Shiloh continued to exist (21. 19 and iSam.1.3) ; but there was apparently no great priest between Phinehas and Eli. In conse- quence, after every interval of peace we find the people less imited. All the people were at Bochim, all the tribes took part in the Benjam- ite War. Deborah rallied some of the northern and central tribes, Gideon only the northern tribes and Manasseh, Jcphthah had to depend on Gilead, and Samson foustht for his own hand. The steady oppression of the Philis- tines was responsible for welding the people together, and made the careers of Samuel, Saul, and David possible. — Institutions. The twelve tribes were divided into clans, the clans into families. Law was ordinarily ad- ministered by the elders or princes of the clan, sitting in the gate {Ru.4), the people acting as assessors or witnesses. The people were free. They call on Joash, through their chief, to bring out his son Gideon for judgment (Judg.6.30). In the endless debate of Reuben (5. 16) we have indications of a communal assembly. The position of the judges was not constitutional or regular — it depended on personal prestige. Barak, Gideon, and Jcphthah were military dictators ; Deborah, Eli, and Samuel were religious leaders ; Ehud, Shamgar, and Samson owed their influence to personal prowess, Othniel to birth and marriage, J air to wealth and local consideration. — The Family and Social Life. The family was the unit, and the rights of the individual scarcely existed. Joash is held responsible (6.30 ff.) for his grown-up son, who is married, has children, owns pro- perty and servants (6.27,7.10,8.20). Samson applies to his father and mother to arrange his marriage (I4.2). Jcphthah assumes absolute rights over his daughter (11. 39). The old man at Gibeah would rather sacrifice his daughter than offend against the law of hospitality (19. 24). Polygamy was recognized ; but was ap- parently rare. Manoah had obviously but one wife. Jcphthah was presumably a monogam- ist ; and this may be assumed of Othniel and the Levite. The wives of Gideon and the family of J air are thought worthy of remark. Several forms of marriage are referred to. (i) Marriage proper, implying an alliance between families and thepayment of adowry — Achsah (I.12-15); (2) Concubinage — Gideon (8.31), the I.evite (19.i) ; (3) Sadiqa marriage, where the woman remained in her own home — Samson (14). The position of woman was undoubtedly high. Deborah, a prophetess, judged Israel before her victory (4.4). Manoah's wife is assumed to have co-ordinate authority with her husband (14.2). A woman could inlierit — .Vclisah (1. 15), Ruth (Ru.4. 9). She could own private property — Micah's mother (Judg.17.2). She was not secluded, even when a virgin — Jepb- JUDGES, BOOK OF thah's daughter (11. 34) and the daughters of Shiloh (21.21). She travelled the country alone — the Levite's concubine (19.2). A woman's dishonour was thought little of compared with a man's (19.23,16.1). [Harlot.] The greatest disgrace was to die (as Sisera and Abimelech) by a woman's hand (5.24-27,9.53,54 ; cf. 2Sam. 11.21). By the law of inheritance, property was ordinarily diyided among all the sons. The 30 sons of lair had each a town. Abimelech asked, " Will you have the 70 sons of Jcrubbaal to reign over you ? " (Judg.9.2). The constant subdivision resulted in nobody being very rich, and none were above manual labour (6.11); nor were any very poor, except the I.eyites (18.7,19.19). Joshua had apparently allotted them 48 towns, scattered throughout the land ; and presumably nobody felt that it was their business to subdue them (Jos. 21). — Occupa- tions of the People. In the E. and in the S. the people were pastoral, in mount Ejihraiiu and the N. agricultural. Mention is made of barley, wheat, olives, and vines. The agricultural dis- tricts were more settled and civilized. There was probably some truth in the Ephraimite taunt of Jephthah (Judg.12.4). Besides agri- culture, there must have been a considerable trade. There were highways and market- places ; Dan had ships and Asher landing- places. There are also incidental notices of parlours, lattices, doors, locks, chairs, tables, looms, embroidery, linen vestments, costly robes, pottery, and bowls ; also mill-stones, ox-goads, cords, ropes, money ; also molten images, ephods, teraphim ; also swords, daggers, spears, shields, trumpets, razors. These things imply industry and traffic. — Culture of the Period. One of the first to%vns taken by the tribe of Judah was Kirjath- scpher — the " book town " (1.12,13). The lad captured outside Succoth was able to write down the names of the elders (8.14). The song of Deborah and the parable of Jotham undoubtedly belong to the period, and evince a high literary character. Then we have the riddle and puns of Samson ; and lastly, we have the sources from which the book is ulti- mately derived. — Religion and Morality. Whether the religion of Israel was at this time (in the strict sense) monotheistic, is open to dispute. There is but little evidence either way. The Israelites certainly worshipped the Jehovah Who appeared to them at Sinai (5.4,5). They believed in the ministry of angels, and attributed to God's direct agency whatever occurred (see esp. 21. 15). They worshipped a jealous God, Who forbade any association with other people. Moore writes {Comm. p. 83), " The religious exclusiveness of the ancient world was possible only on terms of complete non-intercourse." The history is a coniinentary on this. Israel did not root out the nations, and could not refrain from Baal worship and festivals like Baal-berith. They knew God's command, and disobeyed Him — were punished, and repented. Their heroes achieved great victories " by faith." The peoi)le were courageous and industrious. Hosjiitality was of obligation. They were ready terribly to avenge gross impurity. Justice required the law of Gokl. A vow had to be literally fulfilled, tl^ough it involved a JUDGMENT HALIi human sacrifice. They condemned cruelty, treacherj^ and duplicity. Their God was righteous, but their conception of righteous- ness was low. The ark was at Shiloh ; there were priests, and Levites had religious func- tions. There was at least one festival at Shiloh. Sacrifices were also offered where there was a theophany. The Nazirite vow was known ; prophetical gifts recognized. They prayed to God and praised Him. They appealed to Him to answer by lot ; they regarded Him as the witness and guardian of oaths. There were also superstitions, represented as such — Gideon's ephod, Micah's ephod and teraphim. The evidence for tree worship and for the sanctity of wells is not conclusive. Extreme criticism: Buddein Kurzer, Handcomm. (1897) ; Moore, Internal. Crit. Comm. (1895) ; Poly- chrome Bible {i8g8). Moderate citicism: Driver, Introd. to Lit. of O.T.; Konig in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904). Conservative : Bachmann, Comm., 1868 (ch. i-v) ; Keil, Comm. (Eng. tr., 1862). Popular Comm. : Farrar {Ellicott's Comm.) ; Watson {Expositor's Bible). For teachers : Paterson-Smyth {Bible for Young), Walpole {Rivington's Handbooks), [h.m.s.] Judg-ment Hall is the A.V. {Palace, R.V.) translation of Praetorium, the headquarters of the Roman military governor, wherever he hap- pened to be. At Jerusalem it was probably the Antonia, to the N.W. of the temple (Jn.18. 28,33,19.9; see Jerusalem). AtCaesarea it was probably part of king Herod's palace (Ac. 23. 35). At Rome the position of the Praetorium alluded to in Ph.l.13 is uncertain. [c.w.] Judg-ment Seat. [Gabbatha.] Judith. — 1. Daughter of Beeri the Hit- tite, and wife of Esau (Gen. 26. 34 ; LXX. 'loi'Stt"). — 2. The heroine of the apocryphal book which bears her name, a wealthy and self-sacrificing widow, who appears as a marked exampleofpiety (Jth.8.6), courage, and chastity (16.22f.). The commencing of her prayer by an approving reference to her forefather Simeon's deed of vengeance (9.2-5), together with the last verse of her song (16. 17), show that she possessed a certain severity of char- acter, though she is not without more feminine qualities (8.8,16.23,24). [w.h.d.] Judith, Book of. This book is a his- torical (perhaps symbolic) romance, contain- ing, probably, some basis of fact. If the story be regarded as having no fictitious element, the geographical, historical, and chronological difficulties are so great as to require many unsupported suppositions. The design is evidently to strengthen faithful patriots, who punctiliously observe the law, in fighting against heathen oppressors ; and to revive hope by a narrative of wonderful deliverance, showing how God is" never at a loss for means to protect His people. It exemplifies the keeping up of religious observances, as well as zeal and trust, in hoiu^s of great peril. " Surely trusting in God's defence," Judith did "not fear the power of any adversaries." But although her aim was high, some of the means and expressions which she used to achieve it {e.g. 9.10,13) are hardly defensible even in time of war (c/. J. H. Blunt's unsatisfactory note). Yet she was regarded as a heroine, taking vengeance on the invader Holofernes. JUNIPER 441 Judith's song (16) is a fine composition of its kind ; and the whole story is well put to- gether, except that the lengthy introduction, before Judith appears in 8.1, is somewhat out of proportion. The collect for the 7th Sun- day after Trinity is indebted to Judith's prayer (9.14) for its opening phrase. — Language. A lost Heb. original, though non-existent even in Origen's day (ad Afric. 13), is generally thought likely. From this the LXX. bears strong marks of translation, e.g. 2.2,8.9. — ■ Text and Versions. The various recensions (though differing less widely than those of Tobit) are signs of extensive circulation ; but at the same time they do not tell in favour of canonicity. The LXX., the most important text we now possess, was the basis of the old Latin. Of this, Jerome, guided by an Aram, codex, made a free and hasty revision for the Vulg. {Praef. in lib. Jud.), which consequently deviates not a little from the Gk. Heb. forms exist of a similar story, much more briefly told, and, in one case without the name of Judith entering into the narrative. — .Author. That he was a Jew can hardly be doubted ; that he was of Palestine is likely from his topographical knowledge, though iripav roO 'lopddvov in I.9 is written from Nebuchad- nezzar's point of view. If we may take Judith as embodying the author's ideals, he was a man of resolute faith warmly patriotic and religious, almost to the verge of Pharisaism. But ritual uncleanness seems overlooked in 13. 10 {cf. Num.19. 11-14). — Date. Most of the conjec- tures may be grouped under three periods : (i) the age of Manasseh, favoured by Dean Pri- deaux (at least as far as the events are con- cerned) and the old authorities. (2) The close of the Maccabaean age, the latter half of 2nd cent. B.C. This is favoured by many re- cent writers. Ball postpones it to Alexandra's reign, 79-70 B.C. (3) The age of Trajan. The reference to Judith and Holofemes by Clem. Rom. (§55) disposes of this notion of Hitzig, Volkmar, etc. Each of these three dates involves some chronological difficulties, but those affecting (2) are less than the others. This is, therefore, the most likely period in which to place the composition. Jth.ll.19 shows a remembrance of the LXX. of Ex. 11. 7. Scholz, Judith und Bel und der Drache (Wurzburg, 1896) ; Speaker's, S.P.C.K., and Bissell's Comm ; arts, in Hastings' (5 vols. 1904) and Vigouroux's D.B. ; Streane, Age of the Maccabees (1898) ; Andre, Les Apocryphes (Florence, 1903). [Bethulia.] [w.h.d.] Ju'el — 1. (iEsd.9.34) = UEL.— 2. (iEsd.9. 35) = JOEL, 13. Ju'lia, a Christian woman at Rome, possibly wife or sister of Philologus, with whom she is saluted by St. Paul (R0.I6.15). Ju'lius, the kindly centurion of " Augus- tus' band," who took St. Paul as a prisoner to Rome (Ac.27.i,3). Ju'nia (R.V. Juntas), a Christian at Rome, mentioned by St. Paul as one of his kinsfolk and fellow-prisoners, " of note among the apos- tles," and " in Christ" before him (R0.I6.7). Juniper (iK. 19.4,5; Job30.4; Ps.120.4). The " juniper " of A.V. is a sort of broom, Genista monosperma, G. raetam of Forskal, the Arab, ratam (Heb. rothem), which is_also 442 JUPITER found abundantly in the desert of Sinai. The Rothem is a leguminous plant, bearing a white flower : found also in Spain, Portugal, and Palestine. [Cedar ; Heath. 1 Jupiter (the Latin equivalent of the Gk. Zeus). In 2Mac.6 it is related that Antiochus Epiphanes caused the temple at Jerusalem to be dedicated to Zeus Olytnpius, and another in Gerizim to Zeus Xenius — titles which associate the deity with mountain worship and social life. He is named once in N.T. (Ac. 14. 12, 13), on the occasion of St. Paul's visit to Lystra. The expression " Jupiter, which was before their city," signifies the extra-mural temple. Zeus, as the supreme ruler of the world accord- ing to Hellenic ideas, is the complete antithesis to the God of the Bible. [Mercurius.] [a.r.] Jushab'-he'sed (loving-kindness is re- turned), son of Zerubbabel, perhaps born after the Return (iChr.3.2o). Justification. The doctrine of justifica- tion by faith is Pauline, and is coloured by St. Paul's personal experience. In his own life the outstanding fact was the revolutionary change known as his conversion. Before that event his spiritual history is the record of a struggle and failure to live the righteous life, as prescribed by a strict, Pharisaic interpreta- tion of the law. To his stern sincerity, the life of " works " was more and more clearly impossible, as well as inadequate. On the one hand, it was impossible to live up to the stan- dard prescribed ; on the other, the fulfilment of observance remained external, it did not affect the inner character and brought no in- ward peace. After the conversion all this was reversed. Personal surrender brought the peace that was lacking, for, though complete attainment was not yet, the decisive step had been taken and progress was now a fact. [Paul.] In preaching justification by faith instead of works, St. Paul is generalizing from his own experience. He is seeking to substi- tute a demand which is at once less exacting in that it does not require unaided initiative, and more exacting in that it requires a change of character and not only outward conformity. Yet real moral difficulties have been caused by this doctrine. It is sometimes felt that it makes salvation too catastrophic, that the individual's part is represented as secondary, as a matter of a moment's emotion, and that too little stress is laid upon slow and painful moral effort. To this objection it may be answered that justification must not be identi- fied with salvation. It is only the first stage in a gradual process, (i) This follows from the meaning of ouai(5co. Verbs ending in -dw naturally have the force of "to make," e.g. TV(f)\ovv, " to make blind." But this is never the case when the meaning is moral, not phy- sical. Hence diKaiodf either means " to vindi- cate " or, as here, " to acquit." Its associations are forensic. It does not signify the making righteous, which is essential to salvation, but only the clearing off of the burden of past guilt, which is no longer reckoned against the sinner, who has a fresh start. So far as justification alone is concerned, it is not the man himself who is changed, but God's relation to him. (2) St. Paul does not ignore the other stages. Thus in the epistle to the Konians it may be said JUSTIFICATION roughly that the first five chapters are occupied with justification, the next three with the life of the believer after justification. St. Paul's name for this, when he does give it a name, is sanctification, ayiaaad';. This meant origin- ally consecration, a ritual separation for the service of God : and with the deepening con- ception of God acquired gradually a more ethical meaning. Now, sanctification, which is a gcradual process extending throughout life, and which is markedly personal and ethical, must intervene between justification and glorification. Thus the preliminary judicial acquittal, signified by justification, is only pro- visional. In itself it onlv demands of the in- dividual a moment's whole-hearted surrender ; but, if it is to be permanent and to have its proper effect, it needs all the effort of a lifetime of gradual growth in holiness. The conditions, however, have changed. The impossible has become possible. The believer is no longer overweighted by past guilt. But these con- siderations are not by themselves sufficient to avert the suspicion of a fiction ; and the notion of a fiction is certainly alien to St. Paul. In- deed, the early verses of Ro.3 consist largely of a vindication of God's truth in the matter of justification. The following points should therefore be added, (a) Though it is true that the change of relation takes place while the be- liever is still sinful, the " treating as" righteous, in which forgiveness consists, is not wholly independent of fact. " It is dealing with us not as we are nor exactly as we are not, but as we are becoming " (Gore). What to a consciousness bound by time-limitations are only latent possibilities, may be in God's sight the deepest truth of a man. All I could never be, All men ignored in me. This I was worth to God, A^Tiose wheel the pitcher shaped. (b) The limitations of the -6^ form in verbs of moral meaning, which are necessary in the case of human agents, would not be necessary when applied to God. Indeed, it is doubtful from the nature of the case whether they are possi- ble. God's thought cannot be separated from His will, nor is a man's relation to God some- thing that leaves his inmost being untouched. He is what he is in virtue of that relation, and, if God declares him righteous, he will become so, not merelv because God is truthful, but also because He is all-powerful. " The response of the Gospel to the human sense of actual sin and unattainable holiness is not the half-grace of forgiveness, but the whole-grace of redemp- tion and deliverance. ... It does not require an exercise of divine power to extend pardon : it does require it to endow and enable us with all the qualities, energies, and activities that make for, and that make, holiness and life " (Du l^ose). The difficulty in this view is the fact that, in some cases, the sequence seems to be broken, and the life of holiness not to follow on the preliminary acceptance. But the pro- blem of evil is a difficulty to any theory ; and, in any case, it is the normal and intended development by which the whole process is to be understood. The qviestion has been raised by Ritschl whether the society is not theproper object of justification, rather than the indivi- JUSTUS dual, as commonly supposed (c/. Sanday and Headlam, Romans, pp. 122 flf.)- A number of texts can be cited in support of either view — e.g. (a) Ro.8.32; Eph.5.25f. ; Tit.2.14; {b) Ro. 3.26,4.5,10.4. The corporate aspect is more marked in the later epistles ; but it cannot be excluded even from the earlier. Justification would normally be associated with baptism into the Christian community, and the life of sanctification is life in that community, ayioi. being a common term for the congregation of the faithful. Justification then is, primarily, one stage in the process of redemption. But, though it is separable in thought as in time, it can only be understood when viewed as an integral element in the whole. " Justification and sanctification may be distinguished by the student, as are the arterial and the nervous systems in the human body ; but in the living soul they are coincident and inseparable " (Liddon). [w.h.m.] Just'us. — 1. A surname of Joseph Bar- SABAS (Ac.1.23). — 2. A Jewish proselyte and host of St. Paul at Corinth (Ac.18.7).— 3. The surname of Jesus, a Christian with St. Paul at Rome (C0I.4.11). Juttah', a city in the mountain of Judah. near Carmel {Jos.i5.55). Now Yut{a, a village 5 miles S. of Hebron. [c.r.c] K Kabzeel', a city of Judah, near Edom (Jos.15.2i), the native place of Benaiah {2 Sam.23.20 ; 1Chr.ll.22). After the Captivity it appears as Jekabzeel. The site is unknown. Kades (Jth.l.g). [Kedesh, i.| Kadesh', Kadesh'-bapne'a. This place, the scene of Miriam's death, was the farthest point which the Israelites reached in their direct road to Canaan ; thence also the spies were sent, and there, on their return, the people broke out into murmuring, upon which their strictly penal term of wandering began (Num. 13. 3, 26,14.29-33, 20.1 ; Deut.2.14). In Gen. 14. 7, the older name Kadesh (the sanctuary) is stated to have been En-mishpat (the fountain of judgment), which is connected with Tamar or Hazezon-tamar, as is also Kadesh-barnea (cf. Ezk.47.19,48.28 ; Num.34.4 ; Jos.15.3). The site of Kadesh was discovered by Dr. John Rowlands in 1844 at 'Ain Qadis, due E. of the Wady el-'Arish, and its identity with Kadesh- barnea was demonstrated by Dr. Clay Trumbull in 1884- (Kadesh-Barnea, New York). The spring is still a gathering-place of the neigh- bouring tribes. But for the opposite view, see Kedesh, i. Here some part of the Mosaic legislation was enacted, and the Israelites were disciplined to undertake the conquest of Canaan. Their residence in Kadesh lasted from the 2nd year after the Exodus (Num. 9.11,13.26) to the 40th year (Num.2O.22, 33.37.38). [Exodus, The.] [a.h.s.] Kadmiel', a Levite who (with his family) is prominent in the return from Babylon with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.40,3.9 ; Ne.7.43,9.4,5,10.9). Kadmonites. In the promise to Abra- ham (Gen. 15. 18-21) ten nations are enumerated KEDESH 443 as inhabiting the land which his descendants are to possess. All occur elsewhere in the Bible except the Kadmonites. The name means " easterns," and may be equivalent to the "sons of the east" (^■ne-qedhem, Judg.6.3, 33; Job 1.3). In Ezk.47.i8 the Dead Sea is called the East Sea, and the Kadmonites may have inhabited its shores. [f.j.f.-j.] Kallai', a priest who represented the family of Sallai when Joiakim was high-priest (Ne.l2. 20). Kanah', one of the landmarks of the boundary of Asher (Jos. 19. 28 only) in the N. Now Qdna, a village 7 miles S.E. of Tyre, with which it is noticed. fc.R.c] Kanah', River, a torrent dividing the territories of Ephraim and Manasseh on the S.W. The border " on the W., went N. to Michmethah" (Jos. 16. 6); "on the W. was the torrent Kanah, and that was the W. border " (16.8) ; " and the border went down the torrent Kanah, S. of the torrent" (17. 9). This applies to Wddy Qdnah, running W. from the Mukhnah plain S. of Shechem. [c.r.c] Kapeah', father of Johanan, 3, and Jo- nathan, 10 (Je.40.8, etc.). Kapka'a, one of the landmarks on the S. boundary of the tribe of Judah (J0S.I5.3). Its site is unknown. Kapkop', the place in which Zebah and Zalmunna were again routed by Gideon (J udg. 8.10). Apparently E. of Jogbehah (ver. 11). The word means "soft level ground" — the region of those "that dwelt in tents," or the desert E. of the Gilead hills. [c.r.c] Kaptah', a town of Zebulun, allotted to the Merarite Levites (Jos.2i.34). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Kaptan', a city of Naphtali, allotted to the Gershonite Levites (Jos. 21. 32). Otherwise Kir- jathaim (R.V. Kiriathaim), "the two towns" (iChr.6.76). The site is unknown, [c.r.c] Kattath', a city of the tribe of Zebulun (Jos. 19. 15). The site is unknown, [c.r.c] Kedap', the 2nd of the sons of Ishmael (Gen. 25.13; iChr.1.29), and the name of a tribe of Arabs, settled on the N.W. of the peninsula and on the confines of Palestine. The " glory of Kedar" is recorded by Isaiah (21. 13-17) in the burden upon Arabia ; the " princes of Kedar" are mentioned by Ezekiel (27.2 1) as traders, also as "archers " and " mighty men" (Is. 21. 17) and dwellers in tents (Ps.120.5). They also settled in villages or towns (Is. 42. 11). They are probably the people called Cedrei by Pliny, on the confines of Arabia Petraea to the S. The Assyrian notices place Qedaru on the borders of Edom. [Arabia.] [c.r.c] Ke'demah (eastern), the youngest son of Ishmael (Gen. 25. 15 ; iChr.l.31). Kedemoth', one of the towns allotted to Reuben (Jos. 13. 18) ; given to the Merarite Levites (Jos.2i.37 ; iChr.6.79). The word means " eastern places," and the " wilderness of Kedemoth " was apparently just S. of the Arnon, on the border of the Amorites (Num. 21.23 ; Deut. 2.26,27, etc.). [c.r.c] Ke'desh (holy). — 1. A town in the ex- treme S. of the land of Israel, which in- cluded the N. part of the Tih plateau (Jos. 15. 23). It was probably the Kadesh, on^the way to Shur, where Hagar found the Beer- 444 KEHELATHAH LAHAi-KOi (Gen. 16. 7, 14 ; see 20. i). This was discovered by Rowlands at ' Ain Qadis, 45 miles S.S.W. of Beer-sheba (c/. Gen. 21. 14). The direction, on the way to Shur and Egypt, is suitable. The legend of Hagar, which lingers at the spot, was due perhaps to Christian hermits, whose caves exist near (Palmer, in Surv. W. Pal. Special Papers, p. 19). Robin- son (Bib. Res. ii. p. 194) remarks that this site does not suit the requirements of Kadesh- baroea {the holy place of the desert of ■wanderinq,), which is distinguished in the same chapter of Joshua (15-3), aud lay at S.E. angle of the land of Israel, being a city on the border of Edom (Num. 20. 16) ; but see the opposite view under Kadesh. See Num.34. 4; Deut.1.2 ; Jos.lO.41; Ezk.47.19,48.28. [E.xoDus, The; Edom; Hor.] — 2. A city of Issachar (iChr.6.72, where Kedesh stands for KisHON, Jos. 21. 28), a Levitical town. This is the present ruin Tell Qadeis, or Abu Qadeis, 2 miles S.E. of Lejjun, and 3 miles N. of Taanach, on W. border of Issachar. It is probably not the royal Canaanite city (No. 3) of Kedesh (Jos. 12. 22), but appears to be noticed as Ras Kedesh by Thothmes III. (No. 48) in i6th cent. b.c. — 3. Kedesh- NAPHTALi, in Upper Galilee (Jos. 19. 37, 20. 7, 21.32), a city of refuge and of Levites, is now Qedes, on a plateau of Upper Galilee, which rises 1,580 ft. above the Huleh Lake, lying to the S.E. of the village. The latter is probably " the plain of swamps " [Zaanaim] by Kedesh (Judg.4.6,9,10,11). This town was raided by Tiglath-pileser III. in 734-732 B.C. (2 K. 15. 29). Here the Greeks assembled at Cades (iMac.ll.63,73), to meet Jonathan the Hasmonaean (in 146 e.g.) at the plain of Hazor (incorrectly Nasor), in Lower Galilee, or perhaps nearer Kedesh, at Jebel Hadireh, 4 miles S.W. of Qedes. There are remains of Roman and Jewish buildings, of 2nd cent. A.D., near the spring, one supposed to be a temple, with an eagle carved over a door- way; also many Jewish and Roman tombs, rock-cut or of masonry (Surv. W. Pal. i. pp. 207, 226-230). [Taiitim-hodshi.] [c.r.c] Kehelathah', a desert encampment of the Israelites (Num. 33. 22). not identified. Keilah', a city of the Shephelah of Judah (Jos. 15. 44), rescued by David from an attack of the Philistines, who had fallen upon the town at the beginning of the harvest. It was then a fortified place, with walls, gates, and bars (iSam.23.i,2,4,5,6,7). The inhabitants soon plotted David's betrayal to Saul, then on his road to besiege the place. Of this in- tention David was warned by divine intima- tion. He therefore left (vv. 7-13). Now the ruin of Kila, 6 nules W. of Halhul, on the E. side of the valley of Elah, not far from Adul- LAM (see 22.1). In 15th cent. b.c. it is noticed in the Amarna letters (Berlin 100, 106, 107, 199) as attacked by the 'Abiri. [c.r.c] Keilah' the Oapmlte, apparently a de- scendant of Caleb (iChr.4.19). Perhaps mean- ing "the (iarmite founder of Keilah." fcR.c] Kelal'ah n:;:i .IO.23) = Kelita, i. Ke'lita. — 1. — Kclaiah, a Levite who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.23 = Calitas in iEsd.9.23). Possibly the same as — 2. A Levite who assisted in expounding the law KENOSIS (Ne.8.7, = Calitas in iEsd.9.48), and signed the covenant with Nehemiah (Ne.lO.io). Kemuer. — 1. Son of Nahor by Milcah, and father of Aram (Gen. 22. 21). — 2. Son of Shiph- tan, and prince of Ephraim : one of twelve men appointed by Moses to divide the land of Canaan (Num. 34. 24). — 3. A Levite, father of Hashabiaii, 5 (1Chr.27.17). Kenan' (iChr.1.2), the more correct form of the name of Cainan. son of Enos. Kenath', one of the cities on the E. of Jordan, with its "daughter-towns" (.^.V. villages) taken possession of by a certain NoBAH, who then called it bv his own name (Num. 32. 42 ; iChr.2.23). Now Qanawdt, a ruined town at the southern extremity of the Leja, about 20 miles N. of Bostra. Among numerous Gk. and Lat. texts (oneby Agrippa) is an inscription of the people "of the city of Kanatha" in honour of Commodus. [c.r.c] Kenaz'. — 1. A duke of Edom ; son of Eliphaz, son of Esau (Gen. 36. 15, 42 ; iChr.l. 53). — 2- The father of Othniel and brother of Caleb (Jos. 15. 17 ; Judg. 1.13,3. 9,11 ; iChr.4. 13). If "Caleb's younger brother" be taken to apply to Othniel instead, then Kenaz would be the "father" of Caleb, who is. however, elsewhere (Jos. 15. 13, etc.) described as "the son of Jephunneh." The interpretation first given (which is, moreover, that of the LXX.) also avoids the difficulty as to Othniel having married his niece; but both interpretations involve difficulties (see 14.6 and art. Kene- zite, and for another view see Caleb). — 3. A grandson of Caleb, according to iChr.4.15, where, however, the meaning is doubtful. Kenezite (Num. 32.12; Jos. 14.6, 14), a title of Caleb, as the grandson of Kenaz. The Heb. now reads q'nizzi ; cf. Kenizzite. Kenites, The, mentioned in the patriarchal history as one of the tribes inheriting the Promised Land (Gen. 15. 19). As Jethro, priest of Midian, Moses' father-in-law (Ex.lS.i) is called a Kenite (Judg. 1. 16, 4. 11), we may conclude that they were closely connected with the Midianites ; and they are also men- tioned as dwelling among the Amalekites. They seem to have been a nomad tribe, pre- serving a purer faith than the surrounding tribes, for Jethro joins with Moses and Aaron in the worship of Jeho\ah (Ex. 18. 9-12) ; and, at the entrance into Canaan, some of them " went \\y) out of the city of palm-trees with the children of Judah into the wilderness of Judah . . . and dwelt with the people" (Judg. 1.16 ; cf. Num. 10. 29-32), while a portion of the tribe sejiarated themselves, and went as far N. as Kedesh (Judg. 4. 11). The bulk of the tribe, however, remained in the S. Saul showed kindness to them for old friendship's sake (i Sam. 15. 6), and they seem finally to have be- come absorbed in the tribe of Judah. The Reciiabites, who till a late time led the nomad life (Je. 35. 6-10), are called Kenites in iChr.2.55- [J-k-I Kenizzite (Gen. 15. 19 ; Heb. q'nizzi), a Canaanite tribe. Gesenius renders the word as "hunters," like the Arab. Qanas. Kenosis; Plepoma. (i) Kcnosis is a sul)Stanti\e not found in N.T. — a term used by theologians to sum uji Ph. 2. 7, iavrbv iKivuxTf. Lat. semitipsum cxinanivit, A.V. "He made KENOSIS himself of no reputation," R.V. "He emptied himself." The verb means "to empty" or "make void." It occurs R0.4.14; iCor.l.17, 9.15; 2Cor.9.3 in latter sense. (2) Pleroma is substantive of TrXTjpouv ; Lat. plenitudo, supple- mentum ; A.V. and R.V. "fulness." II\r]pw/j.a has two meanings : (i) " that whichisfilled"; (ii) " that which makes up the fulness." E.g. a full ship, or the men and tackle of a ship. In N.T. the word means " that which is filled " or "the thing in its fulness." In Mt.9.i6 and Mk.2.2i, it means either "the completeness" of the patched cloth, which is afterwards destroyed by the patch, or "the patch" viewed as abstract completeness in opposition to the hole requir- ing a patch. In Mk.6.43 and 8.20 it means "full measure." St. Paul uses the word in this sense in Ro.ll. 12,25,13. 10,15.29 ; iCor.10.26 ; Gal. 4.4 ; Eph.l.io. The term is important, be- cause used of God or Christ in si.x places : (i) Jn.l.i6 ; (ii) Col.l. 19,2.9 ; (iii) Eph. 1.23,8.19, 4.13. In these passages it is used of (i) the fulness of the grace and power brought to men from God by Christ and communicated to them in Him ; (ii) the fulness of the divine powers and prerogatives in themselves, and as pos- sessed by the Incarnate Son ; and (iii) the ful- ness of the attributes, powers, and character- istics of the Christ which are to be exhibited in the ideal Church. St. Paul is thought to have reclaimed this term from wrong usage by Colossian heretics, who spoke of Christ as a man sharing to some small extent in the pleroma of divine power. Later heretics of the Gnostic type regarded the pleroma not only as the fulness of the divine power, but as an actual place in which that power is localized. (3) The Pleroma of Godhead in the Incarnate Son. The Christ is the Revelation of God to man. In Him dwells the fulness of Godhead bodily (Col. 1.19,2.9), in order that mankind may receive divine life or grace, and know the divine Being in truth (Jn.l. 16,17). Godhead cannot be contained in manhood, but all that manhood can ever receive and know of God- head is in the Christ — the Eternal Son. Thus, in union with the true Son of Man, who is also Son of God, the human race is placed upon the divine level, shares the divine life, and is guided by divine knowledge. God became incarnate, taking our manhood, in order that our manhood might be made perfect through His divine grace and truth. All divine powers and prerogatives were in some measure exer- cised by, and in their ultimate essence fully possessed by, Jesus the Son of Mary. The Christ was not a mere man to Whom was com- municated divine power : He is the eternal Son, very God of very God, possessing the ful- ness of the divine power, and exercising it ac- cording to the capacity of His perfect, God- assumed manhood. (4) The Kenosis of the Eternal Son. The difference between posses- sion and exercise is the measure of the Kenosis, or self-emptying of the eternal Son. This Kenosis has been very variously estimated, (i) St. Paul merely asserted the fact of self- emptying as a ground of Christian humility. He does not tell us of what the Son emptied Himself. Rather, he makes the act of Keno- sis to consist in the assumption by the Son of a State of slavery (Ph.2.5-9). Slavery is a nega- KENOSIS 445 five state, implying the disability to exercise prerogatives and powers of which no man can divest himself. So the eternal Son " emptied Himself " by accepting manhood as a sphere of limitation. By one act of His eternally divine will He imposed upon Himself a law of per- petual self-restraint in regard to new relations which He was to take upon Himself towards creation, with a view to its redemption — all which relationships spring from and find their existence in His assumption of manhood. This law of self-restraint binds the Son also in His relation to His Father within the sphere of His activity as High-priest and King of the re- deemed universe, (ii) Patristic writers shrank from emphasizing the Kenosis, lest they should fail to do justice to the glory and power of the Incarnate. St. Irenaeus taught that the Word was sometimes quiescent, in order that His manhood might have its free and natural exer- cise, and his teaching is followed more or less by Athanasius, Gregory Naz., and Basil. The pressure of heretical teaching led to the view that these human actions were due not to quiescence, but to the supreme power of the divine Son, in Whom men saw no human weak- ness or limitation that is ultimately incom- patible with divine freedom and power. So taught Gregory of Nyssa, Hilary, Ambrose, Augustine, Cyril, and Leo. (iii) In reaction against this view there arose after the Re- formation the school of Kenotists : men who emphasize the reality of the manhood in the Christ, predicating either limitation or aban- donment of divine powers and prerogatives. Some hold that the Son ceased to exercise His cosmic functions, having no share in the ruling of the universe during the 3'ears of His incarn- ate life. Of such are Gers andGodet. Others who will not accept this extreme view, yet agree that the Son surrendered His physical attributes of omnipotence, omnipresence, and omniscience, while retaining the moral, internal attributes of Godhead. Of such are Thomasius and Fairbairn. Martensen taught a less ex- treme view, which lies to some extent behind that of Bishop Gore. The matter is one of great mystery. Some principles may be enun- ciated, which will guide men towards the truth, (i) No explanation of the Kenosis is satisfac- tory that is not applicable to our Lord's pre- sent state of glorious manhood. The Incarn ate Life never ceases, and therefore no theory of actual abandonment of attributes is accept- able, (ii) The sphere of the Incarnation may not be completely separated in thought from the sphere of the Logos-life : for, in fact, both spheres, or states, are merely sums of relation- ships founded in one Person as subject, (iii) The distinction between physical and moral attributes must not be over-emphasized, lest it be said that God's love came into existence at the Incarnation. Omnipotence, etc., can be shown to lie in eternal Love, (iv) Thelncarn- ate has no relations Godward or manward ex- cept in and through manhood ; and within these relations His Godhead is limited by and conditioned in His manhood. (5) The Church the Pleroma of Christ (Eph. 1.23,4.13). The fulness of Godhead dwells in the Incarnate under conditions of manhood ; and in His manhood is the centre of the redeemed race. 446 KEREN-HAPPUCH That race, as called and sanctified, is named His mystical body, the Church. It manifests His power through the Sacraments, His truth in the Word, and His moral beauty in the lives of saints. In the last day it will exhibit before God the fulfilment of His ideal for man, and the completion of the offering of obedient wills that was begun on Calvary. Without the Church, the Christ cannot see His victory. Without the Christ, the Church is not. Litera- ture.— Pleroma : Lightfoot, Colossians, ad loc. and app. note ; Fritzsche, Ep. ad Rom. ii. p. 469 ff. Kenosis : Gifford, The Incarnation. On whole matter : Dorner, Person of Christ ; Martensen, Christian Dogmatics ; Bruce, Hu- miliation of Christ ; Gore, Dissertations ; Powell, Principle of the Incarnation ; Weston, The One Christ. See also art. Paul, II. (3) in this Diet. [f-w.] Ke'pen-happueh', youngest of the three daughters of Job, born during his restored prosperity (Job 42.14). [Paint.] Kepioth'. — 1. (Je.48. 24,41.) [Kirjathaim.] — 2. (Jos. 15. 25), properly Kerioth-hezron, as in R.V. [Hazer, 10.] This has been considered to be the birthplace of Judas Iscariot, whence his second name ; but many regard Quriut (the Corea of Josephus), a place not mentioned in O.T. and situated 10 miles S.E. of Shechem, as the possible birthplace ; and for another sug- gestion for the origin of Iscariot, see Sychar. Ke'nos. Sons of Keros were Nethinim who returned with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2.44; Ne.7.47). Kettle (dUdh), a vessel for culinary or sacri- ficial purposes (iSam.2.14). Rendered "bas- ket" in 2K.IO.7, Je.24.2, "caldron" in 2Chr.35.13, and "pot" in Job41.20. Ketupah' (incense; Gen.25.i), the second wife whom Abraham took after the death of Sarah, but referred to in iChr.l.32 as his con- cubine. She is related to have borne him six sons, and whereas the birth of Isaac was re- garded as wonderful, that of these six sons, when Abraham was much older, is passed over quietly. For this reason it has been suggested that Keturah was a concubine really contem- porary with Sarah ; while some modern critics would see in this story a reason for suggesting a diiiferent document (P), in which an attempt is made to show the relation between Heb. and Arabian people. There is evidence of an Ara- bian tribe bearing the name Katurah. [b.f.s.J Key. The key of a native Oriental lock is apiece of wood, from 7 in. to 2 ft. in length, fitted with wires, wooden pegs, or short nails, which, being inserted laterally into correspond- ing holes in the hollow bolt wiiich serves as a % IRON KEY. (From Thebes.) lock, raise other pins within the staple so as to allow the bolt to be drawn back. But it is not difficult to open a lock of this kind even with- out a key, viz. with the finger dipped in paste or other adhesive substance. The passage Can. 5. 4, 5 is thus probably explained. [Lock.] Keys, Powep of the. [IIxcommuni- CATiON ; Peter.] KING Kezia', Second of the three daughters of Job, born after his recovery (Job 42.14). Keziz', Valley of, one of the " cities " of Benjamin (Jos. 18. 21) and the E. border of the tribe. Kibpoth'-hattaavah' (graves of lust), the 2nd station after leaving Sinai (Num.11. 3,34), the " three days' journey " (IO.33) ending with a longer stay at Hazeroth(11.35). But in Num.33.i6 Taberah, the ist station, is unnoticed. [Hazeroth.] [c.r.c] Kibza'im, a city of Ephraim, given with its " suburbs" to the Kohathite Levites (Jos. 21.22); site unknown. [Jokmeam.] [c.r.c] Kid. [Goat.] Kidpon', Bpook (the black torrent ; Heb. nahal), crossed by David on the way to the desert from Jerusalem (2Sam.i5.23). It was a centre of idolatry from the time of Solomon (iK. 2. 37, 15. 13 ; 2K. 23. 4,6, 12 ; 2 Chr.l5. 16, 29.16, 30.14 ; Je.3i.40), and is the Cedron (KeSpov) of N.T. (Jn.lS.i), between Jerusalem and the mount of Olives, on the slopes of which Solomon's temples to Ash- toreth, Chemosh, and Molech were built (iK. 11.5,7). It is also called simply "the torrent," (A.V. valley), or nahal (2Chr.33.14). Josephus calls it Cedron, and states that it divided Je- rusalem from the mount of Olives (5 Wars ii. 3, iv. 2, vi. I, xii. 2, etc.). The ravine is narrow and rocky, with cliffs on the E. The bed (300 ft. below the temple) is now raised 40 ft. by the rubbish of the temple and city. Before 728 B.C. a stream may have flowed on this rocky bed [Gihon] ; as described (32.4) c 703 B.C., " the nahal which flowed through the midst of the land [or, earth] " : even now much water flows down it in winter underground, and rises suddenly in the Bir Eyiib, at the junction with the Hinnom gorge, forming a surface brook, which runs E. to the Dead Sea. On the E. slope, opposite the temple, there arc remarkable Greco-Jewish rock-cut tombs. That now called " Absalom's Pillar " is possibly the tomb of Alexander Jannaeus (Josephus, 5 Wars vii. 2), and that called the "grotto of St. James" bears a square Heb. text (perhaps c. 50 B.C. or later), stating that it belonged to the Bene-Hezir priests (iChr. 24.15). The others are of the same age, but clearly Jewish. At the village Silwdn, on the E. clilT, M. Clermont-Ganneau found a much-worn Phoenician text, on which the name Baal is readable — perhaps a relic of the idolatrous shrines on. Olivet. [Jehoshaphat, Valley of.] [c.r.c] Kinah', a city of Judah, on the extreme S. of the tribe, towards Edom (Jos. 15. 22). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Kindped. [F"amily.] Kine. [Cattle.] King-. The office of king in Israel must be considered in connexion with the special relation in which the people stood to God. Wc should note that kingship is predicated supremely of God Himself (Ps.74.i2). This idea was, indeed, held by Israel in common with other nations, as is illustrated by the frequency with which the name of the tribal god is compounded with the title " king." Thus Molech, the god of ,\mmon, is simply " the king." Ivtymologically the word appears to mean " one who gives counsel." Hence the root idea is of one whose superior wis- dom gives him a right to direct the nation. Primarily this quality is ascribed to the tribal god, and thus arises the analogy between the god and the temporal ruler. In the particular case of Israel, the dominant idea is the king- ship of Jehovah ; and we find two lines of thought, which are very difficult to reconcile with one another, as to the relation that should subsist between this divine kingship and the earthly ruler of the people. The book of Deuteronomy regards ^the king^as having a proper place in the theocratic state. Regulations and restrictions are laid down for his guidance, and his observance of these is to be rewarded by long life in his kingdom (17. 14-20). On the other hand, Samuel re- gards the demand for a king as a repudiation of the divine sovereignty (iSam.8.7). We may perhaps interpret Samuel's words to refer only to the particular circumstances under which the demand was made. There was a desire to emulate the surrounding nations in worldly ambition ; and so far the demand showed a falling away from the theocratic ideal. Certainly the Eastern despot whom Samuel depicts (8.11-17) is not such a ruler as would help the jj people to fulfil the purpose of their election. The religious aspect of kingship is prominent in the mode of appointment. In the case of Saul (10. 24) the choice is that of God Himself; Samuel calls the people together, but only in order to ratify the choice already made. So, too, David (16. 13) and Jeroboam (1K.II.35) are designated by God for the office. After- wards this principle disappears, and the suc- cession becomes dynastic, except that in the northern kingdom it was constantly interrupted by military conspiracies. Jehu, however, claimed divine sanction for his seizure of the throne (2K.9.6). The anointing of the king, as a symbol of his appointment to office, had a re- ligious significance (iSam. 16. 13). [Anointing.] In accordance with this, we find that definite religious duties were attached to his office. He was required to take a leading part in the national religion, and to make special provision for the maintenance of the sacrifices (Ezk.45. 17). In some degree there belonged to him the right of actually offering the sacrifice himself. Saul certainly regarded this right as inherent in his office, though in the parti- cular circumstances in which he exercised it he incurred Samuel's displeasure (iSam.lS.g). David wore a linen ephod (2Sam.6.i4), which was a garment distinctive of priesthood (iSam.22.i8), and he, too, appears to have offered sacrifices in person (2Sam.6.i3,i7). At a time when there was as yet little advance in civilization, it was natural that a prominent part of the king's duties should be leadership in war. It was in part the need for a recog- nized leader in war which gave rise to the original demand for a king (iSam.8.20), but it is noticeable that on the same occasion stress is laid upon another side of the kingly functions. He is to judge the people. The poor are as far as possible to have access to the king himself in order to receive justice (aSam. 14.4), and indeed the office of supreme judge KINGDOM OF GOD, l^HE 447 is synonymous with kingship (2K.I5.5). It was felt that the worldly pomp which or- dinarily attended the establishment of an Eastern sovereign was incongruous in one who, as ruler of Israel, stood in a special re- lation to God. So the Mosaic legislation laid down restrictions (Deut. 17. 14-20), which, however, were little observed. Though a multipHcity of wives was forbidden, the royal harem became a regular institution (2Sam.l6. 21). The prohibition against the accumula- tion of wealth was intended as a safeguard against oppression, but yet the burden of the royal establishment was a heavy one (Ezk.45. 8). In addition to the taxes (iSam.8.15) and special levies raised in times of need (2K.15.20) and the exaction of forced labour (1K.5.13), there was also a royal domain, farmed for the king's benefit (iChr.27.25-31), and he seems to have had a claim upon some portion, perhaps a tenth (iSam.8.15), of the pasture throughout the country (Am.7. 1 ). Despite oc- casional oppression, the office of king, ideally regarded, became an element in the Messianic portraiture. Ezekiel looks forward to the com- ing of the ideal David, whose rule over God's people shall be for ever (Ezk. 37. 2 5). [j.c.v.d.] King-dom of God, The. Our Lord's doctrine of this kingdom fills much of His teaching and is intimately connected with His Person. In the prayer that He taught, " Thy kingdom come " is placed near the beginning, as expressing that which ought to be one of our first desires. He began His preaching by saying " The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand " (Mk.l.15). His Gospel is described by St. Matthew (5.23) as " the Gospel of the kingdom." St. Luke (4.43) represents Him as identifying this preaching of the king- dom with the heart of His mission. St. John (3.5) shows that the kingdom of God implies a blessing to which man can only attciin if " born of water and the Spirit." — Title. SS. Mark, Luke, and John write " kingdom of God." St. Matthew only uses this precise title in 12.28,21. 31,43. He usually replaces it by the name " kingdom of heaven." Possibly this means more specifically the kingdom that is of heavenly origin. More probably, it is exactly the same in meaning as " kingdom of God." The Jews, out of reverence for the name of " God," often replaced it by the word " hea- ven." In either case the idea is practically the same. It means a kingdom, or more accurately a reign which is the reign of God, its laws being the expressed will of God. — The Kingdom of God in O.T. The actual name does not occur in O.T. But the idea penetrated all Judaism. After the covenant made between God and Israel at Sinai, the Israelites regarded them- selves as peculiarly His people. Scruples were even sometimes felt as to the propriety of having an earthly king (iSam.8. 4-9), and at the same time theearthly king was looked upon as God's vicegerent. Is., Mi., Je., Zeph., Zech., are full of the hope of a kingdom in which David would be for ever represented by a royal descen- dant ruling in God's name. In Dan.7 this hope takes the form of a vision. Dan. represents the four empires hostile to Israel as successively losing their power before the appearance of God. Everlasting dominion is then given to 448 KINGDOM OP GOD, THE " one like unto a son of man " who represents the;;faithful remnant of Israelites. In the apocryphal books there is further teaching about the kingdom. In the Pss. of Sol. (xvii. 3-5) it is connected with the advent of the Messiah. Sometimes the whole idea is strongly nationalist and political, sometimes far more spiritual. The tone of Wis. 10 may be com- pared with that of Ps.i45.9f. The ordinary Jewish conception of the kingdom of God made it practically that of Jewish domination. — The Kingdom is Spiritual. Our Lord's teaching about the kingdom makes it essentially spirit- ual. It is a force directed against the power of Satan, who has an organized kingdom of his own (Mt. 12. 26,28 ; Lu.ll.i8). Christ repelled all temptation to become a secular king (Mt. 4.8f. ; Jn. 6.15,18.36). His statecraft is truth and justice. It was part of the cunning of His adversaries that they persuaded Pilate to con- demn Him on the ground that His kingdom was of this world, when the Jews had really rejected Him because it was not. He had made no attempt to deprive Caesar of what was Caesar's, but asserted the paramount claim of God on man's allegiance. God's kingdom was not to be nationalist any more than secu- lar. It is free to all. Further, God's rule over man inaugurated by His Son is itself God's gift and the security of man's freedom. The king- dom is said to " come," to " be at hand," to " draw nigh." It is " prepared " by (iod and " inherited." It is " given " (Lu.i2.32), and " received " (Mk.lO.15) by those who have the spirit of a little child. Like every gift of God, it demands a moral effort on man's side. It must be " sought " with trouble; for it every- thing else must be " sold " (Mt.i3.45f.). God's purpose for us is fulfilled by our own co-opera- tion. St. Paul exactly represents the place of human effort when he writes, " Work out your own salvation, . . . for it is God which work- eth in you " (Ph.2.i2f.). — The Kingdom both Present and Future. The kingdom was present in the world when Christ taught and worked. It was not a rule to be inaugurated first at His second coming. Its full realization is in the future, but it came among men in the Person of Jesus Christ. Some Jews believed that the reign of the Messiah would not begin until after the judgment ; others believed that He could conquer His enemies and begin His reign before the judgment. The latter conception is nearer to the teaching of our Lord, though He spiritually transformed it. The kingdom came into the world as a hope for the future, but where Jesus went the hope became in some measure an actual reality. The kingdom is present, for with the preaching of Christ a new era begins (Mk. 1.15). Satan, "the strong man," is already being bound a prisoner (Mt.l2.28 = Lu.ll.20). God's kingdom and His righteous- ness are to be sought now ; one is accessible like the other (Mt.6.33). It is now being taken by force and occupied (ll.iif.). Further, the parables of the Sower, the Tares, the Mus- tard Seed and the Leaven all imply that the kingdom is here. The kingdom belongs to the near future. Some who hear Jesus will live " to see the kingdom of Ciod come with power " (Mk.9. i). St. Matthew, in the parallel passage (I6.28), says, " Till they see the Son of Man KINGS, BOOKS OP coming in His kingdom." It is not necessary to suppose that St. Matthew meant by this some- thing different from St. Mark. The disciples saw the Son of Man come in the Person of the Spirit (Jn. 14.19; cf. Mk. 14.62, Mt. 26.64, and Dan. 7). There will a development like the growth of the " blade " into the " ear " (Mk.4. 28). The kingdom belongs to a more distant future. It is to be consummated at Christ's second coming. He will then call the blessed to " inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundationof theworld"(Mt.25.34). In this sense the kingdom is strictly eschatological. It is remarkable that St. Paul uses the phrase both in the sense of a present reign of Ciod and in that of a kingdom at the end of the world (R0.I4.17 ; Gal. 5. 21). — The Kingdom both Inward and Outward. It is uncertain whether the Gk. in Lu.l7.2of. means that the kingdom is " v.'ithin you " or " among you." But it is evident that in its essence the kingdom is un- seen. This is shown by, e.g., Lu.i2.31ff., Mt.5.3. It is also outward. All spiritual social forces must have an outward form to be the instru- ment of their inward power. The kingdom that begins as the reign of God in the heart must manifest itself in an outward society and have a history of its own. The parable of the Tares illustrates this. The kingdom is here that part of the world where the good seed has been sown by the Son of Man, where good and evil grow together until the end (Mt.i3.41). So, too, the kingdom is a drag-net, gathering both good and bad ; some will be saved, some rejected (13.47). Much recorded in Mt. implies the idea of a society of persons visibly connected in a supernatural bond. The kingdom of heaven of which St. Peter received the keys must necessarily be a society with a visible form, a society to which men can be admitted and from which they can be excluded. Our Lord calls it " My Church " (16.i8f.). Thus the kingdom of God is also the kingdom of His Son {cf. Eph.5.5) ; He definitely calls His own the kingdom where He has sown the good seed. He is Himself " the King " Who shall judge all nations at the doom (Sit. 25. 34), and the faith- ful shall " eat and drink at My table in My kingdom " (Lu.22.30). The kingdom of the Son as a redemptive power will then be ended. When His redeeming work is complete, " He shall deliver up the kingdom to (iod, even the Father" (1C0r.i5.24). — Definition. The king- dom of God is the reign of God in the hearts and conduct of His children ; a reign which was embodied in the whole character of Jesus Christ, has expanded in tlie life of the Church, and will be perfected at the second coming of our Lord. | JEsrs Ciikist, III. (i).] [l.p.] King's, Books of. Language, Text, and Sources. The twobnoks of" Kings" formiiart of a ciintinuuus history, of which the former part is cIdscIv related t«> Samuel, the last part to Jeremiah. The Taliuudic tradition that Jeremiah was the final editor is possible, though the last chapter leaves us somewhat altruptiy in Habylon, and not in I'"gypt. The Gk. translation has four books of " kingdoms," or " royal transactions," which correspond to our I and 2Sam. and i and 2 Kings, but the division into books is more ancient ; that be- tween the ist and 2nd " Kings " is unhappy. KINGS, BOOKS O!^ l^'or the weighty judgment of Ewald as to the language of " Kings," see Samuel, Books of. The Heb. is of the golden age, but clearly later than the Pentateuch. The vivid per- sonal touches of Samuel reappear in the first part, and in the anecdotes of the prophets. In the Elijah and Elisha episodes historical writ- ing takes a new lease of life in the freer air of the N. and under the impulse of great events (see Benzinger ad loc). For vigour and beauty it is unsurpassed. We are certainly right in looking to the schools or colleges of the prophets for those who selected from contem- porary tradition, writing, and annals what lies before us. This conclusion is borne out by the Chronicles, which select and modernize out of the same ancient material from a priestly and post-Exilic standpoint. The traditional text, though sometimes corrupt, holds the field. We should experience more than Nol- deke's " slight philological shudder " (Lohr, Sam. p. xc) if any improved text were to sup- plant it. We should miss much of value. The q'^ri even is not always right. Keil hits, per- haps, the sane mean of alteration. The Gk. translation — for the completion of which before 150 B.C., certainly before 132 B.C., Baudissin gives reasons — and which is " the oldest wit- ness for the O.T. text " (CorniU), is (for all its merit) valuable chiefly when by its literalism, or even mistakes, it plainly stands for a Heb. original. Made with a purpose, by persons not thoroughly acquainted with Heb., at once too slavish and too free, it is untrustworthy in alterations, unsatisfactory re- arrangements, omissions, and additions. Kings is full of " ornamental " additions to a story they could not have told. An instance will illustrate its merits and demerits. In 1K.8.12, but out of its place at ver. 53, the LXX. inserts before " The Lord said," " He made the sun to be known {or, to appear] in heaven." And they follow with " is not this written in the book of the song ? " [cf. aSam.l.iS). This addition is accepted as original by very many. But it is a confused reminiscence from 2Sam.23.4. It misses the point of the noble abruptness of Solomon, and confuses the meaning. "Je- hovah said He would dwell in the thick dark- ness," and therefore the cloud shows He wiU dwell here. (At ver. 12 MS. B of the LXX. omits Solomon's words, MS. A inserts them as the Heb. does : both add the insertion given above at ver. 53.) Yet " the book of the song " (i.e. book of odes) is probably the only remaining trace of a primitive corruption in 2Sam.l.i8, where Jashar {the just), which is inappropriate, should be altered into " the song " by a transposition of letters. The fabu- lous addition of the LXX. to the story of Jero- boam at iK.12.24, rightly rejected by Keil and Rawlinson, is the first of those stories, added sometimes to canonical books, which give its reflected meaning (legendary) to the word " apocryphal." The sources of Kings may be approximately indicated. Besides the annals of Solomon, and the annals of the kings of Israel and Judah, we have : (i) The Samuel source, c. 978-975 B.C. {cf. iChr.27.24). In its graphic personal style the story of Samuel is continued, and completed. (2) The Solomon source, c. 975-938 B.C. It is distinguished by character- klNGS, BOOKS Oi" 440 istic words. The account of^the~^temple, judging by 7.8,9.24, must have been written before Pharaoh's daughter had rivals. This source may have used " the book of the annals of Solomon," which stands by itself. (3) The northern source, including the acts of Elijah and Elisha, c. 938-741 e.g., marked by traces of northern dialect in words and by slight peculiarities, which recur too often to be textual errors. "Provinces" (iK.20. 14) and " governors " (20.24, cf. IO.15) are doubtless historically accurate {cf. the loan word " lords " of the Philistines in Jos., Judg., and Sam.). The acts of Elisha are grouped out of sequence. (4) The Isaiah source, c. 777-641 B.C., closely related to the book of Isaiah. Here again a height of literary inter- est and power is attained. (5) The Jeremiah source, c. 639-587 b.c, closely related to the book of Jeremiah. That the sources date chiefly from the periods stated is clear from style and language, from the recurring phrase " to this day," frequently out of place, if edi- torial, and from indications sufficient to justify the opinion that the last writer would have be- trayed himself, if he had rewritten what he found. Difficulty in explaining and correlat- ing comes from the writers telling of their own present; without any attempt to harmonize it. Chronicles, after the Captivity, names other soinrces as still extant which have not come down to us (see, e.g., iChLr.27.24,29.29 ; 2Chr.9.29,12.i5,13.22). "Annals" having be- come part of the kingly regiment, chronology becomes accurate, and by its interlacing diffi- cult, but not impossible, to make clear. In Samuel we have only round numbers. — Contents. It is important to observe that the books of Kings are dominated by a purpose. They begin with the highest point the theocratic monarchy ever reached, described fully with something of the simple naivete of a prophet's " plain living and high thinking." The rest traces its decay in causes and in fact. This unity of purpose makes the record pass over much which Chronicles supplies, or which we have lost. Kings relates only how corruption and weakness spreads to Judah through Israel, till by degrees the greatness reached by Solo- mon disappears. The books may be thus analysed. (i) iK.1-3. The first years of Solomon and the last of David, (ii) iK.4-11. Solomon's reign. Chronicles tells us why the bdmd at Gibeon (8.4) is called "great" (2Chr. 1.3), and adds to the preparation (iChr.22, 29) what is implied in iK.'7.5i. The singing at the dedication (2Chr.5.i2 13) is implied in the word translated " cry" (iK.8.28). The fire from heaven (2Chr.7.i), though resting (as critics allow) on old tradition, is left out, as not in the line of thought. The description of the temple (iK.6,7) is the oldest and only descrip- tion of an ancient building. Tus fact that Benzinger gives it a flat, and Fergusson a slanting roof, shows the difficulty of modern realization. But the difficulty is not because the writer " had never set foot in the temple," as Benzinger says, but arises from the partially understood technical terms with which an eye- witness laboxrrs to be accurate. Of more con- sequence is it to notice that the writer designs an account of what Solomon and Hiram the 29 450 KINGS, BOOKS OF artificer added. The " tent of meeting " in Exodus is implied by what is omitted, for there is no description of the chief and most significant parts of the temple furniture. The old sanctuary ornamentation (" cherubs ") is mentioned because made in carving and over- laid in gold, with gourds and palm-trees and outspread garlands of flowers added (6. i S.agff .) . The "lilies " introduced by Hiram (7.19,22,26) into his new work were possibly favourite flowers with Uavid and Solomon (see Pss. titles). Cherubim are mentioned because Solomon added two large cherubim of olive wood (6.23), covered with gold, detached, and to overshadow the ark and its cherubim. There is a break at 7.47, observed by the LXX., which translates the first verb wrongly, " he took or gave." The pattern and ornament of the furniture, which follows, is not given. It is not Hiram's ; it is the " tent of meeting " pattern. The mention of it is because Solo- mon increased the number of tables and lights in his larger building. Such points as that, e.g., the top flanking rooms are larger than the lower by increasing rebates in the walls, show the building real and not imaginary (Rawlin- son ad loc). Comparison with other ancient Eastern buildings is the key to correct under- standing (Ftrgusson, History of Architecture, p. 203). Solomon does not seem so near to us as do the heroes of Samuel. His public utterance gives a noble idea of his "wisdom." But his character is to be sought in his writings, some of them extant (see 4.32,33). (iii) iK.1.2t0 2K. 10 and ch. 13. The revolt of Israel — consist- ently regarded by the prophets as a sin, though providentially brought about by Solomon's forced labour, as well as by his luxury and foreign affinities — and the resulting decline of the kingdom. The scene shifts for years to the N., for here the battle for true religion chiefly raged. Judah is only briefly mentioned. The reforms of Jehoshaphat are left out, though implied (2K.22.43). The destruction of his Elath fleet (possibly alluded to Ps.48.7) is mentioned because of his failure to restore Solomon's commercial status, (iv) 2K.11,12 and 14 to the end. Corruption spreads from Israel to Judah by alliance and by the inter- marriage with Athaliah, Jezebel's daughter, who introduces Baal and the Asherah, and through Ahaz, " who walked in the way of the kings of Israel " (16. 3), and introduced foreign fashions from Damascus, and the Sun-god and tlie host of heaven from Assyria. In the weakening and ultimate extinction of Israel, whose hist kings were short-lived nmr- derers, j udali is left o])en to Aram and Assyria. The reforms of Joash, LIzziah or Azariah, Heze- kiah, and the most thorough one of Josiah, staved off the ruin ; but they were to an extent forced on a half-hearted people, and were fol- lowed by reaction. Manasseh's rei)entance is not mentioned, because it did not materially affect the story. Judah, left alone, is first oppressed by Aram and tlien by Assyria, and in the end destroyed or led into captivity by Babylon. The last vestiges (24.13-18) of the wisdom and greatness of Solomon arc gone. — Historical Implications. In the earlier books tlie pre-existence of the Mosaic literature emerges in hint and allusion. The disturbed KINGS, BOOKS OF state of the times prevents its full operation. But in the time of peace and progress with which Kings opens, the pre-existence of the books of Moses is certain, if the history is trustworthy. The action and words of Solo- mon presuppose it, and have otherwise no sufficient cause. His seven prayers at the dedi- cation are based upon Deut. and Lev. The history of J udah is ever in its reforms recurring to a type directly declared as set once for all. Deut. is quoted (iK. 14.10,11, 15 ; c/. Deut. 82.36, 28.26,29.27), and the law said to be written (iK.2.3; 2K. 17.35-39; cf. H0.8.12, Heb.), before the book of the covenant was found in Josiah's time. The " testimony " in the coronation ceremony (2K.II.12) would pro- bably be the king's copy of the law (Deut. 17.18). The proportions and description of the temple imply the " tent of meeting," and in the ark are still the two tables of the " ten words" (iK.8.9). The Mosaic institution was an ideal — variously approximated. Perhaps, in the prophet's judgment, it was most nearly reached by Josiah. The northern prophets de- vised means for keeping together the godly in the spirit of the Law, and as far as possible to its form (18. 29 and 31 ; 2K.4.23). The invention of a continuous and pervasive Deuteronomic redaction really grants all this, and is itself critically violent, for the traces of the law are imbedded in the record. The sober historian will hesitate to allow the spirit of direct falsehood, which such a redac- tion unavoidably involves, to be the spirit of the Heb. writers. It is devised to destroy the evidence. But it is a two-edged sword. It is far more likely that the history alludes to a foregoing literature, which has come down to us, than that it should be systematically falsified to agree with something that never existed. It would never enter the mind of any one simply desiring to explain what he finds, that the law book discovered in the temple was Deuteronomy only. Its description is too precise (2K. 22. 8, 11, 23. 2, 3). Deuteronomy oniy is not " the book of the law," " the book of the covenant," " the words of this covenant which are written in this book." The LXX. title gives the ancient opinion that L)euteronomy is a repetition and an exhortation. From Deut- eronomy only, Josiah's great passover would not have resulted. Even De Wette allows, in reference to 2K.22, that by Deuteronomy " the existence of the other books is presupposed " (Introduction, § 162 a). But, further, the con- sistent habit of the Heb. writers of mentioning things only when they come ilireclly in their way indelinitely increases the strength of the evidence. Only one great national festival, the Feast of Tabernacles, used as the dedication feast, is mentioned in the reign of Solomon. That, however, national assemblies at the feasts (iK.9.23) were the use of Solomon's time and that they invohed the godly of the N. to a notable degree, iscjuite clear from Jeroboam's in\'ention, at Dan and Bethel, of calves and of feasts "after his own heart," and priests " from all the jieople " to replace the Levitical, wherebv " he made Israel to sin " (12. 26-33). The half-shekel poll-tax for the temple ser- vice and the various priestly dues of Leviticus were always in operation as far as possible, KINGS, BOOKS 0]tf" but they are only mentioned when Joash Un- successfully attempted to divert some of them to the repair of the temple dilapidations (2 K. 12. 4f. ). The various kinds of sacrifice were always going on, in accordance with Leviticus, but are only mentioned when Ahaz interfered with them by introducing his foreign altar from Damascus (16. 13-16). The brazen serpent " which Moses made " (18. 4) was in all probability in Jerusalem from the first, not- withstanding other theories ; but it is never mentioned anywhere, till Hezekiah destroyed it, to prevent its further superstitious use. — The Miraculous Element. This is not the place to discuss the possibility of Miracles, or the unique nature of the Heb. idea of it. It is only in place to point out the strength of the evidence, and the worthiness of the " signs " occurring in these books. The kingdom of Israel was weakened by perpetual violence, deserted by its teachers (2Chr.ll. 14 and 13. 9) and the means of true worship, and left a prey to idolatry and persecution. The prophets raised up for this crisis were friendless, alone, and men of peace. It is impossible to explain their influence without the sufficient cause alleged for it. Jehovah, as at the Exodus " a man of war," contends at the frontier for the safety of the faithful remnant and for the con- tinued existence of Jerusalem, where " He set His name." The O.T. economy of the miracu- lous is justified (Godet). The towering form of Elijah, the mediator of a new revelation of God's secret counsel, is not the form of an impostor. His taking up was seen only by Elisha, but it was verified by the search of 50 men. The wonders of Elisha were related from lip to lip (2K.8.4f.), much as vhe wonders of Jesus Christ were in the same country. His method resembles his Master's. Even smaller miracles are part of a story characterized by a unique and fearless truthfulness, and manifestly near to the events. The total effect is to relieve the oppressed remnant with a sense of unseen protection and guidance, to chastise insolence and violence, to stay for a while the torrent of impiety. The superb drama is, at any rate, a writing of genius. The apocryphal stories of the LXX., Josephus, the Talmud, and the Koran show what legend is, and what are its marks (see Keil, p. 57). The power of the prophets was exercised according to their own mind in stern times, and conse- quently breathes the spirit of the O.T. rather than that of the New. The destruction of Sennacherib, in answer to Hezekiah's prayer in an agonizing crisis, was in the public records, and was known in Egypt ; for Herodotus appar- ently makes a confused allusion to it (ii. 141 ). — Contact with the Monuments. Within the last 70 years a great resurrection of ancient times has come from the deciphering of ancient monuments. The work is going on. It is well neither to ignore, nor to exaggerate. The book of Kings is as good and honest a record as any ancient monument. The nearest approach to its continuous history is probably the Assyrian Eponym Canon, which George Smith refused to consider infallible {Eponym Canon, p. 182). The progress of discovery, however, restores vividness to the old, for- gotten past, and largely reinforces the opinion KINGS, BOOKS OF 451 that in such a work as Kings we have not legend, but reality. The external contact, small in Samuel, increases in Kings, and with it contact with the monuments of other nations. Points of contact which confirm the lesser statements in Kings should add to our con- fidence in the whole. (a) According to Deutsch, Tyrian mason marks have been discovered upon the big stones of Solomon's temple foundation, with other Tyrian remains of interest. The royal quarry, whence the stones were hewn, has been found, {b) The allusion to "the kings of the Hittites," once derided, is found to be accurate, (c) An in- teresting sidelight on Solomon's fleet at Elath comes from an inscription of Sennacherib (Sanherib III. R. 12), in which he relates that he made certain captive Hatti (dwellers perhaps in Cyprus or on the ^Mediterranean coast) build lofty ships in Nineveh, such as they made in their own country ; that he manned them with sailors from Tyre, Sidon, and Yawan, and finally, with a complement of Assyrian soldiery, by land, canal, and river, set them in the Persian Gulf. Neither Hebrews nor Assyrians could build or handle big ships without the Phoenicians (Delitzsch, Wo lag das Paradies? pp. 76, 271, 291). {d) The inscrip- tion of Mesha on the Moabite Stone " agrees fully with the Bible " ( Winckler, Keilinschriften, p. 253), which strengthens the belief that minor statements like 2K.3.4f. are well grounded. (e) German explorers have discovered, N. of Antioch, Aramaic inscriptions which spell Tig- lath -pileser as in Kings, and not as in Ass>Tian, " Tukulti-Pal-eshar." So that probably pecu- liarities in spelling in Kings "go back to the period of the events recorded " (Sayce, Higher Criticism and the Monuments, p. 412 ; Winck- ler, p. 38, note 3). (/) The Siloam inscription, in ancient Heb. script, was probably put there by Hezekiah's workmen when he made his " con- duit " (Sayce, Fresh Light, p. 82). (g) In the British Museum (K. 1620) is a letter of Senna- cherib, assigning large gifts to Esar-haddon his son, whose name he wished to change {Records of the Past, ser. i. vol. i. p. 136). The tenor of the letter, which is known, perhaps without sufficient reason, as " the will of Sennacherib," seems to indicate that he was a favourite son. This, taken together with the fact that Sen- nacherib appointed Esar-haddon, though his fourth son (Lenormant, Hist. p. 404), to the important position of king of Babylon during his lifetime, may throw an interesting sidelight upon the motive of jealousy which induced two other of his sons to murder him (2K.I9.37). — Unity. Kings is the expression of a prophetic mind. Persistent through so many generations of varying events, it speaks with one voice. The prophets were not antagonists of the priests, as is sometimes stated. All along they stand for thoroughness in religion and purity in worship, and they are conspicuous in Josiah's renewal of the covenant (23.2, the reading is right). The writings of Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, Micah, Jeremiah, and the rest, are only pro- perly understood, and their influence only suffi- ciently accounted for, in the historic atmo- sphere of Kings. One mind bespeaks one spirit, " the spirit of Jehovah," by Whom they all profess to have been moved. It is a situation 452 KIB, unique in history. We cannot even strike out the name " Josiah " from iK.13.2 without attributing to the writer of 2K. 23. 16,17 a spirit of deliberate lying alien from the evidence. Kings is a great book, often characterized by an inimitable literary pathos and power. It tells the story of a splendid fight of the faithful few, in which the prophets were worthy leaders. — Literature. Benzinger in Marti (1899), distinguished by a thorough-going scepticism and an arrogance in criticism, but useful ; Keil in Keil and Dclitzsch (on the whole a masterly commentary) ; Rawlinson in The Speaker's Commentary, still valuable ; Farrar in The Expositor's Bible ; Barnes in The Cambridge Bible ; Thenius, old but useful ; Klostermann in Strack-Zokler, preposterous in text altera- tion, but suggestive. For te.xt : Burney's Notes and Kittcl's Hebrew Bible, with critical apparatus. For parallel texts : Girdlestone's Deuterngraphs (Clarendon Press), and Wood's Hebrew Monarchy (Eyre & Spottiswoode). For archaeology : The Records of the Fast (Bagster) ; the works of Sayce, Pinches, Hommel, and others ; the publications of the Palestine Ex- ploration Fund, including Harper's Bible and Modern Discoveries. Winckler in Schrader's Keilinschri/ten (Berlin, 1905) might be sup- posed to give an expert's resume ; but his extreme scepticism succeeds in so involving a clear subject, as to detract from its value. Jeremias (Das Alte Test, im Lichte das Alten Orient, 1906) is better, but still quite unreason- able. A very useful, short summary (1892) is Nicol's Explorations. [f.e.s.] Klp is mentioned by Amos (9-7) as the land from which the Syrians (Aramcans) were "brought up" — i.e. where they had dwelt before migrating to the region N. of Palestine. It was also the land to which the captive Syrians of Damascus were removed by Tiglath- pileser (2K.I6.9 ; cf. Am.1.5). Isaiah joins it with Elam (22.6). The LXX. (Vat. MS.) does not give it as a proper name in any passage. The position of Kir is unknown. [c.k.c] Kip of Moab, one of the two cliief strong- holds of Moab, the other being Ar of Moab. This name occurs only in Is.lS.i. [Kir- iiARASETH, etc.] A cluc to its identification is perhaps given by the Targum on Isaiah, which for the above names has Kerakka or Kerak, the great castle S.E. of the Dead Sea, not far from the W. edge of the plateau. It lies about 6 miles S. of the modern Rabba. It is built upon the top of a steep hill, surrounded by deep and narrow valleys, completely inclosed by mountains rising higher than the town. The elevation of the town is 3,323 feet above sea-level. Klp-hapa'seth(2K.3.25),Kip-hape'seth (Is.16.7), KJp-hapesh'(ver. 11), Kip- he pes (Jc. 48. 31, 36), ai)i>arintly all slight variations of tiif same name and probably all applied to Kir of .MoAn. [c.r.c] Klplah' (= town ; Arab. Qiiriah), ren- dered "city" by A.V. The word occurs in 35 passages of O.T., and refers to Heshbon (Num. 21. 28) and Zion (Is. 33. 20), instead of the usual word ' ir, found in hundreds of passages. [Cities.] [c.r.c] Kiplatha'lm (two towns). — 1. {iChr.6.76.) A town of Nai>htali given to the Levites, other- KIRJATH-JEARIM wise Kartan (Jos.2i.32). The site is un- known. It is perhaps the Kerettenau of the list of Thothmes III. (No. 11).— 2. [Kir- JATHAIM.] [c.r.c] Kiplathia'pius. [Kirjath-jearim.] Kipioth' (R.V. Kerioth, as in Je.48.24,41), " the high buildings " of which are to be burned (Am.2.2). The Heb. has the def. article, and the LXX. reads " the foundations of its cities." If a city of Moab is intended, it is probably Kerioth, which may be KiRjATiiAiM.now the ruin Qar^jya/. [c.r.c] Kipjath' (J OS. 18. 28), a town of Benjamin, noticed with Gibeath. It is apparently the present village el Qiiriah (otherwise called Qiiriet el ' A nab, " town of grapes " ), 7 J miles W. of Jerusalem, and close to Jeb'a. It is not Kirjath-jearim, which is mentioned in the same chapter (18. 14). [c.r.c] Kipjatha'im, or Kipiatha im (Je.48.i, 23 ; Ezk.25.9), probably Shaveh Kiriathaim (Gen.14.5), otherwise Kirjathaim (R.V. Kir- iathaim), in A. v., Num.32.37; Jos.i3.19. A town in Moab, apparently S. of Heshbon, rebuilt by the Reubenites. In 4th cent. a.d. it was a Christian village called Kariatha {Ono- masticon), 10 miles from Medeba, apparently the present ruin Qareiydl, about 10 miles S. of Mddcba. It is probably not the same as KiRiOTH (R.V. Kerioth), in A.V. Am.2.2, or Kerioth, in A.V. Je.48.24,41. On the Moabitc Stone, in 9th cent, b.c, king Mesha records his building (or fortifying) of Qiriathen, which was evidently the same town — a place of importance in Moab. [c.r.c] Kipjath'-apba', an early name of Hebron, named from Area, one of the Anakim (Jos. 14. 15 ; Judg.l.io). See also Gen.23.2,35.27 ; Jos. 15. 13, 54, 20.7,21. II. Kipjath'-apim', an abbreviated form (Ezr. 2.25 only) of Kirjath-jearim. Kipjath'-ba'al, an alternative name of Kirjath-jeakim (Jos.15. 60,18.14) = Baalah, Baale-of-Judah. [Baal, geogr.] Kipjath'-huzoth', a place to which Balak accompanied Balaam immediately after his arrival in Moab (Num. 22.39). It appears to have lain between the .\rnon and Bamoth- BAAL (cf. vv. 36 and 41). The LXX. under- stands merely " a town of dwellings." Per- haps better "a town of the borders." [c.r.c] Kipjath'-jeapim' (toxvn of woods), other- wise Kirjatli-ariin (lizr.2.25), Kiriathiarius (iEsd.5.19), Baalah (Jos. 15. 9), Kirjath-baal (Jos. 15. 60), or Baale of Judah (2Sam.6.2 ; iChr.13.5,6 : 2Chr.l.4). A place on the N. border of Jvidah (Jos. 15.0. 10), which was one of the Hivite cities (9. 17), probably re- named to avoid the old name connected with Baal. Its jiosition, with the Maiianeh-Dan — or open plain near Betu-shemesii — to the W. (A.V. behind, Judg.l8.12), agrees with that of the ruined town ' Erma, on the hill S. of the valley of Sorek, 12 miles W. of Jerusalem [Judah], as first suggested by Rev. .\. Hender- son. Kirjath-jearim was higher up than Beth-shemesh (iSam.6.21) ; and the view from ' Erma to W. includes the plain near Beth-shemesh (4 miles olT), visible through the gorge. Here the ark, recovered from the Philistines, remained for 20 years during the rule of Samuel (iSam.7.2) ; and, though ac- KIRJATH-SANNAH compaaying Saul in his wars (according to the usual text of iSam.l^.iS), it was apparently brought back, and was there found by David, after Saul's death (2Sam.6.2), in the Gibeah, or " hill." (See iChr.2.50,52, 53, 13.5,6 ; Ne.7. 29 ; J e. 26.20.) The site was wrongly placed, in 4th cent, a.d., at Kirjath of Benjamin (Onomasticon). The ruins are those of an ancient town, with rock-cut wine-presses, and a scarped platform for a tower {Surv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 43-52). In one of the Amarna letters, the king of Jerusalem speaks of Beth-baalah KITE 453 iChr.6.72 Kedesh, 3 {Tell Abu Qadeis), stands instead. [c.r.c] Kishon' (R.V. Kishion), a town of Issa- char (Jos. 21. 28), given to the Levites. [Ke- desh, 3 ; Kishion.] [c.r-c] Kishon', Rivep [the twisting torrent ; nahal), near mount Tabor (Judg.4.6,7), where Sisera was defeated by Barak {vv. 13- 16). The epithet " ancient " (R.V. and A.V. 5.21) is perhaps better rendered "of difficul- ties " ; for the Kishon — now called Nahr el MuquU'a {river of the cut-up ground) — is a VIEW WEST FROM KIRJATH-JEARIM. (Showing the Mahaneh Dan.) (From an origina sketch by Col, Conder.) as a town revolting from him in 15th cent. b.c. (Berlin 106). This may represent the sub- mission of Kirjath-jearim, with the other Hivite towns, to the Hebrews. [c.r.c] Kipjath'-sannah' (Jos.i5.49), ^ name for Debir. Probably " town of the height" ; Debir {the back) being now erf/t Dhdheriyeh {the place of the back, or ridge). ' [c.r.c] Kipjath'-se'phep, the early name of the city Debir, in Jos. 15. 15, 16 ; Judg.l.11,12. The LXX. understands " town of letters." Possibly " town of the road," being on the main Hebron-Beersheba road. [c.r.c] Kish.— 1. The father of Saul ; a Benjamite of the family of Matri, according to i Sam. 10. 21, though descended from Becher according to iChr.7.8, compared with iSam.9.1. [Ner.] — 2. Son of Jehiel, and uncle to the preceding (iChr.9.36). — 3. A Benjamite, ancestor of Mordecai (Esth.2.5). — 4. A Merarite, of the house of Mahli, of the tribe of Levi. His sons married the daughters of his brother Eleazar (iChr.23.2i, 22,24.28,29), apparently about the time of Said, or early in the reign of David. Kishi', a Merarite, and father or ancestor of Ethan the minstrel (iChr.6.44). Kishion', a town on the laoundary of Issa- char (Jos. 19. 20), allotted to the Gershonite Levites (2I.28, R.V., but A.V. Kishon). In treacherous boggy stream. When Junot and the French defeated the Turks (in 1799) near Tabor, many of the latter perished in its swamps. The source is W. of Tabor ; and Sisera's army, defeated at Kison, perished near En-dor (Ps.83.9). Thence it winds W., under the hills of Zebulun, to the pass near Jokneam, under mount Carmel (1K.I8.40), and runs N.W. by Harosheth, to the sea in the bay of AccHO. The lower course is fringed with date palms. The river, even in winter, does not reach the shore when the wind is in the W., but is only fordable at the bar when it is in the E.. It receives a considerable affluent from S. near Jokneam, which is fed from springs on the slopes W. of the plain of Esdraelon, the whole of which is drained by the Kishon. The soldiers of Sisera, in their retreat to Harosheth, perished apparently in the swamps (Judg.5.2i), while he fled alone some 30 miles N.E. [Zaanaim] ; chariots, how- ever, were easily driven in the plain between Harosheth and Tabor. [Merom.] [c.r.c] Kison' (Ps.83.9 only); R.V. Kishon. Kiss. [Salutation; Idolatry.] Kite. TheHeb. word {'ayyd) thus rendered occurs in Lev. 11. 14, Deut.i4.13, and Job 28.7; in the two former it is translated " kite " in the A. v., in the latter " yulture " (q.v.). The 454 KITHLISH word occurs among the 20 names of birds men- tioned in Dent. 14 (belonging for the most part to the diurnal birds of prey, or Accipitres), considered unclean by the Mosaic Law, and forbidden as food to the Israelites. The allusion KITE {Milvus ictinus). in Job alone affords a clue to the probable iden- tification of the bird. The mines in the moun- tains are there described as " a track which the bird of prey hath not known, nor hath the eye of the vulture Vciyyd] looked upon it." Among all birds of prey, the kite is said to be distinguished by peculiar keenness of vision. Robertson derives 'ayyd from an obsolete root, connected with an Arab, word, the prim- ary meaning of which is " to turn." If this derivation be correct, the evidence in favour of kite as the proper translation is strengthened. Possibly dayydh may signify the black kite (Milvus ater), and 'ayyd the true or red kite (M. regalis) ; but this is little, if at all, more than a conjecture. [Vulture.] [r.l.] Kithlish', one of the towns of Judah, in the Shc|)helah or lowland (Jos. 15. 40). Kitpon', a town from which Zcbulun did not expel the Canaanites (Judg.l.30), identified by some (Tal. Bab. Megillah 6, a) with " Cip- pori" (Sepphoris), now Seffurteh. [c.r.c!] Klttlm' (C.cn.lO.i ; iChr.l.7) = CniTTiM. Kneading-tpoug-hs. [Bread.] Knife. Tiif knives nf the I'lgyptians, and of other natlDiis in early times, were of hard stone. Iron knives lia\e been found of a \ ery early date at Tell Loh in Chaldea, but the flint or stone knife was retained for sacred purposes after the introduction of iron and steel (see Jos. 5. 2). Herodotus (ii. 86) mentions knives both of iron and of stone in different stages of the same process of embalming. In their meals the Jews, like other Orientals, did not cat with knives, b>it required them for slaughtering animals either ff)r food or sacrifire, and for rutting >ip the carcase (Lev. 7. 33..34,8.i5-20,2,'i.9.i3 ; Num. 18. 18; iSam.9.24, etc.). .Smaller knives were in use for paring fruit (Josephus, i Wars xxxiii. 7) and for shar|)ening pens (Je.36.2:?). The lancets of the priests of liaal wfrc; doubtless pointed knives (iK.18.28). [liooKs; Kazor.] Knop. A. V. thus translates two Heb. terms, (i) kaphtor ("ball"). This occurs in the description of the candlestick of the sacred tent (Ex. 25.31-36,37. 17-22). They appear to form bosses, from which the branches spring out from the main stem. (2) p'qd'im, " bulbs " (iK. 6. 18. 7. 24 only). The following woodcut of a portion of a richly ornamented slab, from Nineveh, probably represents some- BORDI-.R OF A SLAB FROM KOUYUNJIK. { Fergusson's A rch iUctitre. ) thing approximating to the " knop and the flower " of Solomon's temple. Ko'a occurs only in Ezk.23.2 3, as the name of a people, with Shoa. These are, perhaps, the Kue and Su tribes of N. Syria, noticed in the Assyrian records. [c.r.c] Kohath', second of the three sons of Levi (Gen. 46.1 1 ; Ex. 6.16 ; Num. 3. 17 ; iChr.6.i,i6). He was the father of Amram, Izhar, Hebron, and Uzziel (Ex. 6.18-22 ; Num.3. 10 ; iChr.6.2, 18,23.12) ; his sister was Jochebed (Ex. 6. 20 ; Num. 25. 3')) the wife of Amram and mother of Aaron and Moses. He lived 133 years (Ex. 6. 18). The number of Kohathites between the ages of 30 and 50, at the time of the first census in the wilderness, was 2,750, and the whole number f>f males of the familv from a month old was 8,600 (Num. 4. 34-36,3. 27, 28). Their position in the camp was S. of the tabernacle (Num.3. 2o). During the wanderings they had charge of the sanctuary and its furniture, after it had been prepared for travel bv the priests, the sons of Aaron (3.31,4. 1-1,'i, 7.0, 10. 21). It will thus be seen that the Kohathites, the family of Aaron, took precedence of the descendants of Gershon, the elder brother. The wealth and prfiminenre of the Kohathites. and the im- portant offices filled by them as musicians (see KOLAIAH Heman), as keepers of the dedicated treasures, as judges, of&cers, and rulers, both secular and sacred, appear in such passages as iChr.6.31- 47,23.12-20,25.1-7,26.23-32 ; 2Chr.20.i9,29.i2, 14. [H.C.B.] Kolaiah'. — 1. A Benjamite, ancestor of Sallu (Ne.11.7).— 2. The father of Ahab the false prophet (Je.29.2i). Ko'pah. — 1. One of the " dukes " of Edom ; third son of Esau by Aholibamah (Gen.36.5,i8 ; iChr.1.35), born in Canaan before Esau mi- grated to mount Seir. — 2. Another Edomitish duke, sprung from Eliphaz, Esau's son by Adah (Gen. 36. 16). — 3. One of the "sons of Heb- ron " in iChr.2.43.'^t. The leader, in con- junction with Dathan and Abiram, of the re- bellion against Moses and Aaron related in Num. 16, 17. Korah was the cousin of Aaron, as shown in the following table. Levi I LAB AN 455 Gershon Kohath I Merari Amram I Aaron Izhar Hebron Uzziel I I Korah Elizaphan Dr. Driver and others believe that in the story of the rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram three narratives are combined, (i) The first is concerned alone with the rebellion of laymen, headed by the Reubenites Dathan and Abiram, against the civil authority of Moses. The narra- tive is attributed to J E, and found in Num. 16.i6-2a,i2-i5,25,26,276-34. (2) The second relates to the protest of Korah, at the head of 250 princes (not all of the tribe of Levi), against ecclesiastical authority being limited to the tribe of Levi. It is assigned to P, and found in 16.ia,26-7a,i8-24,27a,326,35,4i-50,17. (3) The third represents the rebellion of Korah in a somewhat different aspect, and is attribu- ted to a writer of the priestly school (P*). In his view, Korah, at the head of 250 Levites, opposes, in the interests of the tribe of Levi, the exclusive right to the priesthood claimed by the sons of Aaron (16.76-11,16,17,36-40). A study of this statement is instructive, as showing the division and subdivision of verses necessary for the ascription to separate " sources " upon which the theory depends. [Pentateuch.] Whether this be accepted or no, it may well be that the rebellion of Korah, though possibly coincident in time and place with that of Dathan and Abiram, differed from it in respect of its motive, its sin, and its punishment. The motive in each case is evident from the above ; the sin in one instance is schism, in the other treason ; Korah and his company sought heavenly power (c/. the association of his name with those of Cain and Balaam in Ju. 11), and were consumed by fire from heaven ; Dathan and Abiram, earthly power, and were swallowed up by the earth. [Korahites.] [h.c.b.] Kopahites, Kophites, or Kopathites. Korah was the great-grandson of Levi, and a member of the Kohathite branch of the tribe. He was the eldest son of Izhar, the brother of Amram, and first cousin to Moses, Aaron, and Miriam. He was, consequently, very closely connected with the priestly race, and it was only to be expected that he should be the representative of his tribe when the claims of Aaron and his sons were disputed (Num.16). Though in the account of the rebellion it seems implied that all the family of Korah perished, it is specially asserted in 26. 11 that " the sons of Korah died not." In the Psalter the sons of Korah were evidently considered among the leaders of the musical services of the temple with the sons of Asaph (Ne.7.44), who, however, are here not reckoned among the Levites, as they are in Chronicles. No less than II (12 if we reckon Ps.42 and 43 as dis- tinct) psalms are inscribed " to the sons of Korah"— i;iz. 42-49 and 84,85,87,88. [Psalms, Titles of.] The Korahites are mentioned (iChr.26.i) as the door-keepers of the temple, and as the leading Levites in the reign of Jehoshaphat (2Chr.2O.19). In iChr.12.6 the Korhites were among the warriors who helped David when he was at Ziklag ; and in iChr.2. 42,43 a Korah is mentioned among the sons of Caleb, the "brother of Jerahmeel, his father being Hebron. [f.j.f.-j.J Kope'. — 1. A Korahite whose descend- ants were chief gate-keepers of the tabernacle in the reign of David (iChr.9. 19,26.1). — 2. Son of Imnah, a Levite in charge of the oblations in the reign of Hezekiah (2Chr.3i.14). — 3. In 1Chr.26.19, "sons of Kore " should be, as in R.V., " sons of the Korahites." Koz (Ezr.2.6i ; Ne.3.4,21,7.63) = (Accoz ; iEsd.5.38, marg. Cos) = Hakkoz. Kushaiah' (1Chr.i5.17) = Kishi. Laadah', son of Shelah, son of Judah, and " father " or founder of Mareshah (iChr.4.2i). Laadan'. — 1. An Ephraimite, ancestor of Joshua, son of Nun (iChr.7.26). — 2. A Gershonite Levite in the time of David (23.7-9, 26.21), or, if the name is that of the family, perhaps = Libni, as seems to be suggested by the first occurrence of the thrice-repeated name in 26. 21. Laban', son of Bethuel (Gen. 28. 5), grand- son of Nahor, Abraham's brother (22.20,24.24), brother of Rebekah (24.29, 25. 20), and father of Leah and Rachel. The elder branch of the family remained at Haran, the city of Nahor (24.io ; cf. 29.4), when Abraham re- moved to the land of Canaan ; and there we first meet with Laban, as taking the leading part in the betrothal of Rebekah to her cousin Isaac (24.10,29-60 ; cf. 27. 43,29. 4). Laban next appears as the host of his nephew Jacob at Haran (29.13,14). There followed the trans- actions by which he secured the services of his nephew for 14 years, in return for his two daughters, and for six years as the price of his cattle (31.41), together with the artifice by which he palmed off his elder daughter on J acob (Gen. 29. 21-30). Laban was absent, shearing his sheep, when Jacob started (with his wives, children, and all his possessions) for his native land ; and it was not till the third day that Laban heard of their departure. In hot haste he set off in pursuit. J acob and his family had 456 LABAN crossed the Euphrates, and were already some days' inarch in advance ; but so large a cara- van would travel but slowly (cf. Gen. 33. 13), and Laban and his kinsmen came up with them on the E. side of Jordan, among the mountains of Gilcad. After mutual recrimination, and an un- successful search for the teraphim, whichRachel had hidden, a covenant of peace was entered into and a cairn raised about a pillar-stone set up by Jacob, both as a memorial of the covenant, and a boundary which the contracting parties pledged themselves not to pass with hostile intentions. After this, " Laban rose up and kissed his sons and his daughters, and blessed them, and departed, and returned to his place " ; and we hear no more of him. Laban', one of the landmarks named in Deut.l.i. The mention of Hazeroth points to LiBNAH (Num.33. 20). These names suggest a " white " chalk region. [c.r.c] Lab'ana (iEsd.5.29) = Lebana. Lacedemo'nians, the inhabitants of Sparta = Lacedaemon, with whom the Jews claimed kindred ( I Mac.l 2. 2, etc. ,14.20,2 3, 15. 23; 2Mac.5.9). Lachish' (difficxilt). a royal Amorite city in S.W. lowlands of judah (Jos. 10. 3, 5, 23, 31, 12.11,15.39), which resisted Joshua's attack for two days, and was evidently a strong site. It was fortified by Rehoboam (2Chr.ll.9), and Amaziah of Judah fled to it for refuge, but was there murdered (2K.14.19 : 2Chr.25.27). In 702 B.C. it was besieged, and submitted to Sennacherib (2K. 18. 14, 17, 19.8 ; Is.36.2,37.8), which fate Micah appears to foretell (Mi.l.13). It was attacked about 607 b.c. as a city of Judah, by Nebuchadnezzar (J 6.34.7), and was reinhabitedby men of J udah after the Captivity (Ne.ll.30). In 4th cent. a.d. Eusebius (Ono- masticon) speaks of it as a village, 7 miles S. of Eleutheropolis (or Beit Jibrin) ; and the present writer was so led to suggest the iden- tity with Tell el Hesy, a strong site with springs 10 miles S. of Beit Jibrin, which suggestion was verified by the discovery, twelve years later by Mr. Bliss, of a cuneiform tablet re- ferring to Zimrida, the governor of Lachish, about 1480 B.C., which was unearthed in the lower part of the excavated citadel. Tell el l.lesy was known by its present name in the i2th cent. (Beha-ed-Din), and is the most important ruin in the district. The Amarna tablets include two from Lachish, one from a certain Yabnilu, the other from Zimrida (Berlin, 124, 123), both promising obedience to the Pharaoh. The cuneiform tablet found in the ruins refers to Zimrida as the nominee of Egypt, but as opposed by the peoiile (of La- chish); and this agrees with another Amarna letter, in which the king of Jerusalem men- tions a revolt against Zimrida of Lachish (Berlin, No. 104). The siege of Lachish by Sennacherib is attested by an Assyrian bas- relief from Nineveh (see Frontispiece), the inscription stating that it rejireseuts " Sen- nacherib ... on his throne before the city of Lakisu," receiving thesubmissionof the inhalii- tants. The city is shown as near mountains, and surrounded with palms and vineyards — which suits the position at T(!ll el l.lesy, near the foot of the hills W. of Hebron, the mound being 340 ft. above sea-level/ Lachish is shown as LACHISH an oval city, with 24 battlemented towers, and a central street ; some of the houses are of stone, some are mud huts ; cattle and horses have been driven within the walls, and priests (probably Assyrian) are worshipping a sacred cone at an altar, by which stands an unhorsed chariot bearing ensigns, inside the town. The excavation of the citadel of Lachish, com- menced by Prof. Flinders Petrie in 1890, was mainly conducted by Mr. F. J. Bliss in 1891- 1893 (see his Mound of Many Cities, 1894). The results were of high importance, and La- chish was the first city (except Jerusalem), ex- cavated in Palestine. The oldest town was found to lie 65 ft. below the present top of the Tell, or about 60 ft. above the surrounding valleys, which contain water from springs (Surv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 261, 291). The whole site perhaps covered 100 acres, but only a few acres on N.E. were uncovered, representing the citadel. Even the oldest city had a wall with towers ; and successive destructions of at least eight towns were traced, with an accu- mulation of rubbish at the average rate of 2 ft. per century. The first city was probably as old as about 2000 b.c, or the age approxi- mately of Abraham. In this the pottery (re- sembling equally ancient pottery in Cappa- DociA)was marked by emblems of the Asianic syllabary [Writing], used by Hittites and others from Cappadocia to Egypt. The bronze axe, spear heads, and adzes here found, proved, when analysed, to have only about 5 per cent, of tin vs'ith 95 of copper — an in- dication of early date. Above this town, other buildings of about 1600 to 1400 b.c. were found ; and, with the Zimrida tablet, there were scarabs of the i8th Egyptian dsTiasty (including one of queen Thii), and another possibly with Hittite emblems. The painted pottery resembled that of Asia Minor and of the Aegean shores, dating from about the same age. These remains were from 30 to 40 ft. below the surface, and the city appears to have remained for several centuries at least standing on a bed of ashes from the burning of the older town. In the upper strata of the Amorite town were found a pilaster like those represented on Assyrian bas-reliefs ; Egyptian scarabs of about 1200 b.c. ; a bronze idol with a gold collar ; and a female figure in pottery (5 in. high), like those found in Hittite and Babylonian ruins ; with cylinders — probably Canaanite — also similar to Babylonian and Phoenician seal-cylinders in design and execu- tion. A yet later city, at a depth of about 20 ft. from the surface, contained remains of Heb. times, the proportion of tin to copper, in the bronze objects, being here nearly 20 per cent. A fragment, from a vase had an early Heb. text (TDH?), sui>posed bv Kenan to mean " for drink," or " libation." In this city also a Gk. text (probably reading Ap^f/^aX"), and a Gk. winged figure, on a fragment of black ware, supjiosed to be as early as 400 b.c, were discovered. Iron was now in common use, but flint instruments still continued to be made. This city also was burnt ; and, thougli remains of rough buildings extend nearly to the surface, with a Gk. Byzantine text, Lachish seems to have gradually sunk, to be- come a mere village in the 4th cent, a.d., and LACtTNTJS was finally abandoned, the Tell being now covered with corn. Though the city is not often mentioned in O.T., it was evidently an important place ; and the succession of the Amorite, Egyptian, Heb., and Gk. popula- tions is the same as found at Gath, Gezer, Taanach, and in other excavated sites, the Canaanite idols occurring in the lower strata only, before the time of the reforming kings of Judah — Hezekiah and Josiah. [c.r.c] Lacu'nus, one of the sons of Addi, who had married a foreign wife (iEsd.9.31). La'dan (iEsd.5.37)= Delaiah, 2. Laddep of Typus, The, the N. ex- tremity of the district over which Simon the Hasmonaean was made captain by Antiochus Theos (iMac.11.59 ; R-V. Tyre). The pass between Accho and Tyre with a road cut in the cliff. Now called Rds en NaqHrah (head- land of the excavation), 12 miles N. of Akka. [Phenice.] [c.r.c] Lael', father of Eliasaph, 2 (Num. 3. 24). La 'had, son of Jahath, a descendant of Judah (iChr.4.2). Laha'i-poi', The ^vell (A.V. Gen.24.62, 25. 11). [Beer-lahai-roi.] Lahmam', a town in the lowland district of Judah (Jos. 15. 40), mentioned with Lachish. Probably the ruined village el Lahm, 10 miles E. of Tell el Hesy, or Lachish. [c.r.c] Lahmi', the brother of Goliath the Gittite, slain by Elhanan the son of J air, according to iChr.20.5. But in the parallel (2Sam.2i.19) Lahmi proves to be the middle part of the word Beth-lehem-ite. [r.b.g.] La'ish, a native of Gallim ; and father of Phalti (iSam.25.44 ; 2Sam.3.i5). La'ish (or Leshem, Jos. 19. 47), the city which was taken by the Danites, and under its new name of Dan became famous as the northern limit of the nation, and as the de- pository first of the graven image of Micah (Judg.18.7,14,27,29), and subsequently of one of the calves of Jeroboam. Now Tell el Qddi, about 2 miles W. of Banias. It is probably called Luis in the list of Thothmes III. (No. 31) in i6th cent. B.C. In Is. 10. 30 the LXX. rendering is " the daughter of Gallim is heard in Laish." The Heb. probably means " listen as far as Laish to the misery (of) Anathoth." [c.r.c] Lakum' (R.V. Lakkuni), one of the places on the boundary of Naphtali (Jos. 19. 33), near Jabneel (Yemma) and the Jordan. The site is tmknown. [c.r.c] Lamb, (i) 'innnar is the Aram, equiva- lent of the Heb. kehhes. See below, No. 3 (Ezr. 6.9,17,7.17). (2) tdU (iSam.7.9 ; Is.65.25), a young sucking lamb ; originallythe young of any animal. (3) kehhes, kesebh, and the feminines kibhsd, or kabhsd, and kisbd, respectively de- note a male and female lamb from the first to the third year. The former perhaps more nearly coincides with the provincial term hog, or hog- get— i.e. a young ram before he is shorn. Young rams of this age formed an important part of almost every sacrifice. (4) kdr, a fat ram, or more probably "wether," as the word is gener- ally employed in opposition to 'ayil which strictly denotes a " ram " (Deut.32.i4 ; 2K.3. 4; Is. 34.6). The Tyrians obtained their supply from Arabia and Kedap (Ezk.37.?i) and the LAMENTATIONS OF JEREMIAH 457 pastures of Bashan were famous grazing- grounds (39.18). (5 )fdw, rendered "lamb" in Ex. 12. 21, is properly a collective term denoting a " flock " of small cattle, sheep, and goats, as distinct from the larger animals (Ec.2.7; Ezk.45. 15), while (6) s^ denotes the individuals of a flock, whether sheep or goats (Gen.22.7,8 ; Ex. 12.3,22.1, etc.). [Sheep.] For Paschal Lamb, see Passover. Lamb of God, a significant title applied by St. John Baptist to our Lord in Jn. 1.29,36. Abraham had foretold that God would Himself provide the lamb for sacrifice (Gen. 22.8). A lamb was both the daily bmrnt-offering in tab- ernacle and temple and the annual commem- orative sacrifice of Israel's deliverance in the Passover. Isaiah describes the suffering " servant of the Lord " and his atonement for Israel under the same figxnre (Is. 53; cf. iPe. 1.19). Thus the title implied the Passion of Christ, its patience, its vicarious character, and the age-long purpose of redemption which lay behind it. See also Rev. 5.6. Westcott, Gospel ace. to St. John (1881). [a.r.w.] La'mech. — 1. The fifth lineal descendant from Cain (Gen.4.18-24). He married Adah and Zillah, and was the father of J abal, J ubal, and TuBAL-CAiN. The remarkable utterance ascribed to Lamech, and preserved in poetical form in vv. 23,24, may be rendered : Adah and Zillah ! hear my voice, Ye wives of I,amech ! give ear unto my speech ; For I have slain a man for wounding me. And a young man for bruising me ; If Cain shall be avenged sevenfold. Truly I^amech seventy and sevenfold. Jerome relates as a tradition of his predecessors and of the Jews that Cain was accidentally slain by Lamech in the 7th generation from Adam. Luther considered the occasion of the poem to be the deliberate murder of Cain by Lamech. Most modern scholars regard it as Lamech's song of exultation on the invention of the sword byTubal-cain, which would enable him to defend himself and his family against all enemies, and render him independent of God's protection. — 2. The father of Noah (5.28,29). Fh.cb.] Lamentations of Jepemiah. The Heb. title is from the first word, " How," or " Alas how," LXX. " Lamentations." Tra- dition assigns them to Jeremiah. Budde would divide the book between two or three unknown authors, one c. 300 b.c. But his facts are weak. 2Chr.35.25 probably alludes to a lost poem : " And Jeremiah composed a lamentation over Josiah: and all the men singers and women singers recited it in their lamentations to this day ; and they appointed them for a custom in Israel : and behold them written amongst the lamentations." All that can be wrested from this is that Jeremiah wrote a " Kinah " {qind), that it was in current public use, and was found among the others. Chronicles gives us literary notices, certainly not invented, of one genealogical, and many biographical and historical works by prophets which survived the Captivity, but have not come down to us. To Jeremiah is only at- tributed prophecy and elegy. We shall not go far wrong, if we attribute to Lamentations re- miniscences of this youthful work — Jeremiah'§ 458 LAMP first great sorrow. That " the national guilt is not emphasized, and the priests and prophets are spoken of with grief " (not al- together true ; see, e.g., 2.14,4.13,5.16) arises from the subject, which is grief, not rebuke. That the principle of the Kinah is " de mortuis nil nisi bonum " is nobly shown in David's, in which nothing ill is said of Saul. That Jeremiah, being in prison, saw nothing of the sack of the city, is an absurd objection. A poet's imagination is not so restrained. We might as easily say that Byron could not have wTitten of Waterloo. That Jeremiah's later life was too troubled to give opportunity for poetry is not reasonable. History posits many a quiet day on the slopes of Mizpeh, when poetry may have been his solace. Changes of style and manner, nuances of varying senti- ment, are simply the characteristics of genuine poetry. A similar scepticism with regard to literary traditions would find many authors divergent in wording and opinion — e.g. Tennyson's " In Memoriam." Tradition (which, though not an absolute proof, is always of the first importance) is unanimous (Baba Bathra 146, Peshitta, Targum, LXX., explicit, and here specially valuable, Itala, Vulgate). Even Wildeboer finds in the book itself traces consonant with the old tradition {Literatur, p. 298). Though the Heb. text makes no ascription of authorship, Jeremiah's has been held by the older critics, including De Wctte (strongly § 274), Bleek, Payne Smith, and Davidson (very strongly, iii. 135) ; by Strack, Orelli, Cornill and other more modern writers many points of contact with Jeremiah are given. Lamentations stands next to Jeremiah in LXX. ; the book of Baruch alone intervening. — Contents. In 1,2 the sor- rows of Jerusalem are portrayed with exquisite feeling and beauty; in 3 the sorrows of the poet, with Jeremiah's special characteristic, probably derived from Job, e.g. a vivid pic- turing of Jehovah as his personal enemy and yet an absolute trust. There are poetic traces of Jeremiah's known experience — e.g. vv. 53-59. Ch. 4 returns to the griefs of his nation, 5 is a prayer of quite unapproachable pathos. The first four chapters are alphabetical, like some of the Psalms. All are very close, as Strack well observes, to the troubles of Jerusalem's destruction ; and delineate Jeremiah's own later experience — e.g. 5.8,9. The metre or form is that peculiar to the Kinah. It is fairly con- stant. The parallelism consists in a longer first half of the verse and a shorter second. The first seems to die away in the second with jilaintive cadence (Driver). It well con- veys the si^irit of the elegy, like the metre of " In Memoriam." — Commentaries. Payne Smith; Plumptre ; Budde in Marti; Ewald; Oettli in Strack-Zockler ; Tiicuius; Keil. K. Budde in Das Hebraische Klagleid (1882) jjointed out the metre ; called by Ley (before him ; see Grundziige, p. 52) " elegiac penta- meter," and towards which De Wette and Keil had been feeling their way. The metre is well shown in Kittel's Bible. [f.e.s.] Lamp, the rendering of two Heb. words — lappidh and ncr. The former only twice "lamp" in K.V. — Is.62.i ; Dan. 10.6 ; in five passages lamp in A.V. and torch in H.V- — tien. LAODICEA 15.17; Judg.7. 16,20; Job 41.io[ii]; Ezk.1.13. Both \'ersi(>ns have torch in Na.2.4[4] ; Zech. 12.6; liiihtnings. Ex. 20. 18; firebrands. Judg.15. 4,5. nt'Tis rendered lamp, candle, light in A.V., but uniformly lamp in R.V., except in Je.25. 10 and Zeph.l.i2 (candles), (i) The mov- able oil-vessels, probably having an aperture or spout for the wick, placed on each branch of the golden lamp-stands [Candlestick] in the tabernacle and temple (Ex. 25. 37. 39.37)- Made of gold in Solomon's temple (iK.7.49). Lamps were lighted in the evening and trimmed in the morning (Ex. 30. 7, 8). Jewish tradition says that the one on the central shaft, called the western lamp, was always alight (Lev. 24. 2) ; hence the custom of having a " perpetual light " in the s^magogue. Cf. Josephus, Cont. Ap. i. 22. According to Josephus (3 Ant. viii. 3), three lamps were always burning, the others only by night. In the shrine at Shiloh was a lamp, which apparently burned at night only, I Sam. 3. 3. No lamp-stand is mentioned. Pure olive oil was to be used (Ex. 27. 20). (ii) A reed-shaped earthenware vessel, with a re- ceptacle at the top, in which were burned rags dipped in oil, Mt.25.i. (iii) The Cairo police use a kind of torch which may illustrate Judg. 7.16,19. "It burns without a flame, except when waved through the air, which causes it at once to burst into a blaze. Its burning end is covered with a small earthen jar or ' pitcher,' and it thus answers the purpose of a dark lantern " (Van Lennep, Bible Lands, p. 480). (iv) Figurativelv, of prosperitv (2Sam.2i.17 ; I K. 11. 36; Job 18.6; Pr.24.20, etc.). Symbolic- ally, of the Spirit (Zech. 4 ; Rev.4.5). [h.h.] Lancet. [.Xems.] Landmarks. [Law in O.T. ; Field.] Lang-uag'e. [Tongues, Confusion of ; Hellenistic Greek ; Semitic Languages.] Lantern (Jn.18.3 only). According to Jewish authorities, the nLY]; 21.15-17, disposition of movables among sons of different wives [Family] ; 21. 18-21, rebellious son [Family, Crimes, etc.] ; 21.22f., hanging [Crimes, etc.] ; 22.1-12, miscellaneous provisions as to hu- manity to animals, construction of houses, sowing and dress ; 22. 13-21, husband impugning wife's prenuptial chastity; 22.22-3o[23.i], sundry sexual offences [Family, Marriage, Crimes] ; 23. 1-8(2-9], laws re- lating to conferring or withholding full Israelite status [Proselyte, Stranger, Foreigner] ; 28.9- i4[io-i5], camp laws [War] ; 23. I5f.[i6f.], runaway slaves [Slave] ; 23. 17(1 8], Israelites to refrain from certain immoral pursuits; 23. 18(19], 2i-23[22-24], Vows; 23. i9f.[2of.], prohibition of usury [Loan]; 23.24f.[25f.], permission to pluck neighbour's grapes or corn with Uie hand ; 24.1-4, law relating to divorcee [Marriage. Divorce] ; 24.5, exemption of newly married men from public duties ; 24.6, 10-13, Pledge ; 24.7, kidnapping [Crimes, etc.] ; 24.8f., Leprosy ; 24.i4f., hired Servant ; 24.i6, individual responsi- bility [supra, (7), (iv), (h)] ; 24.i7f., justice to stranger, fatherless, and widow; 24.19-22, gleaning [Poor]; 26.1-3, stripes not to exceed forty [Crimes, etc.] ; 26.4, ox not to be muzzled in threshing [Cattle] ; 26.5-10, Levirate Law [Crimes] ; 25.iif., indecent assault by woman [Crimes] ; 26.13-16, just Weights AND Measures; 26.17-19, "Remember Amalek " ; 26.I-II, Firstfruits; 26.12-15, Tithes. This is followed some chapters later by Deut. 31. 10-13, providing for the septennial reading of " this law " (i.e. Deuteronomy). (9) How far LAW IN O.T. new. The legislation is not a consolidating code. Some old rules are contained, but pro- bably only where some new application is given {e.g. certain branches of law to be ex- tended to strangers as well as Israelites (Lev. 24. 17-22), or some portion of an old rule is modi- fied. Proofs of this view : (i) Everywhere ex- isting practice is assumed — e.g. no rule is originally given for the most usual cases of assault, but only the somewhat exceptional instance of a pregnant female bystander being hurt, (ii) The decided cases are due to the ne- cessity of deciding some new or doubtful point- (iii) Much of the law deals with matters that could not have arisen in the earlier history — e.?. tenure of and succession to land, (iv) Some rules conflict with the previous customary law — e.g. in lieu of unlimited paternal power (c/. A, i, b, i, supra) we find cursing and smiting a parent, andrebelliousness, dealt with by courts (other in- stances in A, I, supra; Homicide ; Crimes), (v) A very large portion of the law is dependent on the creation of a priestly tribe with ceremonial, ritual, sacrificial, hygienic, and teaching func- tions, and of a tabernacle or house of God. (vi) The difficulty of definition where a mental ele- ment enters into the law {e.g. contrasts of mur- der and manslaughter, voluntary action and duress, Deut.22.26) testifies to the novelty of the conceptions. The human mind in such matters advances from concrete cases to gene- ral principles {cf. Dareste, Etudes, 22-24). (lo) How far original, (i) The jural laws. The Hammurabi question. In 1902 a copy of the code of Hammurabi [Amraphel] was discovered, and the question arises how far Heb. law was influenced by it. {a) Patriarchal age. In cer- tain departments the law contained in Genesis is fundamentally different from that of Ham- murabi, and springs from different ideas. " The wide paternal power, the law of Homicide, the absence of regular law courts, the primitive nature of the conveyance of the cave of Mach- pelah stand in the most marked contrast to the Babylonian system. Further, the later Israelitish law sometimes introduces a rule, substantially identical with a passage of Ham- murabi, in terms which make it plain tliat a new and difficult conception is being put for- ward— e.g. cf. Deut.22.25f. with Hammurabi, § 130. Indeed, generally, cases of similarity between the later Mosaic law and the code tend to show that these rules had not hitherto been practised in Israel. In the third place, there are some resemblances in the marriage customs, though even here Hammurabi some- times appears to be dealing with a different case {e.g. cf. § 144 [a votary's maid] with Gen. 16. iff., Sarah's maid ; SO.iff-.gff., Jacob's wives' maids). However, as the §§ following contrast with the law of Genesis, it may be that the com- mon law relating to ordinary wives, who were not votaries, was the same in both cases. But the custom here contemplated is by no means distinctive or uncommon (Post, Grtindriss, i. 143,144). so that not much can be inferred. The scanty information we have as to the law of theft and inheritance presents some resem- blances and some differences {e.g. Gen. 31. 32 perhaps resembles § 6, though not in the tri- bunal applying the law ; but the story of Ben- jamin is unlike Hammurabi's rules). Lastly, in LAW IN O.T. 465 maO}' cases, owing to silence on one side or the other, no comparison is possible. On the whol e, therefore, it is certain that the patriarchs did not live under the code of Hammurabi, though in some departments their "customary law was similar to Babylonian law. In such matters the rules are not sufficiently distinctive to war- rant any hypothesis of influence, but the possi- bility is not excluded. (6) The Mosaic age. Hammurabi deals with jural law only. He legislates for a society that is entirely different in historical, geographical, political, social, and economic conditions from the Israel of Moses. Hence the departments in which influence is possible are very narrow. Again, many matters that are common to both s^'stems are universal in societies in certain stages of development — e.g. O.A.THS of purgation, ordeals, etc On the form of the two legislations, see supra, 2, iv. Further, the main ideas and institutions of the two systems are fundamentally unlike — e.g. in Homicide, land laws [Jubilee], inheritance, slavery, the position of women [Marriage], offences against parents [Family ; Crimes, etc.] the rules and ideas differ toto caelo, and the ethical principles are of course different. In some subjects — e.g. talion, manifold restitution for theft, etc. — both legislations embody ideas that are universal ; but here Hammurabi often exhibitsvariations from the normal types, which types, on the other hand, are readily paralleled from the Mosaic legislation. This points to independent development, especially in view of the fact that the earlier law of theft appears to have been different (Gen. 44). A few minor Pentateuchal rules are practically iden- tical with those of Hammurabi; but they are not in the least distinctive. Many find paral- lels^U over the world — e.g. §i4resembles Ex.21. 16 ; but see Dillmann, ad loc, and Post, Gritnd- riss, ii. 355. In truth, the laws are often such that any able man, if confronted with the pro- blems they are designed to meet, must have invented substantially the same rules. One illustration must suffice. There is considerable resemblance between Ex. 22. 5 [4] (damage done by cattle) and Hammurabi, § 57 (damage done by sheep undercharge of a shepherd) ; but Gautama, xii. igff., resembles both laws more than they resemble each other. In all three cases the principle of the law is compensation, but different procedure is adopted in each to attain this end. There is thus no reason for supposing that the code influenced the Mosaic legislation. At most it can only have affected a few minor departments of the law. Deut.24. 16 is perhaps aimed at the form of talion that at present is evidenced by Hammurabi alone : though later ages interpreteci it otherwise (2K. 14.6). (ii) Sacrificial. Evidence is accumu- lating that some ideas and institutions, and a few terms of the sacrificial law, can be paralleled from Babylonian, Minean, and Phoenician sources — e.g. shewbread. See P. Haupt, "Babylonian Influence in the Levitical Ritual," J ournal of Biblical Literature, xix. (1900), 55-81, and the Marseilles Tariff (Renan, Corpus Inscript. Semit. i. 8 ; Rawlinson, Phoenicia, p. 387 ; a translation by S. R. Driver may be found in D. G. Hogarth's Authority and Archaeology, pp. 77 f.). Sacrifice was universal throughout the ancient world, and 30 466 LAW IN O.T. corresponded to sentiments that were enter- tained everj'where. Some of the resemblances so far noted — e.g. the physical perfection of priests — are apparently the outcome of ideas that were widely prevalent, and would natur- ally spring up independently. In others [e.g. philological resemblances) the origin of the people accounts for likenesses : but in yet others it may ultimately appear that the needs and ideas of the Hebrews led to the enactment of some institutions which differed from the jiractices of surrounding peoples in the funda- mentals of worship rather than in external details. The influence of Babylonian and other cults on some externals of worship may yet prove to have been considerable ; but in this department judgment must be reserved till the evidence is more nearly complete, (ii) How far unique. The special articles in this volume and their bibliographies attest the fact that there exist number- less parallels to almost every institution and idea contained in the law. Talion and blood- feud, sin and crime, clean and unclean, the priestly order, sacrifice and ritual, all may be paralleled from other races. Nor is it different if we turn to individual rules. With certain striking exceptions [e.g. the law as to stran- gers) it is possible to parallel most of the laws, even such a detail as the permission to pluck grapes, etc., Deut.23.24f.[25f.] ; cf. Post, Grundriss. ii. 426 ; Manu, viii. 341 (with characteristic differences), etc. Nor again is this the only legislation that claims a divine origin, or that seeks to regulate extra-jural matters. The Hindu law-books, for example, deal with faith, penances, purifications, dress, demeanour, etc., as well as jural law. Every ancient legislation is and must be the creation of its age ; and as the objects of legislators are everywhere similar, and laws are everywhere directed to moulding human conduct, it follows that every archaic legislation belongs to a family group, and differs from other systems be- longing to a similar stage of development only within certain more or less defined limits. Naturally, the law of Moses bears the impress of the history, the mind, and the character of the nation for which it was designed ; but so does every other known system, .^nd withal it is unique, (i) No other legislation is co-.nparable in literary form and beauty, (ii) While many of the rules can be paralleled, there is no parallel to such a collection of humane rules : hence the sf)irit and general effect of the whole are differ- ent from those of all other legislations, (iii) Perhaps no similar legislation has ever been so free from rules designed to benefit some privileged person or caste. Special consideration is shown only to the helpless. But the true differentia is in none of these things, though it embraces and accoimts for all. It lies in the attitude towards the divine. Everywhere the peculiar relation between the One (lod and the separa- ted people — with all it involved in duty to God and duty to man — is stamped on institutions designed for a race that in its general ideas and primitive civilization differed \ery little from many other races in similar stages of develop- ment. This law centres in and leads to God. Its ultimate problem is not legal or literary or economic or social : it is theological. (12) LAW IN O.*. How far practical. If the test be actual work- ing when put into operation, the innumerable parallels prove that most of the rules were es- sentially practical. Others again are known to have worked satisfactorily — e.g. the pilgrim- age law (see especially 1K.i2.26f.). But some of the rules are contrary to powerful human sentiments, and appear either not to have been executed at all or to have failed, or else to have been abrogated. Example : It is clear from Je.34 that the law for manumitting pur- chased Heb. slaves after six years' service was long a dead letter, and that even when it had for once been put into execution, it was again speedily nullified. There is in truth an ideal element in the Pentateuchal legislation : its provisions are sometimes in the nature of coun- sels of perfection. In estimating this, it must be remembered that the legislation sought to teach the people religious perfection, not merely to provide rules for settling inevitable disputes ; and even in the most unpractical institutions, the failure has not been absolute : they have all helped to mould countless lives. But the history of this law suggests yet another test, viz. adaptation to the national character. Here it stands unique. No other legislation has been guarded and practised so tenaciously in the face of every conceivable obstacle. None other has evoked so much loyalty and affection. — C. Post-Mosaic. The prophets are full of Israel's various backslidings. but we have ex- tremely little definite information on legal points. Judg.l.12-15, etc., present us with a form of marriage. [Family.] The levirate marriage and rights of pre-emption of land had clearly undergone some extension in the days of Ruth (4) ; which chapter also shows us that widows had some title to their deceased husbands' immovables in certain cases. Under the monarchy derelict land appears to have vested in the king (2Sam.9.9 ; 2K.8.3). Mort- gages were in use in Nehemiah's time (Ne.5.4f.). Jeremiah's conveyance (Je.32) witnesses a long legal evolution since the days of Moses, being in very modern form [Witness], and Zech.ll.12 was obviously written in a society that was economically and legally much more advanced than that to which the Mosaic ordin- ances respecting the hired Servant were given. The practice of selling or pledging children long continued. [Pook.] Jeroboam introduced a festival one month later than Tabernacles (1K.I6.10-16), at the time of his apostasy. Ahaz made changes in the national sacrifices (2K.i2.32f.). For other develop- ments see Temple, Priest, Levites, Judge, HoMicinE, Crimes, F'amily, Slave. The most important events in the later legal his- tory are tlie finding of the book of the law in the i8th year of king Josiah, and the subse- quent reformation (2K.22f., etc.), and the covenant to observe the law under Ezra and Nehemiah (Ne.9f.). [Pentateixii : Exodus; Leviticus; Numbers; Deuteronomy ; Isra- el ; Law in N.T.] K. Dareste, Etudes d'histoire du droit (1889), 18-51 ; H. M. Wiener, Studies in Biblical Law (1904) ; articles in Princeton Theol. Review, .^pril 1907, 188-209, Oct. 1907, 605-630, Bibliotheca Sacra, Jan. 1908, 97-131. The current commentaries, Bible Dictionaries, Archaeologies, etc., can only be LAW 0*" M6SES IN N.T. used with the utmost reserve for legal purposes. The writings of Sir H. S. Maine, A. H. Post's Grundriss der ethnologischen Jurisprudenz (2 vols. 1894, 1895) ; the volumes of the Zeitschrift fiir vergleichende Rechtswissenschaft, and other old law-books and codes (especially the legal volumes of the Sacred Books of the East), and other works on ancient law, together with the materials collected in J. G. Frazer's Golden Bough (2nd ed. 1900) and similar works, form the best aids for the study of O.T. law. The Babylonian and Minean material is conveni- ently given in A. Jeremias' Das alte Testament im Lichte des alten Orients (2nd ed. 1906). Translations of Hammurabi's code, e.g. Johns, The Oldest Code of Latvs ; R. F. Harper Code of H. ; Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), s.v. "Code of H.," etc. The legal work hitherto published on "it is superficial, and cannot be recom- mended. For the subsequent development of the Jewish Law, see the Jewish Encyc. s.v. (Funk & Wagnalls). [h.m.w.] Law^ of Moses in N.T. (i) Our Lord's Attitude. Our Lord assumed, or at least did not call in question, the Mosaic author- ship of the Pentateuch (Mt. 8. 4,19.8, etc.), and affirmed its divine authority, both as a whole and in its several parts. This is as evident in the Gentile and Pauline (Lu.l6.17) as in the Jewish gospel (Mt. 5. 17,18, 15. 6). He ob- served not only the moral, but the ceremonial law (Gal. 4.4 ; Lu. 2.2iff., 4.16,31, 5.14 ; Jn.S.i, 7.10 ; Mt.i7.24ff., 26. 18), severely condemned the " making void " of the least of the com- mandments (Mt. 5. 19, 15. 6), regarded the keep- ing of the law as the way (under the old covenant) of eternal life (Mt. 19.17 ; Lu.lO.28, 16. 29), and even acknowledged the official position of the scribes and Pharisees as inter- preters of the law (Mt.23.2). On the other hand, (a) He entirely rejected the mass of rabbinical tradition, which, professing to be a protecting " hedge " round the law, too often annulled it both in letter and in spirit (Mk.7. iff. = Mt.l5.iff., etc.). (b) Within the law. He distinguished between its weighty precepts (e.g. judgment and mercy and faith) and its less important ones (e.g. the tithing of mint and anise and cummin) (Mt.23.23 ; Lu.ll.42). (c) Some ordinances He regarded as concessions to human infirmity rather than as positively good. Thus He regarded the original ideal of marriage (Gen. 2. 23, 24) as of higher authority than the permission to repudiate a wife granted by Moses to his hard-hearted con- temporaries (Deut.24.i ; Mt.i9.3ff., 5. 31). (d) He considered the spiritual and moral ideals of the law to be its real essence. Hence Deut. 6.5 and Lev. 19. 18 were to Him the true text of the law, and all else commentary (Mt.22.35ff., cf. 7.12). (e) He gives the law the widest and most spiritual interpretation possible. E.g., He understands commandment v. to for- bid anger and hatred, and commandment vii. lust (ch. 5). (/) The ceremonial law is only ac- ceptable when observed in a spirit of love and charity (6.23) : it was made for man, and not man for it ; and works of piety and mercy take precedence of it (Mk.2.27, etc.). As Son of God, our Lord claimed authority to revise the law, even the decalogue spoken by God Himself (Mt.5.2iff., R.V.). Accordingly He LAYING ON OF HANlDS 46? definitely abrogated the lex talionis (5.38), and revoked the permission to hate one's enemy (6.43), and to swear by Jehovah (5.33). He clearly contemplated the ultimate abandonment of the Mosaic law by His Church. Thus He regarded His death as a new covenant, superseding the old one made by Moses (Mt.26.28), and said definitely, " The law and the prophets were until John ; from that time the Gospel of the kingdom of God is preached " (Lu.l6.i6, cf. Mt.ll.12,13). As to His abrogation of the ceremonial law we have the evidence of the comment of St. Mark (i.e. of St. Peter) on the discourse in Mk.7, " This He said, making all meats clean " (ver. 19, R.V.). The passages which seem to affirm the permanence of every jot and tittle of the Mosaic law (Mt.5.17-19 ; Lu.l6.17) refer to it, not in its imperfect O.T. form, but as revised and " fulfilled " by Christ. The " fulfilled " law is nothing but the Gospel. (2) Attitude of St. Paul. See Paul (Theology of). (3) Attitude of St. Peter. See Peter; Acts. (4) Attitude of St. James. See James, Ep. of. [c.h.] La\vyep (j/o/utK^s). See Scribe (B). Zenas " the lawyer" (Tit. 3. 13) was possibly not a scribe, but a legal advocate. [c.h.] Laying- on of iiands. (i) Among the Jews, the ceremony was used for very various purposes, (a) As a sign and means of per- sonal blessing, or appointment to a position or office. The object of Israel placing his hands on the heads of Manasseh and Ephraim before his death is explained in connexion with the blessing which he invokes from God on them (Gen. 48. 14-20) ; and though the Heb. words used are different from those usually found for the laying on of hands, it is obvious that the action was of the same character. The object of the lifting up of the hands of the high-priest in the high-priestly blessing (Lev. 9. 22) was the same ; and this may rightly be classed as parallel towards the congregation with the act of Israel towards individuals, although here the ceremonial action is different. The children of Israel laid their hands on the members of the tribe of Levi at the time of the dedication of that tribe in place of all the firstborn (Num. 8.10). Moses laid his hands on Joshua in appointing him to be his successor, and to communicate to him the spirit of wisdom which he himself had possessed (Num.27. 18, 23 ; Deut. 34.9). In all these cases there was the idea of bestowing divine blessing ; in the case of the tribe of Levi there was also the notion of substituting those on whom hands were laid, (b) As appointing to a place in sacrifice. Here also were the ideas of assign- ing to a work in the service of God, and of sub- stitution— that of substitution possibly being the link between the laying of hands on the Levites and this use of the ceremony. In- stances are : — the offering of the bullock and the rams at the consecration of Aaron and his sons (Ex. 29.10,15, 19 ; Lev.8.14,18,22) ; animals offered in sacrifices by individuals (e.g. Lev. 1.4) ; the goat for Azazel on the Day of Atonement (Lev.l6.21) ; and the sin-offer- ing to make atonement for all Israel at the passover of Hezekiah (2Chr.29.23). (c) The witnesses of blasphemy were directed to lay their hands on the head of the offender in Lev. •4fi« LAYING ON OF HANJDS 24.14 ; and the two elders laid their hands on [ the head of Susanna when they accused her before the people (Sus.34). Apparently the idea in this case was that of handing over the I offender for conviction and punishment. (2) Iti the Ministry of Christ. The use of the cere- mony by our Lord carried on the idea of bless- ing and gift. When He blessed little children, He laid His hands on them (Lu.18.15,16, where the laying on of hands is not explicitly men- tioned, but is apparently implied in the state- ment, " They brought unto Him also their babes, that lie should touch them," compared with Mt. 19.13, 15 and Mk. 10.13,16). In His work of healing He laid His hands on the sick or otherwise touched them (Mt. 9.18,25; Mk.5. 23,41, "Come and lay Thy hands on her," "He took the damsel by the hand" ; Mk.6.5 ; 7.32, 33, " They beseech Him to lay His hand upon him," " He put His fingers into his ears, and He spat, and touched his tongue " ; 8.23,25, " He took hold of the blind man by the hand," " And when He had spit on his eyes, and laid His hands ujion him," " .^gain He laid His hands upon his eyes " ; Lu. 4. 40, 13. 13 : cf. Mt. 8.3,15,9.29,20.34; Mk.l.41,7.33 ; Lu.5.13, 22.51). As the blessing of the Jewish con- gregation by means of the uplifted hands of the high-priest is compared above with the blessing of individuals by means of laying hands on their heads, so the blessing of the apostles by our Lord with (iplifted hands at the time of His ascension may be compared with His acts of blessing by means of touch (Lu.24.50). (T,) In the Apostolic Period. In the last 12 vv. of St. Mark's gospel our Lord is recorded to have said of Christians, " They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall re- cover " (Mk.16.i8). The laying of the hands of Ananias on Saul of Tarsus seems to have been a means of bodily recovery of sight parallel to that thus spoken of by our Lord rather than a means of spiritual gift, since in the ac- count it is closely connected with the reception of his sight, and was before his baptism. At the same time, it is in many cases difficult to draw a sharp line between acts for the body and acts for the soul, and the reference to being filled with the Holy C,host immediately follows that to the reception f)f sight. " The Lord . . . hath sent me, that thou mayest receive thy sight, and be filled with the Holy Ghost " (Ac.9.12,17). The ceremony was used by the apostles for a specifically spiritual purpose in the laying of hands on the baptized, accom- panied with prayer. The converts at Samaria had been baptized, but St. Philip was ap- parently without the (lower of administering the further rite now known as Confirmation (8.14-17). Similarly, at liphesus St. I'aul laid his hands on those who had by his in- structions been baptized ; and "the Holy (ihost came on them, and they spake with tongues, and prophesied" (19.0). [Baptism.] It is probai)ly this use of the ceremony as a means of administering confirmation that is referred to in Heb.6.2, where the teaching of laying on of hands is placed between the teachmg of baptisms and of resurrection of the dead. A further use was in connexion with ordination. The apostles laid their hantls on the " seven men of good repf)rt " (A(;.6.(>). When St. LAZARtJS Timothy was ordained, the presbyters and St. Paul laid their hands on him (iTim.4.14 ; 2 Tim. 1.6). St. Paul's command to St. Timothy, " Lay hands hastily on no man " (iTim.5.22), probably refers to ordination, though some have explained it of the reconciliation of penitents. The laying of hands on SS. Barna- bas and Paul at Antioch (.Xc.lS.s) may have been in coimexion with a formal appointment to the apostolate ; but is much more likely to have been simply an act of blessing on their special mission, since, while "Separate Me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them " (13.2) n\ight in itself refer either to the general work of the apostolate or to their immediate mission, it is distinctly said that at the end of their missionary journey they had " fulfilled " " the work " for which " they had been committed to the grace of God" (14.26, R.V.). In 14.23 x««/oo''"o>''>)roposed to the disc iples that they siiould take the journey into I Judaea again. V\iihing ; and so the solemn journey was undertaken. By the time of Christ's arrival, Lazarus had been in the grave four days; but a large number of Jews from the city was still with the sisters to comfort them in their mourn- ing. First Martha and then Mary slipped away to converse with their belated Friend, LEAD whilst He was still outside the village. The Jews too followed, weeping. At sight of so much sorrow, in which He too shared pro- foundly, the Saviour wept ; nevertheless He bade them take Him to the grave itself. On arrival there, in spite of Martha's scruples, the stone that closed the entrance was removed ; and Jesus, after giving thanks to the Father, with a loud voice commanded Lazarus to come forth, and the dead obeyed His voice, bound though he was hand and foot with grave- clothes. The effect of this wondrous act of power was to win or confirm the faith of many, but to repel others and increase their opposi- tion. These latter being mainly from among the leaders of the nation, the event contributed not inconsiderably, in the Divine providence, to the subsequent arrest and trial of our Lord (see Jn.ll.46ff.). St. John tells us that Lazarus was at Bethany during the last week of Christ's earthly life (12. i), and we hear of him no more (except in those legendary accounts, for which see Martha). As to the silence of the Synop- tists on this miracle, it should be remembered, inter alia, (i) that St. John's definite purpose was to supplement their narratives, which do record two other raisings from the dead, and (2) that quite possibly Lazarus himself imposed reticence till after his final decease on the wonder that had happened to him. [c.l.f.] Lead, a common metal, is found generally in veins of rocks, very rarely in a metallic state, and most commonly combined with sulphur. It was early known to the ancients, and the Hebrews evidently were well acquainted with its uses. Mines of it were worked in the Sinai district, and in Egypt. There were none in Palestine proper, but that lead was common there is shown by the expression in Ecclus.47.i8 (cf. I K. 10. 27). It was among the spoils of the Midianites brought by the children of Israel on their return from the slaughter of the tribe (Num. 31. 22). The ships of Tarshish supplied the market of Tyre with lead, as with other metals (Ezk.27.i2). Its heaviness, to which allusion is made in Ex.15. 10 and Ecclus.22.i4, caused it to be used for weights, which were either in the form of a round flat cake (Zech.5. 7), or a rough unfashioned lump or " stone " (ver. 8) ; stones having in ancient times served the same purpose {cf. Pr.l6.11). In modern metallurgy lead is used with tin in the composi- tion of solder. That the ancient Hebrews were acquainted with the use of this is evident from Is. 41.7. No hint is given as to the composition of their solder, but in all probability lead was one of the materials employed, its usage for such a purpose being of great antiquity. The ancient Egyptians used it for fastening stones together in the rough parts of a building, and it was found by Mr. Layard among the ruins at Nimrud. In Job 19. 24 the allusion is sup- posed to be to the practice of carving inscrip- tions upon stone, and pouring molten lead into (or perhaps painting with red lead ; see Writ- ing) the cavities of the letters, to render them legible, and at the same time preserve them from the action of the air. Lead is also em- ployed now for the purpose of purifying silver from other mineral products. The alloy is mixed with lead, exposed to fusion upon an earthen vessel, and submitted to a blast of air. LEAVEN 469 By this means the dross is consumed. This process is called the cupelling operation, with which the description in Ezk. 22. 18-22, in the opinion of Mr. Napier, accurately coincides. Leaf, Leaves. The word (sing, or pi.) oc- curs in A.V. in three different senses : (i) Leaf of a tree ('die, tereph, 'ophi). The olive-leaf is mentioned in Gen. 8. 11. Fig-l?aves formed the first covering of our parents in Eden. The barren fig-tree (Mt.2i.19 ; Mk.ll.13), on the road between Bethany and Jerusalem, " had on it nothing but leaves.'" [Fig.] The oak- leaf is mentioned in Is.l.30 and 6.13. The righteous are often compared to green leaves {e.g. Je.17.8). The ungodly are as " an oak whose leaf fadeth " (Is.l.30). In Ezk.47.i2, Rev. 22. 1,2, there is an allusion to some tree whose leaves were used by the Jews as a medicine or ointment. (2) Leaves of doors {feld'im, deleth). The first Heb. word, which occurs very many times, and which in iK.6.32 (marg.) and 34 is' translated " leaves " in A.V., signifies beams, ribs, sides, etc. In Ezk. 41. 24, deleth represents iDoth door and leaf. (3) Leaves {d'lthoth) of a book or roll (Je.36.23) only ; meaning columns. [Writing.] Leah (perhaps from Assyr. Wat, " mis- tress," or Arab, lawiya, "ugly"), the elder of Laban's daughters (Gen.29.i6). Not only was Rachel the younger and more beautiful of the two, but Leah seems also to have suffered from weak eyes (rakkdth). Having served seven years for the former, J acob received the elder sister in marriage, through fraud on the part of Laban, and, when at the end of a week he received Rachel also, he seems to have con- fined his affection to the latter. The his- torian regards Rachel's barrenness and Leah's fertility as a divine compensation for this state of affairs. By the elder sister J acob became the father of Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun, and Dinah. She was buried at Mach- pelah. The division of the tribes into two dis- tinct classes, arising from the double marriage of Jacob, was a constant traditional factor in the history of Israel. [b.f.s.] Leasing-, falsehood, Ps.4.2,5.6 ; elsewhere in A. v., almost uniformly, "lies" (Ps.40.4,etc.). Leather. [Handicrafts, (7).] Leather boot. [Arms.] Leaven {s^'or). The Heb. root means " to be agitated." The fermentation which sets in when flour, mixed with water, is left to stand, is due to the presence of the micro- scopic yeast plant, which has the property of growing in solutions of sugar or of gluten. The "bubbles" which result through the gluten being split up into alcohol and carbonic acid gas " lighten " the substance, which thus be- comes leaven. When a piece of this fer- mented dough is mixed with fresh flour and water, and baked, ordinary leavened bread results. The use of leaven was forbidden in every case in which bread was used in con- nexion with worship (Ex.23. 18 ; Lev. 2. 4, etc.), with the one exception of the case of the two loaves referred to in Lev.23.i7 ; but these were for the priests, and did not come upon the altar (see ver. 20). The shewbread was un- leavened {cf. Josephus, 3 Ant. iii. 6), as were also the Passover cakes. Originally, all cereal offerings, as well as bread for ordinary use, 470 LEBANA were unleavened. Later, leaven came into use for the purposes of every-day life ; but in all that concerned worship, the ancient custom was retained. In the figurative sense, there is no idea of corruption, the under- hung thought being that of permeating. It is therefore used in a good as well as in a bad sense — the former when leaven is likened to the kingdom of heaven (Mt.i3.33 ; Lu.l3.2i), the latter when used of the corrupt doctrine of the Pharisees (Mt.16.6), or of evil generally (iCor.5.6, etc.). [w.o.e.o.] Lebana' (Ne.7.48), Lebanah' (Ezr.2.45)- His descendants were Nethinim who returned from Babvlon with Zerubbabel. Lebanon' (= while), the high range run- ning N., parallel to the Mediterranean shores, and dividing Phenice from Coelosyria. It LEBANON Orontcs, the Anti- Lebanon presents a more barren appearance, with white chalk peaks, which die away on the N. near Emesa, the range being connected on the S. with Her- MON, by the high pass which divides the valley of the Litany frona that of the Jordan. The Anti-Lebanon is called in O.T. '" Lebanon to- wards the sun-rising " (Jos. 13. 5). Lebanon proper has several perennial streams, of which the most important are the Adonis River [Gebal], and the Dog River (Lycus) farther S. near Beirut. The upper slopes have, in places, a scrub of oak and mastic, while in the lower valleys the fig, mulberry, and olive are grown. The population (of Maronite Chris- tians) is dense in the mountain villages ; and numerous monasteries and chapels are perched on the W. spurs. The average elevation of VIUW OF LEBANON. attains a height of 10,000 ft. at Jebel Sannin, and is covered with snow on the upper ridges for the greater part of the year. It is bounded on the S. by the Litany River, flowing into the sea N. of Tyre ; and on the N. by the Eleu- TiiFRtrs, which springs from a basaltic basin dividing the Lf^banon from mount Bargylus — and this broad valley is the " entering in to Hamath " (Num. 34.8). The geological for- mation consists of sandstone, with hard lime- stone above ; the former being only visible on tlie lower slopes to W. These are open to the sea breeze, and are covered with vineyards and l)ines. The E. slope, shut out from the mois- ture of the W. breezes, is verv bare and rugged. The glory of Lebanon (Is.35.2), throughout history, has been its cedar forests ; and these remain, not only in the well-known group S.E. of Tripoli, but in many'other i^arts of the upper ridges rarch' \isitcd bv travellers. Parallel with tcbauon proper, E. of the valley^of the the crest is about 7,000 ft. above the Mediter- ranean, while the Anti-Lebanon averages only about 5,000 ft. The two Lebanons are no- ticed in 49 chapters of O.T., and in 30 of these in connexion with the Cedar. The passages referring to the Anti-Lebanon and to the valley of Lebanon are in Joshua (11. 17. 12.7. 13.5) and in the Song of Songs (7.4). where the " tower of Lebanim " overlooks Damascus. Lebanon was to be included in the land of Israel (Deut.l.7.3.23,11.24 ; Jos.l.4). but re- mained unconquercd (13.5) till the victory of David over Damascus. Solomon possessed towns in Lebanon (iK.9.io; 2Chr.8.6). It had an Amorite and Hivite population (Judg. 3.3), but Zerhariah includes it in the land of Israel (10. 10) after the Captivity. The "smell of Lebanon " was that of its cedars (Can.4.ii), and of its gardens of spire. Its streams (4.i5) and its snow (je.lS.i () .uc mentioned, as also it$ wine (Hos.14.7), which is still very heady, LEBAOTH The Babylonians, and the Ass jTians after 1400 B.C., raided the Lebanon [Amana], and took its cedars to roof their temples, as did Nebu- chadnezzar. These invaders followed the shore route [Phenice] at the foot of Lebanon, but Nebuchadnezzar has left inscriptions not only at the Dog River, but also at Wddy Brissa, on the E. side of the mountain W. of Riblah. [c.r.c] Lebaoth' (Jos. 15. 32). [Beth-lebaoth.] Lebbaeus. [Judas of James.] Lebonah', a place named in Judg.2t.19 only. It was N. of Shiloh. Now el Lubban, a village immediately W. of the " high way that goeth up from Bethel to Shechem," 3 miles N.W. of Seiliin. [c.r.c] Lecah', mentioned in the genealogies of Judah (iChr.4.2i only) as a descendant of Shelah. Perhaps it is a place-name. Leeks. The Heb. hdfir, translated leeks in Num. 11. 5, occurs twenty times in the Heb. text. It properly denotes grass, and is derived from a root signifying "to be green"; and may therefore stand here for any green food, lettuce, endive, etc., as Ludolf and Maillet have con- jectured. It would thus be equivalent to our use of the term " greens " ; yet as the hdcir here is mentioned with onions and garlick, the rendering of A.V., agreeing, as it does, with the most ancient versions, is probably correct. Another very ingenious interpretation, how- ever, ot hdcir, first proposed by Hengsten- berg, and accepted by Dr. Kitto (Pictor. Bible, Num. 11. 5), adopts a more literal translation; for, says Dr. Kitto, " it is mentioned by travel- lers [in Egypt] that the common people there eat with special relish a kind of grass similar to clover." This is the Trigonella foenum grae- cum, belonging to the natiural order Legumin- osae, a plant similar to clover, but with more pointed leaves (Mayer). The botanical name of the leek is Allium porrum, order Liliaceae. With regard to Egyptian leeks (Num. 11. 5), Pliny says : " The principale leekes be in Aegypt : the next are those of Ortia and Aricia " (xix. 6, Holland's trans.). Lees. The Heb. word {sh<'mdrim) is used only in plur. Its root means " to be dark," or " tawny-coloured." It was applied to " lees " from the custom of allowing the wine to stand on the lees, that its colour and body might be better preserved. Hence the expression " wine on the lees," as meaning a generous full- bodied liquor (Is. 25. 6). Before the wine was consumed, it was necessary to strain it, and such wine was then termed "well refined" (Is. 25. 6). To drink the lees, or " dregs," was an expression for the endurance of extreme punishment (Ps.75.8). Leg'ion, the great unit of a Roman army, nominally of 6,000 men — our " brigade." In N.T. only figuratively of vast and irresistible numbers (Mt. 26.53 ; Mk.5.9 ; Lu.8.30). [h.s.] Lehabim',son of Mizraim (Gen. 10. 13), the Lebu of the Egyptian inscriptions, the Libyans of classical geography. They were a fair- skinned people with light hair and blue eyes who inhabited the N. coast of Africa W. of Egypt. [LUBIM.] [a.h.s.] Le'hi (= jaw, Judg.15. 9,14,19). [Ramath- ^ehi.] Lemuer, the namf- of an unknown king LEOPARD 471 to whom his mother addressed the prudential maxims contained in Pr.3i.2-9. Rabbinical commentators identify Lemuel with Solomon ; most modern writers (see 30. i, R.V. marg.) regard him as " king of Massa," in Arabia, and refer to Gen. 25. 14. [Agur.] [h.c.b.] Lentiles (Heb. 'ddhdshim; Gen. 25. 34 ; 2Sam.l7.28,23.ii ; [and Ezk.4.9). There are three or four kinds of lentils grown in the S. of Europe, Asia, and N. Africa. The red len- til is still a favourite food in the E. It is a small kind, the seeds of which, after being de- corticated, are commonly sold in the bazaars of India. The modern Arab, name is identical with the Heb. It is known also in Egypt, Syria, etc., by the name 'Adas. Lentil bread is still eaten by the poor of Egypt. Pliny mentions pottage of lentils, as in Gen. 25. 34. He says, "They that have but weake and bad stomackes, use verely to put lentales to thicken their pottage and gruels, instead of barley groats, and find thereby much ease " (xxii. 25). Lentils were cultivated in very an- cient times, but their original home is unknown, as are also the meanings of the Gk. and Lat. names aKbs and lens. [Shammah, 3.] [h.c.h.j Leopard is the A.V. translation of the Heb ndrner, which occurs in Can. 4. 8; Is. 11. 6; Je 5.6,13.23 ; Dan.7.6 ; Ho.13.7 ; Hab.1.8. Leopard occurs also in Ecclus.28.23 and in Rev. 13. 2. That ndmer, which (like the Indian word chita) means spotted, is identical with the Arab, nimr (cheetah) can scarcely be doubted. The leopard is still to be met with in the Lebanoi, Gilead, and the Jordan Valley, and ranges from Africa through Asia Minor and Persia to India and Central Asia ; the Persian, and probably Syrian, race being a rather long-haired variety known as Felis pardus panthera. It is probable, however, that ndmer, like the Indian chita, includes the hunting-leopard {Cynaelurus jubatus), which is a distinct species, with nearly as wide a range as the leopard. It is still used i)y Arabs in Svria ^qy ,^a??)le-hunting, 472 LEPROSY Its black spots are solid, instead of forming rosettes, like those of the leopard. [r.l.] Lepposy {Elephantiasis graecorum, Lepra arabum). The Hcb. word fdra'ath, translated by the Cik. Xewpa and in A.V. by leprosy, refers in every instance, except where it is applied to garments and habitations, to one or other of the various types of the disease called in mediaeval and modern times leprosy. The erroneous use of the Latin lepra by some ancient writers, who included under that term not only the disease now known as true leprosy but also some other skin diseases having no relationship to true leprosy, has led to some confusion and miscon- ception. There is no attempt in Holy Scripture to give a minute or exhaustive description of the disease, but in Lev. 13, 14 there are set down for the guidance of the priests and the people a number of easily observed signs by which leprosy in its early stages can be distin- guished from other diseases more or less like it in appearance. The fact that there is no men- tion of the horrible and repugnant lesions com- monly associated with leprosy has led to the erroneous belief that the disease here spoken of as leprosy is not the same as is now known under that name. It must be remembered that the aim was to segregate the leper in the earliest stages, long before the grosser lesions had developed. There was then, and still is, some difficulty in diagn(jsing early leprosy, but scarcely any when the disease has become ad- vanced ; so that it was quite unnecessary to give signs by which the leper in an advanced stage of the disease could be recognized, and so throughout the Levitical description only the early signs are referred to, and these are placed in contrast with the signs of other diseases prevalent amongst the Israelites, but which, being of a non-contagious character, did not require the segregation or isolation of the victim. There is not yet unanimity of opinion as to how the disease is spread. In modern times this has been attributed to direct contact, inoculation, bad food, heredity, bad sanitation and hygienic surroundings, and to the action of such body-parasites as bugs, fleas, or lice carrying the germs of the dis- ease from the sick to the sound. Probably a combination of several of these may be necessary for an effective transmission of the disease. In this connexion it is interesting to note the lamentable state of misery to which the Israelites were reduced during their period of bondage to the Egyptians. This is fully portrayed in the early chapters of Exodus. So prolific had they been that in numbers they exceeded the Egyptians themselves (I.7-9). That they were badly fed and their habitati him t<} wife, and perform the duty of a husband's brother unto her." Under any other circurn- stances the marriage of a man with his brother's wife was strictly barred : " Thou shalt not uncover the nakedness of thy brother's wife : it is thv brother's nakedness" (Lev.l8.i6). The bar'is thus stated to be the natural bar of near affinity. A definite penalty is assigned or foretold in the event of disobedience — " they shall be childless " (20.21 ). It appears there- fore that the levirate law sanctions an excep- tion to a general rule which is regarded as based on the law of nature, and is ordinarily protected by penalty. It further appears that the custom was not' introduced by the legisla- tion of Deuteronomy. In the case of Tamar (Gen. 38), the wife of Er, the custom required Onan, as the next brother, to raise up seed to Er. This he declined to do, because he " knew that the seed should not be his." After the death of Onan, which is stated to have been the result of the divine displeasure, Judah told Tamar to remain a widow at her father's house till Shelah, his next son, should be grown. The narrative thus shows the levirate custom as in binding force before the Egyptian sojourn, and apparently as more binding at the earlier than at the later period. The law of Deuteronomy permits the brother or next-of- kin to decline the union in the presence of judges if he is prepared to go through the ordeal (i) of being spit upon, (2) of having his shoes loosed by the widow, and also (3) of being named in Israel the " unshod " (Deut. 25.5,10). Crave as the resulting disgrace would be, it was still not so grave but that a person who was strongly indisposed to effect the union would dare to encounter it. In the case of Tamar it does not appear that Onan had any right at all to decline the union, and it seems to be imi)lied that when Onan was dead, Judah was boimd to raise up seed to Er, if not bv Shelah, then in his own person. It appears then that the law of Deuteronomy modifies and relaxes an obligation which had been stricter at an earlier ])eriod. F"or the proper understanding of the levirate law it is necessary (o notice that the custoni has pre- L.EVITES, THE vailed widely outside the Hebrew limits. In the laws of Manu, the great legal code of ancient India, we find the custom at much the same stage as in the Pentateuch. The obliga- tion of taking the widow of a deceased brother is laid down ; but, as among the Hebrews, only where the deceased has left no son. The object is stated to be the raising up of issue to the deceased brother. The custom of the levirate is said to exist in the present day amongst the South African tribes, amongst the Arabians, amongst the Druzes. and amongst the tribes of the Caucasus. So widespread a custom points to some cause of general application. That cause may not necessarily be the raising up of issue to the deceased. Some writers find the origin of the custom in the practice of polyandry, once widely spread. In the more limited form of polyandry as practised, e.g., in Ladak, the brothers of a family have one wife among them. On the death of the eldest brother in Ladak, his property, authority, and widow devolve upon his next brother. Here there is not yet any purpose of raising issue to the deceased. Mr. Herbert Spencer, de- clining the polyandry theory, regarded the custom as a form of the inheritance of chattels. Whatever may have been the origin of the j custom, certain things are clear, (i) The i custom involves a union of near kin, which under other circumstances is regarded as in- herently sinful ; (2) it was not originated by the legislation of Deuteronomy, but was in force centuries before that legislation ; (3) it was not confined to the Hebrew people, but was practised in various other countries, often under circumstances pointing to great moral laxity ; (4) it was at no time permitted to the Hebrews, except for the continuance of fami- lies ; (5) its compulsory character is taken away by the code of Deuteronomy, which simply visits non-compliance with the penalty of a marked discredit. It is reasonable to infer that the levirate custom, like polygamy and divorce, was a custom not devoid of a sin- ful character, but suffered awhile in a fallen race for the hardness of men's hearts, and that the legislation of Deuteronomy was in the direction of restraint and not in that of en- couragement. [Familv ; CrOEL.] Redslob, Die Leviratechc bei den Hebrdern (1836) ; J. F. McLennan, Primitive Marriage, also art. "The Levirate and Polyandry " in Fortnightly Review, 1S77, p. 604 ; H. Spencer, Princi- ples of Sociolngv (1S85), §302 ; Watkins, Holy .Matrimony (1895). [o.d.w.] Levis', a corruption of " the Levite " (see Ezr.lO.15), given as a proper name iniEsd.9.14. Levltes, The, appear first as one of the twelve tribes, and then as a special priestly tribe in Israel ; and it is not very clear how the transi- tion from a merely tribal to an official status took place. It would appear from Cien.34 that, in conjunction with the kindred tribe or family of Simeon (for vv. 2 iff., 30, show that we have here to deal not with mere individuals), they committed an act of treachery and cruelty on the people of Shechem, in whicli the other tribes did not participate, but which they se- verely reprobated. In consequence of this they were so seriously diminished in numbers that they failed to obtain a territorial possession, LEVITES, THE like the other tribes, Simeon alone receiving a portion in the tribe of Judah, whUe Levi was dispersed throughout the land (Gen. 49. 5-7). At the early occupation of Canaan, neither Simeon nor Levi is mentioned among the fight- ing tribes in the song of Deborah (Judg.5), and we find the Levites already regarded as a priestly class (Judg.17,18) ; so that we natu- rally look to the time of the sojourn in Egypt (see iSam.2.27ff. ) or the wilderness period for the transition to this dignity. It is to be noted that Moses himself was of the tribe of Levi, and Aaron his brother is in Ex.4. 14 called " the Levite," showing the beginning of an official name. It is reasonable to suppose that in the struggle with Egypt which preceded the Exo- dus his own tribe would rally round the na- tional leader, and that in arranging for the worship of the people, Moses should select his own tribe for the performance of religious duties. On the occasion of the sin of the golden calf, when Moses said, " Who is on the Lord's side ? " we read that " all the sons of Levi gathered themselves together unto him. And he said unto them, . . . Put every man his sword upon his thigh and go to and fro from gate to gate throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man his com- panion, and every man his neighbour. And the sons of Levi did according to the word of Moses " (Ex. 32. 26-28). To this very probably reference is made in the blessing of Moses on the tribe " who said of his father and of his mother, I have not seen him, neither did he acknow- ledge his brethren nor knew he his own chil- dren " (Deut.33.9). The separation of Levi to be a priestly tribe is thus ascribed to Moses, and the duties of the tribe are briefly stated in the passage last quoted — to consult the Lord by Urim and Thummim, to teach the people the law, and to offer incense and burnt-offering on the Lord's altar. The picture which is pre- sented of the Levites immediately after the occupation of Canaan is characteristic of that rude and unsettled age. They seem to have no fixed territory (Judg.lT.g), though probably many of them were sojourners in Judah (17.7, 19.1). They are recognized as peculiarly qualified to take charge of a local sanctuary (17. 10-13, 18. 18-20) and to consult the deity by means of the lot (18. 5). Although, according to the old patriarchal practice, the head of a family or other layman might offer sacrifice as occasion required, where there was a sanctuary it was considered desirable to have a Levite for a priest (17. 13), and no doubt many of the Levites be- came priests of those places which the Israelites adopted on their possession of the land. Yet we are not to forget that at the sanctuary of Shiloh there was a hereditary priesthood and the observance of a formal ritual (iSam.l.3 etc.). Not, however, till the erection of the temple would there be full opportunity for the Levites to exercise their functions in an or- ganized and systematic manner. What these functions were we learn from the priestly legislation of the Pentateuch, in which their ideal position and appointment are described at length. In the view of the legislator the whole of Israel is a " kingdom of priests and an holy nation " (Ex. 19. 6), and every firstborn is claimed, by the Lord (13.2), Instead of the LEVITES, THE 475 firstborn, however, the tribe of Levi is accepted (Num.3. 12, 41), the whole tribe thus being priestly. Within the tribe, again, a distinction is drawn between the ordinary Levite and those of the family of Aaron, who are consti- tuted a hereditary priestly family to perform the specific priestly duties about the altar and theholyplace (Ex. 28. 1,30.7,8,20; Lev.l.5, etc., 24.8 ; Num.6.17,16.46). The ordinary Levites, on the other hand, are " given unto Aaron and to his sons " (Num.3.9), i-^- they serve as minis- ters to the priest, " to do the service of the tabernacle " (3.7,8.5-13), the service being divided among the three branches of the tribe, the Kohathites, the Gershonites, and the Merarites (4.4-16,22-28,29-33). They acted as guards of the sacred tent (1.51-53,18.22,23). They might not sacrifice nor burn incense nor see the " holy things " till they were covered (4.5,15,19). Their duties are somewhat gene- rally described as " keeping the charge " of the tabernacle and its vessels (I.53) or " doing work" about the tabernacle (3.7,8). To com- pensate for the want of territory the legislation allows the Levites a tithe (18.2i,24ff.), from which they give a tithe to the priests, and 48 cities with suburbs are assigned to them in various parts of the land (35.iff. ; Jos.21). To what extent an ideal like this was carried out on the occupation of Canaan is not made very clear. The situation depicted in the book of Judges, the long period that elapsed before the temple was erected, the schism of the tribes with all the irregularities that followed, would lead us to conclude that many things contem- plated by the legislator could not be carried out, or that they would be gradually carried out under modified conditions. Of the actual exercise by the Levites of the functions de- scribed, or functions corresponding to them in the service of the temple, the books of SaVnuel and Kings, which cover the period of the mon- archy, tell us nothing, for the Levites are only incidentally mentioned four times therein (iSam.6.15 ; 2Sam.i5.24 ; iK. 8. 4,12.31), and the first mention of them in the prophetical books occurs in Je.33.i7ff. We must not, however, from this silence, conclude that there was no priestly Levitical tribe, or that a dis- tinction did not exist between various parts of the tribe, for the priestly class is frequently mentioned, and a gradation in rank of some kind is taken for granted. There was already a hereditary priesthood in Shiloh (i Sam. 2. 11, 12) ; and at the temple the multifarious duties connected with the ritual demanded a large number of officials, among whom there must have been order and gradation, according to the services to be performed. Thus we read of a "headpriest" and a " second priest " (2K.25.i8; cf. Ezr.7.5; Je.29.25, 52.24); a "high priest" and "priests of the second order" (2K.I2.10, 22.4,8,23.4). There are also "keepers of the threshold " (E.V. door) mentioned along with these priests (12.9,25. 18 ; Je. 52.24). Though, therefore, the historical books specially so called do not draw a distinction between priests and Levites — for they had little occa- sion to enter into matters of ritual — they are not inconsistent with such a distinction, and leave room for supposing it to exist. Deutero- nomy, which contemplates the worship of a 476 LEVITES, THE central sanctuary, '" is far from giving a com- plete picture of the existing priestly relations or of those to be established" (Baudissin), and we cannot with certainty fill up the gaps left in its arrangements. It seems to make no dis- tinction between priests and Levites, in speak- ing constantly of "the priests the Levites," a natural enough expression in a code which is not a priests' handbook ; but though every priest is a Levite, it does not follow that every Levite is a priest. And it is not correct to say that Deuteronomy knows no priests but those officiating at the central sanctuary ; for it pro- vides (Deut.21.5) that priests are to take part in the atoning ceremony for a murder com- mitted in any of the cities of Israel, and the treatment of leprosy is put into their hands (24.8). So " a priest " or " the priest " is mentioned (10.6,17.12,26.3) in such a way as to imply special distinction. On the other hand, the Levite is repeatedly mentioned as an object of special charity (12. 12, 18, I*. 27, 29.16.11.14,26.11,12). And when it is or- dained that, if a Levite come from any part of the country and desire to take his share of the service of the sanctuary, he is to be treated like his brethren, this does not necessarily mean that every Levite is a priest ; it may simply mean that he is to take the status, whether of priest or Levite, that belongs .t(j him by birth. In the account of Josiah's reformation given in 2K. 22.23. there is no mention of Le\ites, though the idolatrous priests (k''marim, 23.5) an I. IZARD [Ptyoilaclytiis jr^t'to.) Palestine, and Arabia ; and it is highly prob- able that the Heb. word is employed in a wide and general sense rather than as denoting one particular species. [Tortoise ; Ferret.] [r.l.] Lo-ammi', i.e. " not my people," the name given by the prophet Hosea to his second son by Gomcr, the daughter of Diblaim (H0.I.9), to denote the rejection of the kingdom of Israel by Jehovah. Cf. ver. 10. [Ammi.] Loan, (i) Of something for use and return, e.g. an ox or plough ; (a) gratuitous, Roman cotnmodatum : the borrower had to make resti- tution for death or injury occurring in the owner's absence, but not in his presence (Ex. 22.i4f.[i3f.]) ; (b) for hire, Roman locatio con- duetto rei : here the risk was the owner's (Ex. 22.i5[i4]). (2) Of things for consumption, the borrower returning a like amount, e.g. money, food ; Roman nuttiiiiin : {a) interest was for- bidden in loans to Israelites, l)ut permitted in other cases (Ex.22.2.'i[24] ; Lev.25.3f)f. ; Deut. 23.i9f.[2of.]). The ])rohibition was frequently violated (Ne.5.7 ; I':zk.l8.i3 ; Pr.28.8, etc.). One per cent, (probably monthly) was some- times exacted (Ne.S.ii). Nehemiah procured the observance of the law (5.1-13). {b) There was to be a septennial release of money debts for Israelites (not foreigners). The duty of lending to the poor Israelite, even when this year was approaching, was earnestly enjoined (Deut.l5.i-ii). This release entirely extin- guished the debts, (c) A loan was frequently secured by I'LEDOE and Hand-clasp, [d) We meet with mortgage of immovables to secure loans (Ne.5.3f.) and (e) personal execution. [Poor, 4.] Parallels in Post, Grundriss, ii. 638 ff.; Driver, Deut. 266, 267. [ii.M.w.] In connexion with this subject cf. the wide application of the law of love given by Christ (Lu.6.34,35)- [H.H.] Lock, l-lastern locks are usually of wood, and consist of a ])artly hollow holt from 14 in. to 2 ft. long for external dotirs or gates, or from 7 to 9 in. for interior doors. The holt passes Ihroiigh a groove in a piece attached to the door into a socket in the door post. In the groove-piece are from 4 to 9 small iron LOCUST or wooden sliding-pins or wires, which drop into corresponding holes in the bolt, and fix it in its place. [Key.] The gates of Jeru- salem set up under Nehemiah's direction had both bolts and locks (Ne.3.3 ; ^A Judg.3.23, 25, Can. 5. 5, etc.). Locust. In the Bible there are frequent allusions to locusts ; and there are nine or ten Heb. words supposed to denote different species of the group, or different developmental stages of such species. In Lev. 11. 21, 22 we have the Heb. names of four different kinds of locusts and grasshoppers : " These may ye eat of every flying creeping thing that goeth upon all four, which have legs above their f(>et to leap withal upon the earth ; even those of them ye may eat, the 'arbc after his kind, and the sol'dm after his kind, and the hargol [wrongly translated beetle by A.V. (see below)] after his kind, and the hdghdbh after his kind." Besides these four names there occur five others — viz. gobh, gdzdm, Jidsil, ycleq, and r'idfdl, which have been regarded as rej^resenting as many species or developmental phases of these insects. (i) The word 'arbe, which is the most common name for locust, occurring about 20 times in the Heb. Bible, is derived from a root signify- ing " to be numerous," and is probably some- times used in a wide sense to express any of the larger devastating species. In almost every passage where the 'arb£ is mentioned reference is made to its terribly' destructive nil. .mii.;katokv Lucusr. powers. The A.V. has grasshopper in Judg.6.5, 7.12, Job 39.20, and Jc.46.23, in all the other places locust. Both the migratory locust (Pachytylus cinerascens) and the N. African locust (Acridium peregrinum) occur in Pales- tine, but the latter appears to be the locust IHIC N. AI-KICAN I.OCL'ST. of the Egyptian plagues. Of this species, M. Olivier (Voyage dans V Empire Othoman, ii. 424) writes as follows : " With the Inirning S. winds [of Syria] there come from the interior of Arabia and from the most satcr, ho is referred to by St. Paul as his "kinsman" {ffvYYt"^^)- ^'- ^'"i"' LUKE is writing from Corinth, and implies that Lucius was known to the Christians at Rome, whom he addresses. He is by some identified with Lucius of Cyrcne {q.v.). [j.a.n.] Lucius of Cypene is one of the " pro- phets and teachers " of the Church in Antioch, who laid their hands upon Barnabas and Saul and set them apart for the mission to the Gentiles (Ac. 13. 1-3). He comes third on the list, and is supposed to have been one of the prophets. [j.a.n.] Lud, the fourth name in the list of the children of Shem (Gen.lO.22 ; cf. iChr.l.17), generally identified with the Lydians ( Josephus, I Ant. vi. 4). Some scholars, however, hold the reading to be corrupt. [Ludim.] [a.h.s.] Ludim', included among the children of Mizraim (Gen.lO.13; iChr.l.ii). Lud and the Ludim are also mentioned in 3 passages of the prophets (Is.66.19 ; Je.46.9 ; Ezk.27.io). In the first of these the kingdom of Lydia is referred to ; in the second the reference seems to be to the Lydian mercenaries in the service of Psammetichus I. and his successors of the 26th Egyptian dynasty. It was by the help of the Lydian, Carian, and Ionian troops sent him by Gyges of Lydia that Psammetichus was enabled to drive the Assyrians out of Egypt and make it once more an independent kingdom. [Races.] [a.h.s.] Luhith', an " ascent," noticed with the " going down " of Horonaim (Is. 15. 5 ; Je.48. 5) ; possibly the slope now called Tal'at el Heiihah, with a path leading up on W. side of Nebo (Surv. E. Pal. p. 228). [c.r.c] Lulie. Aoi'kSs, or Lucas, is a Gk. pet name or diminutive for the Latin Lucanus. It suggests the probability that the evangel- ist's father was a Roman and his mother a Greek. He was not born a Jew, as in Col. 4.11,14 he is distinguished from " those of the circumcision." He is there called " the beloved physician " by St. Paul. That the writer of our third Gospel and Acts was really a physician, or at least one deeply interested in medicine, is absolutely proved. Both books abound in medical terms, and in descriptions of cures, accurate according to the standard of the 1st cent, of the Christian era. Not only docs the author use technical medical terms, as in describing the sleep of Eutychus (Ac. 20.9) and the viper at Mclita (28.3ff.), but he actually injects medical words into his description of undcrgirding the ship in 27.17- In the stories of miraculous cures which he borrows from St. Mark, St. Luke repeatedly gives St. Mark's phrases a more scientific medical turn [e.g. Lu. 4.35, 38,5. 12,8.27,44). And in 8.43 he simply leaves out St. Mark's rather sarcastic allusion to physicians. An ancient Latin biography says that St. Luke belonged to Antioch. Acts corroborates this. It is remarkable that in the choice of the Seven, the native place of one only is mentioned, Nicolas oi Antioch (6.5). Again, the history of St. Stei)hen leads to an account of the planting of the Ciuin h at Antioch, and the details of this are of fnst-rate value and interest (ll.igff.). Note, too, how the five projihets and teachers at Antioch arc mentioned in ch. 13, and the question as to circumcision comes to a head at 'Antioch (15.2). St. Luke's books show LUKE, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. that he is not a native of Palestine, of which he knows part of the coast, or Jerusalem. He knows Asia well. St. Luke met St. Paul at Troas in 50 a.d., during St. Paul's first mis- sionary journey (Ac.16.io, 17). He went with him to Philippi, where he remained after St. Paul had gone. About six years later they met again at Philippi and went together to Jeru- salem (20.5-21.18). He was with the apostle on his voyage to Rome, was shipwrecked with him at Malta (ch. 27). He was with him in Rome, and was his beloved friend (Col. 4. 14; Ph. 24). And as the great apostle waits for death he writes, " Only Luke is with me " {zTimA. 11). The Latin biography says that St. Luke died in Bithynia at the age of 74. This also is probable. It is plain that he was in possession of special knowledge obtained from St. Philip, with whom he stayed at Caesarea (Ac. 9. 30,21. 9). And it is probable that he visited St. Philip and his daughters after they had re- moved to Hierapolis in Asia Minor, where they were buried (Euseb. Hist. Eccl. iii. 31). From them he may have derived some of the facts peculiar to his gospel. [l-P-] Luke, Gospel ace. to St. We are left to gather the name of the author from tradition. The Muratorian Fragment, c. 180 a.d., and Irenaeus, c. 185 a.d. (Adv. Haer. iii. i), first call St. Luke the author. But the gospel is quoted earlier. Justin Martyr (c. 140 a.d.) records several facts found in this gospel only — e.g. the coming of the angel to the B.V. Mary, and the cry on the cross, " Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit." Celsus, a celebrated pagan philosopher (c. 180 a.d.), refers to the genealogy which says that Jesus was descended from the first man. The Letter of the churches of Lyons and Vienne (177 a.d.) quotes Lu. Marcion, a famous teacher who mixed a pagan Gnosticism with Christianity (144 a.d.), is an important witness. He held that St. Paul was the only apostle who was free from the taint of Judaism. The only gospel that Marcion kept was Lu., because he held that it agreed with St. Paul. The contents of Marcion's gospel can be largely discovered quoted in the book written against Marcion by Tertullian. They prove that Marcion used our present third gospel, simply cutting out what did not agree with his own debased doctrine. Thus he left out St. Luke's account of our Lord's birth and infanc}^, because he did not believe that His human nature was strictly real. Tertullian and his contemporary, Clement of Alexandria (c. 200 A.D.), definitely ascribe the gospel to Lu. The internal evidence of genuineness is of imique interest. It consists in the subtle and strong connexion between the gospel and Acts in style, in the dedication of the two books to Theophilus, and the reference in Ac. l.i to a " former treatise," which can only be the gospel. The two books fit together, both in spirit and form. It is well known that Acts contains certain passages, 97 verses, which are commonly called the " we sections," because the writer uses the first person plural, implying that he was personally present on the occasions described. It has long been debated whether the rest of the book is by the same writer, or by a later author who inserted these sections into a less trustworthy and much later book. The LUKE, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. 487 question may be regarded as no longer a ques- tion. Acts is a literary unity. There are about 67 words or phrases which are common to the " we sections " and the rest of Ac, while they are absent in all four gospels. There are also 44 words and phrases in the " we sections " which are also in the rest of Ac. and in Lu., but not in Mt., Mk., Jn. There are about 130 words or phrases in the 97 verses found in the rest of Ac, or Lu., or both, but not in Mt., Mk., Jn. These facts, which might be added to, lead irresistibly to the conclusion that the gospel and all Acts are by one writer, the author of the " we sections " — St. Luke, the companion of St. Paul. [Acts.] — The date is previous to that of Ac. It is later than Mk. Lu. and Ac. cannot confidently be dated after 70 a.d., and are probably earlier than St. Paul's death in 65 a.d. Few arguments can be found for a date later than 70 a.d., other than the some- what sceptical objection that the prophecies about the destruction of Jerusalem are too clear to have been written until the destruction had taken place, or the more sceptical objec- tion that the story of the risen Christ and the Ascension is necessarily a late legend. Ac, which is plainly later than Lu., contains no hint of St. Paul's death or of St. Peter's. It betrays no use of St. Paul's epp., which would be almost inconceivable if it were later than 70 a.d. The historian who in Ac.ll.28 speaks of the fulfil- ment of a Christian prophecy, never mentions the fulfilment of Christ's prophecies with re- gard to Jerusalem and the temple. The Jews are represented as in a privileged position in the empire, a position which they did not hold after c. 68 a.d. ; and our Lord is called " the Christ," or Messiah, the word having not yet become a proper name. The gospel is, there- fore, an early work, probably c. 63 a.d. — Style and Character. Lu. is the most literary of the gospels. The author's name and profession imply that he was a man of education and versed in Gk., the polite language of the Roman empire. His gospel corroborates this. We have already noted his repeated use of medical terms. The very opening verses of the gospel not only recall a " prologue " in Galen (Theriac. ad Pis. i. xiv. 210), but at once arrest attention by their classical character. In almost every narrative which Lu. has in common with Mt. and Mk., we find that there is a slight tendency to reject non- classical words and to write in a purer style. No less than 319 words are peculiar to him in N.T. The number of words which occur here and not in Mt. and Mk. is large ; St. Luke uses the optative mood, which is rare in N.T., and is fond of re and 5^ Kai. Though able to write pure Gk., he uses numerous Hebraisms. This is partly due to the fact that he was imbued with both the style and the vocabulary of the LXX. The Hebraisms cannot always be derived from the sources which he used, for they recur in the sentences which he has himself composed to link the narrative to- gether, but they are intentional. The effect is unique. It is archaic, hieratic, like that of early Gk. or mediaeval Italian sculpture. With a true Gk. sense of form, St. Luke, with- out artificiality or exaggeration, introduced a Heb. element into a gospel for the Gentiles. 488 LUKE, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. It is a prophecy of the catholic character of the Church ; and the Magnificat (Lu.l. 46-55), the Bcnedictus (1. 68-79), the Gloria in Hxcelsis (2.14) and the Nunc Diniittis (2.29- 32), have become for ever part of the praises offered by the Church to God. Sympathy is one of the great marks of St. Luke. As a friend of St. Paul, ho believes that the Gospel is free to all ; it is universal. As St. Paul be- lieved that even himself, the chief of sinners, and even the unclean heathens of Corinth, had been given the offer of a full salvation, so St. Luke has room for every outcast. He alone (3.6) quotes in full Is.52.i() — "all flesh shall see the salvation of God." Christ's first recorded teaching (Lu.4.24ff.) tells of the ad- mission of Gentiles to privileges at tiie hands of Elijah and Elisha. The exquisite narrative of the visit to Emmaus tells of forgiveness to be preached " to all nations " (24.47). It is in Lu. that we read of the jiublican who was justified (18. 1 3), of the good Samaritan who showed a pity which the Jewish priest and Levite withheld (10.3off.), of the prodigal welcomed home by his father (15. 11 ff.), of the woman in the city who had been a sinner (7. 36ff.), of the dying robber who appealed to our Lord on the cross (23.39ff.). Jesus, in this gospel, is especially the Refuge of sinners and the Consoler of the afflicted, the " Saviour " and Healer of the sick (4.4of.,6.i8f.,7.2i,13.32); Jesus is also the Father of the poor. The poverty of the holy family (2.7,16,24), the beatitude on the poor (6.20) with the corre- sponding woes pronounced on the rich (6.24ff.), the parable of Dives and Lazarus (16. 19), the invitation of tlic poor to the supper of tlie king, show tills sym]>atiiy. St. Luke lias been ac- cused f)f hfjlding the Ebionile heresy, held by some semi-Christian Jews in the 2nd cent, a.d., because he strongly condemns the rich. The accusation implies an anachronism. The Ebionites denied both the divinity and virgin birth of our Lord, and insisted on the necessity of circumcision. Such notions would have gained scant respect from St. Luke. There is also no reason for doubting that his severe words against the rich faithfully preserve our Lord's teaching. Christ's words were often incisive, and in outward form ]iaradoxical. His strongest words against wealth are in Mk.lO. 25, and are followed by symbolic words which suggest that His teaching is not always to be interpreted literally (10.29,30). It by no means follows from this that we interpret our Lord's severe sayings correctly when we explain them away. Women are represented in Lu. with a new dignity and grace. St. Luke was here relying on some special sources of great value. Here Mary is seen as " highly favoured," and her place in the i)lan of redemption is demon- strated. The feminine touch about the story of our Lord's infancy can most reasonably be traced to her or to some f)f the circle of holy women around her. St. Luke probably met tliein wlien staying in Jerusalem in 56 a.d. Note the prophetess Anna, tlie widow of Naiii and the woman who called Mary !)lcssed (Lu. 11.27). Martha, " ruiiibcrcd .ihout iiiucii serving " (10. 40), the widow witii tlie two mites I (21.2), the daughters of Jerusalem weeping on the way of the cross (23.28), Elisabeth re- | LUZ joicing both to bear a son in her old age and to be visited by the mother of her Lord, breathe with womanly life. Women of Galilee were by the cross (23.49), ^^^ women first tell of the Resurrection (24.io). St. Luke reminds us perpetually that the Gospel is " good tidings of gfeat joy " (2. 10), and tells of joy from the birth of the Baptist (I.14) to the bewildered joy of the apostles at the Resurrection (24.4 1), and of their return with great joy after the Ascension (24.52). There is the joy of the 70 disciples (10. 17), of the people over the works done by the Lord (13. 17), of Zacchaeus (19.6), and others. Lu. is the imperishable proof that Christianity did not destroy, but fulfilled, the joy of the Circck mind. The stress laid upon prayer is also remarkable. There are seven instances in which St. Luke alone tells us that Jesus prayed : at His baptism (3. 21) ; before His first encounter with the Pharisees (5. 16) ; before choosing the Twelve (6.12) ; before the first prediction of the Passion (9. 18) ; at His Transfiguration (9.29) ; before teaching the Lord's Prayer (11. i) ; and on the cross (23.34,46). Prayer is one of the truest marks of a real human nature, and in this gospel, where Jesus is so often represented as the divine " Lord," prayer is one of His great characteristics. The duty of prayer is in- culcated in two parables found in Lu. only (11.5-8,18.1-8). St. Luke alone tells us that Jesus said that He had made supplication for St. Peter, and records His charge to the Twelve, " Pray that ye enter not into tempta- tion " (22.32,40). St. Luke also manifests a deep interest in the work of the Holy Spirit. The whole incarnate life of Clirist is dominated by the Spirit. It not only begins with the direct action of the Spirit in Mary (I.35), but is accompanied by other manifestations, as in Elisabeth (I.42) and Simeon (2.25-27), and the birth of the Baptist (l.i5)- By the Spirit He was baptized (3.2 2), led to the wilderness (4.i), returned to Galilee (4.14). With the Spirit upon Him He began His preaching (4. 18), in the Spirit He rejoiced (10. 21). It is for the Holy Spirit that we should pray, for the Father will give Him to us (11. 13). At the end of the gospel the risen Saviour describes this gift of the Spirit as " the promise of My L'atlier," and as " power from on high " (24. 49). Perhaps it is the tenderness of St. Luke that causes his account of the Twelve to differ considerably from that of St. Mark. Their dulness and their weakness are set in a sub- dued light. He does not tell us that Clirist once called St. Peter " Satan," or that St. Peter cursed when he denied Christ. He omits the rebuke administered to the disciples in the conversation concerning the leaven (Mk.8.17), and the ambitious request of the two sons of Zebedee. And when he speaks of the slumber of the apostles in Gethscmanc, he says that liicy were " sleeping for sorrow " (22.45). The gospel of the physician is a gos|i(l (if pity as of poetry. [l.p.] Lunatics. [Madnkss.] Luz ( almond). — 1. 'I'lii; old name of llic town afterwards ealleil Hi rnia, ((;cii.28.i<),35. (-.48.3; Jos.l6.2,18.i3 : Judg.l.23). lying W. of Abraham's altar at Betlicl. — 2. A town in the "land of the Hittites " (Judg.l.2(^), LYCAONIA named after the preceding. The situation is uncertain. It may be the ruin Lmveiziyeh, about 4 miles W. of Banias, at the sources of Jordan ; since the land of the Hittites, in early times, extended far S. in Syria. [c.r.c] Lycao'nia (Ac.l4.6,ii), the bare plateau W. of Cappadocia, with salt lakes — a region mainly pastoral. The " speech of Lycaonia " may have been a Semitic dialect, since a Semitic clement existed, from very early times, in S.E. part of Asia Minor, and since Paul and Barnabas seem to have been able to make themselves understood (vv. io,i8). There were Pers., Gk., and perhaps even Hittite, ele- ments in the population, as well as Jews and Phoenicians. The gods adored (ver. 12) are given Gk. names ; but it is possible that the rude peasantry who desired to sacrifice to the apostles, after Paul had healed the cripple, thought that Barnabas was a " son of Nebo," and Paul himself an incarnation of Btil — a Semitic deity whose name occurs in Palmyrene texts. If so, the population would have been Semitic. [c.r.c] Lyeia is the S.W. region of the peninsula of Asia Minor opposite the island of Rhodes (Ac. 27. 5). It is a remarkable district, both physically and historically. The range of Taurus here descends in majestic masses to the sea, forming the heights of Cragus and Anticragus, with the river Xanthus winding between them, and ending in the series of promontories called by modern sailors the " seven capes," among which arc deep inlets favoiurable to seafaring and piracy. The Lycians were incorporated in the Persian empire, and their ships were conspicuous in the great war against the Greeks (Herod, vii. 92). After the death of Alexander the Great, Lycia was included in the Gk. Sclcucid kingdom, and was a part of the territory which the Romans forced Antiochus to cede. It was not till the reign of Claudius that Lycia became part of the Roman pro- vincial system. At first it was combined with Pamphylia. At a later period of the Roman empire it was a separate province, with Myra for its capital. [The language of the Lycian inscriptions of the 5th cent. B.C. at Xanthus, etc. ,isadialectakin to ancient Persian. Some texts are in Lycian and Gk. c.r.c] Lyd'da, the Gk. form of the Heb. Lod, near Joppa (Ac. 9. 32, 35, 38). Now the town Lndd at the foot of the hills io| miles S.E. of Joppa. Lydda, with Gophna, Emmaus, and Thamna, became the prey of the insatiable Cassius (c. 45 B.C.). It was burnt by Cestius Gallus (66 A.D.) on his way from Caesarea to Jerusalem. In 68 a.d. it was again taken by Vespasian. In the time of Hadrian it received the name of Diospolis. When Eusebius wrote (320-330 A.D.), Diospolis was a well-known and much-frequented town. In Jerome's time (404 A.D.) it was an episcopal sec. The town has now a population of about 7,000. It includes the ruins of the churches of St. George and St. James, built about 1150 a.d. ; to the former a minaret was added before 1495 a.d. (Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 252, 267, 268). [c.r.c] Lyd'ia, the iirst European convert of St. Paul, and afterwards his hostess during his first stay at Philippi (Ac.l6. 14,15, also 40). liYSIAS 489 She was a Jewish proselyte, and at the Jewish sabbath-worship by the side of a stream (ver. 13) the preaching of the Gospel reached her heart. Her native place was Thyatira (ver. 14 ; Rev. 2. 1 8), a city famous for dyeing, and Lydia was connected with this trade. She was probably a person of position and wealth. Lyd'ia, a maritime province in the W. of Asia Minor, bounded by Mysia on the N., Phrygia on the E., and Caria on the S. The name occurs only in iMac.8.8 (the rendering of A.V. in Ezk.30.5 being for Ludira) ; it is there enumerated among the districts which the Romans took awa^' from Antiochus the Great after the battle of Magnesia in 190 b.c, and transferred to Eumenes II., king of Per- gamus. For the connexion between Lydia and the Lud and Ludim of O.T., see Ludim. Lydia is included in the " Asia " of N.T. Lysanias, mentioned in Lu.3.i only, where he is said to have been tetrarch of Abilene (in Syria) in the fifteenth year of Tiberius, i.e. (probably) 29 a.d. Josephus (15 Ant. iv. r, i Wars xxii. 3) speaks of a prince named Lysanias, son of Ptolemy, who ruled over a territory in the neighbourhood of Lebanon in the time of Antony and Cleopatra, and was killed by Antony at the instigation of Cleo- patra in 36 B.C., or more than sixty years before the Lysanias mentioned by St. Luke. Several scholars have identified the Lysanias of St. Luke with Lysanias the son of Ptolemy, thus attributing to St. Luke the gross blunder of supposing that the latter was still reigning sixty years after his death. But it may be urged that (i) St. Luke (loc. cit.) is engaged in elaborately fixing the date of a great event — viz. the beginning of the Baptist's ministry. It seems rash to assume that so careful an historian has, while thus engaged, committed an error involving some sixty years. (2) Ly- sanias son of Ptolemy is styled king (by Dio Cassius). The Lysanias of St. Luke is merely tetrarch. (3) An inscription (Corp. Inscrip. Grec. 4523), restored with probability by Re- nan, shows that Lysanias son of Ptolemy left children bearing his own name. (4) In 37 a.d. (Josephus, 2 Wars xi. 5) the emperor Claudius bestowed on Agrippa a kingdom called that of Lysanias (" Abila of Lysanias " in 19 Ant. V. i), and in 20 Ant. vii. i mention is made of a tctrarchy of Lysanias; see also Corp. Inscrip. Grec. 4521. As Lysanias son of Ptolemy reigned for only five or six years, it seems probable that these expressions point to a ruler named Lysanias less distant from the time of Claudius than the earlier Lysanias. Hence we identify the tetrarch Lysanias of St. Luke with this later Lysanias. Plummer on Lu.3.i (Internat. Crit. Comm.) ; C. H. Prichard in Hastings, D.B. iii. 178 ; P. W. Schmiedel in Encycl. Bib. iii. 2840. [j.a.n.] Lysias, a nobleman of the blood-royal (iMac.3.32 ; 2Mac.ll.i), who was entrusted by Antiochus Epiphancs (c. 166 b.c) with the government of southern Syria, and the guar- dianship of his son Antiochus Eupator (iMac. 3.32 ; 2Mac.lO.r1). As governor, Lysias armed a very considerable force against Judas Maccabaeus. Two detachments of this army under Nicanor (2Mac.8) and Gorgias were de- feated by the Jews at Emmaus {iMac.4) ; and 490 liYSIAS, CLAUDIUS in the following year Lysias himself met with a serious reverse at Beth-sura (165 b.c.)- After the death of Antiochus Epiphanes (164 b.c), Lysias assumed the government as guardian of his son, who was yet a child (iMac.6.17). The war against the Jews was renewed ; and Lysias was besieging Jerusalem when he received tidings of the approach of Philip, to whom Antiochus had transferred the guardiansliip of the prince. He defeated Philip (163 b.c), and was supported at Ixomc ; but in the next year, together with his ward, fell into the hands of Demetrius Sotcr, who put them both to death (iMac.7.2-4 ; 2Mac.l4.2). [Antiochus V.]. Ly'sias, Clau'dius, " chief captain of the band," i.e. tribune of the Roman cohort, who rescued St. Paul from the infuriated mob at Jerusalem (Ac. 23. 26,24.7). Lysim'achus. — 1. " A son of Ptolemaeus of Jerusalem," named, in the I^XX. subscrip- tion to Esther, as the Gk. translator of the book. — 2. A brother of the high-priest Menc- laus, who left him as his deputy during his absence at the court of Antiochus. He fell a victim to the fury of the people, c. 170 b.c. (2Mac. 4.29-42). Lys'tpa has two points of extreme interest in connexion respectively with St. Paul's ist and 2nd missionary journeys — (i) as the place where divine honours were offered to him, and where he was presently stoned (Ac. 14) ; (2) as the home of his chosen companion and fellow- missionary TiMOTHEUS (Ac.16.1). The first settlement of Jews in Lystra, including possibly ancestors of Timotheus, may perhaps be traced to the establishment of Babylonian Jews in Phrygia by Antiochus 3 centuries before. Still it is evident that there was no influential Jewish population at Lystra : no naention is made of any synagogue ; and the scene de- scribed by St. Luke (Ac.l4) is thoroughly heathen. Lystra was undoubtedly in the E. of the great plain of Lycaonia ; and there are very strong reasons for identifying its site with the ruins called Bin-bir-Kilissch, at the baseof a conical volcanic mountain, named the Qara Ddgh. Pliny places this town in Galatia, and Ptolemy in Isauria ; but these state- ments are quite consistent with its being placed in Lycaonia by St. Luke, as it is by Hierocles. M Maacah'. — 1. (2Sam.3.3) — Maachah, 5.— 2. A region near Geshur (Deut.3.14) and Bashan (Jos. 12. 5). The king of Maacah assisted the Bcne-Ammon against Joab (2Sam. 10.6,8 ; iCh.19.7, R.V.). The name of Abel Beth-maachah (Ahil Qiimh), in the N.E. corner of the land of Israel, indicates that the small kingdom oi Maachah lay near Bdnids and the Jedt'ir district. [c.r.c] Ma'achah (Maacah, R.V.).— 1. Son (or daughter) of Nalu)r by his concubine Kcumali ((;on.22.24).— 2. '|Mao( 11. 1— 3. Tlio (laughter, or nion; jirobably graiidd.mghtcr, of AI)saloni (Abishalom ini K. 15. 2), named after his mother ; favourite wife of Relmboam and mot her of Abijah(2Clir.l 1.20-22). In2Sam.l4. MAASEIAH 27 Absalom's daughter is called Tamar, and she became, according to the LXX. and Josephus (7 Ant. X. 3), the wife of Rehoboam. But the mother of .\bijah is elsewhere called " Michaiah, the daughter of Uriel of Gibeah " (2Chr.l3.2). It is more probable that " Michaiah " is the error of a transcriber, and that " Maachah " may be the true reading in all cases. During the reign of her grandson Asa she occupied at the court of Jutlah the high i)(isition of " king's mother " (c/. 1K.2.19), which has been compared with that of the Sultana Valide in Turkey. It may be that at Abijah's death, after a short reign of three years, Asa was left a minor, and Maachah acted as regent. If this conjecture be correct, it would serve to explain the influence by which she promoted the prac- tice of idolatrous worship (1K.I5.13 ; 2Chr.l5. 16).— 4. The concubine of Caleb the son of Hezron (iChr.2.48). — 5. The daughter of Tal- mai king of Geshur, and mother of Absalom (3. 2) ; also called Maacah in A.V. of 2Sam.3.3. — 6. The wife of Machir the Manassite (iChr.7. 15,16). — 7- The wife of J ehicl, father or founder of Gibeon (8.29,9.35 ). — 8. The father of Hanan, one of the heroes of David's body-guard (11. 43). — 9. A Simeonite, father of Shephatiah, prince of his tribe in the reign of David (27. 16). — 10. (19.7) = Maacah, 2. Maachathi', or Maachathites, The, the inhabitants of the small kingdom of Maachah (Deut.3.14; Jos.12.5,13.11,13). In- dividual Maachathites were among the warriors of Israel (2Sam.23. 34 ; 2K.25.23 ; Je.40.8). Maadai', one of the sons of Bani who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.lO.34). Maadiah', one of the priests, or families of priests, who returned with Zerubbabel (Ne. 12.5) ; called Moadiah in ver. 17. Maai', a musician of the Bene-Asaph who took part in the dedication of the wall of Jeru- salem after its rebuilding (Ne.i2.36). Maaleh'-acpabbim' (J0S.I5.3), else- where in A.V., as here in R.V., rendered " the ascent of, or the going up to, Akrabbim." Ma'ani (iEsd.9.34 ; cf. Ezr.l0.34)=BANi, 4. Maarath', one of the towns of Judah, in the Hebron moimtains (Jos. 15. 59). Probably the present village Beit Ummdr, 6 miles N. of Hebron. [c.r.c] Maaseiah'. — 1. A descendant of Jeshua the priest (Ezr.10.i8). — 2. Apriest, of thesons of Harim (10. 21). — 3. A priest, of the sons of Pashur (10. 22). — 4. A layman, of the sons of Pahath-moab(10.3o). All the four preceding had married foreign wives. — 5. Father of Azariah, i9(Ne.3.23). — 6. Oneof those who stood on the right hand of Ezra when he read the law to the people (Ne.8.4). — 7. A Lcvite who assisted on the same occasion (;7).). — 8. -A. chief layman who. or whose dcscciulants, signed the covenant with Nohemiah(10.25).— 9. (11.5.)[.Asaiah,3.1— 10. A Benjamite, ancestor of Sallu (11.7)- — 11- Two priests of this name are mentioned(12.4i,42) as taking part in the musical service at the dedica- tion of the rebuilt wall of Jerusalem. One of thorn is probably the same as 6.— 12. A priest in the reign of /cdekiah ; father of /ki'iianiau, 3 (Ie.21.i,29.2S,37.^).— 13. Father of Zcdc- kiah the false prophet (J (■.29.2 1). — 14. One of the Levites of the second rank, ajipointcd by David to sound " with psalteries on Alamoth " MAASIAI (iChr.15. 18,20). — 15. Sonof Adaiah, 5,and one of the captains of hundreds who assisted Je- hoiada in placing J cash upon the throne of Ju- dah (2Chr.23.i). — 16. An officer of high rank {shofer) in the reign of Uzziah (2Chr.26.11). He was probably a Levite (c/. iChr.23.4), and en- gaged in a semi-military capacity. — 17- The "king's son" (perhaps viceroy; cf. iK.22.26 ; 2Chr.l8.25 ; and Malchiah, 8) killed by Zichri the Ephrairaite hero in the invasion of J udah by Pekah, king of Israel, during the reign of Ahaz (2Chr.28.7). — 18. The governor of Jerusalem appointed by Josiah as one of the superintend- ents of the temple-repairs (2Chr.24.8). — 19. The son of Shallum, 8 ; a Levite of high rank in the reign of Jehoiakim (Je.35.4 ; cf. iChr.9.19). — 20. A priest; ancestor of Baruch and Seraiah, the sons of Neriah (Je.32.i2,51.59). Maasiai', a priest who after the return from Babylon dwelt in Jerusalem (iChr. 9. 12). Maasias (Ba.l.i) = Maaseiah, 20. Ma'ath, son of Mattathias in the genealogy of Jesus Christ (Lu.3.26). Maaz', son of Ram in the genealogy of Caleb (iChr.2.27). Maaziah', a priest in the reign of David, head of the 24th course (iChr.24.i8). The name in Ne.10.8, given as that of one who signed the covenant, is probably that of this family, rather than of an individual. Mabdai' = Benaiah, 8, of the sons of Bani = Maani (iEsd.9.34 ; cf. Ezr. 10. 34,35). Mac'alon (iEsd.5.2i), apparently an error for MiCHMASH. Maccabees, The. I. The name Macca- bee {MaKKajSaTos, ''33D or ^3pD) is primarily the distinctive designation of the third son of Mattathias, though afterwards extended first to the rest of his family, and then to the whole body of his adherents, who maintained their heroic struggle against Syria during the latter half of the 2nd cent. B.C. The title has been variously explained as meaning " ham- merer," " extinguisher " (sc. of his enemies), or as being formed from the initial letters of the sentence '"•D''^X3 n3iD3 ''O ("Who is like un- to Thee, among the gods, O Jehovah ? "), a de- vice supposed to have been borne upon their banners. Mattathias was the grandson of one Hashmon, and hence the more accurate family name is Hashmonean or Asmonean (Hasmo- naean) ; moreover, it is possible that the " sur- names " Gaddi, Thassi, etc., were the original names of the five sons of Mattathias, and that John, Simon, Judas, Eleazar, and Jonathan were added when they became princes or leaders of the Jewish people. — II. The events which culminated in the Maccabaean revolt may be briefly summarized as follows : At Banias in 198 Antiochus the Great succeeded in accomplishing what had longbeen a cherished desire of the Seleucidae — i.e. in wresting Pales- tine from the power of the Ptolemies. After an uneventful reign, his successor, Seleucus IV., was followed in 175 by Antiochus Epiphanes (iMac.l.io ff.), a man whose curious character offers an interesting field for study. Brought up at Rome, he freely imbibed the fashionable Hellenism of the day, and developed a super- ficial taste for Gk. culture and religion, so that by the time of his return to Antioch he MACCABEES, THE 491 had conceived the idea of enforcing throughout his dominions a uniformity of manners, cus- toms, and religion upon a Hellenistic basis, and this purpose he forthwith proceeded to put in- to execution, by such methods as amply justi- fied his receiving the title " Epimanes " as a parody on Epiphanes. Unfortunately, there were renegade Jews willing to abet him. The high- priesthood was sold to Jason, an unscrupulous individual who purchased it by compliance with the Hellenizing policy of the king, and the promise of a large tribute ; but when Menelaus offered Epiphanes the adherence of an even more enthusiastic Hellenism and the payment of a still higher tribute, Jason was promptly ejected to make room for this enterprising per- son, who, like his predecessor, had unfortunately no small following of sympathizers among the Jews themselves (2Mac.4.7-5o). In 170, during one of Antiochus' campaigns in Egypt (iMac.l. 16-28), a rumour spread abroad that the king was dead, which not only led to Jason making an assault upon the citadel of Jerusa- lem, but by the time it reached the king's ears was coupled with a report that the Jews were rejoicing because of it. Antiochus returned to Jerusalem, gave his soldiers a free hand to massacre and pillage in the city, and plundered the temple, polluting the holy place by offering swine upon the altar. Again in 168, his Egyp- tian campaigns being brought to an abrupt and undignified conclusion by the intervention of Rome, Epiphanes turned and vented his spleen upon the hapless Jews. This time he was determined absolutely to eradicate Jewish customs and religion with the Mosaic law, or exterminate the race itself. The streets of Jeru« salem ran with blood, and all kinds of barbar- ous punishments and tortures were inflicted upon men and women to induce them to pro- fane the sabbath, to eat swine's flesh, aban- don circumcision, or deliver up copies of the law to be burnt or defaced with pagan pictures. The climax was reached at last when, on De- cember 25, 168, Jehovah was identified with Zeus Olympios, and a heathen altar superim- posed upon the great altar of burnt -offering — " the .abomination of desolation " of Dan. 11. 31 (DJDCJ* )^-"lpK*, ? intentional disfigurement of WW '7V2, Nestle; iMac.l. 29-64). At length passive endurance gave way to active resistance. At the little town of Modin an aged priest named Mattathais, when called upon to offer sacrifice to the pagan deities, refused to do so, slew another Jew who was about to comply, struck down the Syrian officer, levelled the altar with the ground, and fled with his five sons to the mountains (iMac. 2). Here he was joined by the hasidhtm (D''']''pn), "the pious," those who till now had endured in silence and remained faithful, and seeing the ghastly result when 1,000 Jews refused to handle weapons on the sabbath, the little band of patriots deter- mined to defend themselves even on that day (2.38). Mattathais soon died, and his place was taken by his third son, Judas the Maccabee, and the success which attended the guerilla tactics of this born leader soon multiplied the numbers under his standard, and enalaled him to take the field against his enemies in the open. In 166 Judas defeated and slew Apollonius, 492 MACCABEES, THE and the same year routed a second army under Seron, governor of Coelosyria, at Beth-horon (8.1-26). These disasters determined the wrathful king to send a huge army under Ptolemy, Nicanor, and Gorgias to crush the Jewish revolt once for all. But again, by bril- liant strategy and valiant courage, Judas emerged victorious at Emmaus in 166 ; and on the glorious field of Bethzur in the following year he defeated the viceroy Lysias himself, and so gained a short respite in which to re- establish the worship of Jehovah onZion(3.27- 4-35 )• On Chislcu 25 — exactly three years after its profanation by Antiochus— the sanc- tuary was cleansed, the heathen altar thrown down, and the stones of the polluted altar of sacrifice set aside " till a prophet should arise " to direct what was to be done with them, and new ones dedicated with festivities extending over eight days (4.36-61). Judas now occu- pied himself in repelling and punishing the envious attacks of surrounding nations, and in rescuing the bands of Jews who had settled among them (ch. 5). In 164 Epiphanes died suddenly, and Judas considered the disorders which followed in Syria a favourable oppor- tunity to attack the citadel of J erusalem, which had continued in the hands of the enemy. The garrison appealed to S>Tia for help, and Judas had to face an army of 120,000 men under Ly- sias. Against such odds even his valour was futile; at Bathzacharias he was defeated and his brother Eleazar slain, while the Syrians marched on Jerusalem. Just as all seemed lost, Syrian complications at the capital re- called Lysias to Antioch, and he was content to make terms with the Jews, who wore granted religious liberty, but were to remain politically subject (6.17-63). From this point the aspect of the contest changes. No longer is the struggle religious, but political — it developed into an internecine Jewish war, in which the Hellcn- izing party, led by the renegade Alcimus (Ja- kim), a worthy successor of Menelaus, had the support of the Syrians. Moreover (a most sig- nificant fact) the hasidhim now fell away from Judas : they had gained all they wanted — re- ligious freedom — and they refused to follow him in a purely political campaign. Alcimus appealed to Syria, Judas appealed to Rome. In two battles, at Caphar-salama and at Adasa, Nicanor, the Syrian general, was de- feated, and in the latter he fell (ch. 7). At length Rome interfered, but the message reached Antioch too late, for immediately the news of Adasa was received, Bacchides was sent with a great army into J udaea, and J udas Mac- cabacus and 800 devoted adherents were an- nihilated ncarEleasa, the Jewish Thermopylae, in 161 (8.1-9.22). This sudden blow absolutely staggered the Maccabaean party — it became wholly disorganized, and only under the pres- sure of the greatest persecution by Alcimus did they rouse themselves to elect Jonathan to fill tlie place of his brotlicr (9.23-31). The eldest of the five sons of Mattathias, John, liad fallen a I'rey to robber bauds while endeavouring to tUposit the baggage for safety among the friendly Nabatheans, and Jonathan's first step was to avenge his death (9.35-.t2). In 160 Al- cimus died, llacchides returned to .Antioch, and " the land had rest two years " (9.57). During MACCABEES, THE this interval of peace the Maccabaean party regained its strength to such an extent as to arouse the fears of the Syrian faction and lead them once more to invoke the aid of Bacchides. The Syrian general again marched into Judaea, but the strength of Jonathan's entrenchments and his cunning strategy soon made him heart- ily weary of the whole business, so, eagerly closing with Jonathan's adroitly timid pro- posals of peace, he finally took his departure (9.58-73). Jonathan's opportunity, however, was afforded by the constant disputes for the Syrian crown, for in 153 Demetrius had to face a claimant for his throne in the person of one Alexander Balas, a pretended son of Antiochus IV. (Epiphanes) (lO.i). Both parties endea- voured to secure the support of Jonathan, since by this time the Maccabees again had the na- tion at their back. Demetrius offered to evacu- ate all the fortresses of Judaea except Bethzur and the Akra, and to give Jonathan authority to raise an army (IO.3-6). Jonathan accepted. But the knowledge that Rome, to say nothing of other allies, was behind Alexander soon in- duced him to transfer his support to the latter, who not only sent him the crown and purple, but also conferred the high-priesthood upon him (10. 1 5 -21). Demetrius now made mag- nificent offers, too good indeed to be true (10. 22-45), and Jonathan wisely adhered to Alex- ander, who overthrew his rival soon after ; and not until Demetrius II. finally crushed Balas in 146 did Jonathan abandon him for the vic- tor, who confirmed him in the high-priesthood and showered upon him all the privileges which his father had jireviously offered in vain. But even the wily Jonathan was entrapped at last. Relying upon Demetrius' promise to put the Akra into his possession, he furnished him with troops to assist in quelling a revolt at Antioch ; but when Demetrius refused to keep his promise, he transferred his services to Try- pnoN, who was endeavouring to place the son of Alexander Balas upon the S)Tian throne. He served him loyally and well. Tr3T)hon, however, came to the conclusion that the rising power of the Maccabaeans was becoming dan- gerously great, and Jonathan, having been induced to meet him at Ptolemais with only 1,000 men, speedily found his bodyguard cut down and himself a prisoner (IO.46-I2.48). Simon, the last and in some respects the great- est, of the brothers, immediately stepped forward to take the vacant leadership in 143. Under him the Mdccabees reached the acme of both their aspirations and their attainments. Judas had striven for religious freedom, and when that was gained, fought on to make the patriotic party politically supreme in Judaea. This last was the great objective of Jonathan ; but having gained it, he proceeded to take the first steps towards that complete emancipa- tion from the Syrian suzerainty which was ultimately reached under Simon, in 143-142 (? 141-140). After his treachery at Ptolemais, Tryphon invaded Judaea, but was checkmated at every move, and, taking a mean revenge by murdering his prisoner Jonathan, retired (12. 44-18. 24). .'\fter establishing a friendship with Demetrius. Simon adojited the safer policy of holding aloof from Syrian internal politicks i altogether, having received ffom the king MACCABEES, THlil the acknowledgment of Jewish independence, which the high-priest transformed into some- thing beyond a mere name by captiu^ing the Akra, and gaining possession of Gazara and Joppa. Simon now devoted himself to the in- ternal affairs of Judaea. A coinage was minted, law and order became established, while com- merce and agriculture began to flourish as never before since the Exile. In spiritual and material prosperity " every man sat under his vine and his fig-tree, and there was none to fray them." The high -priesthood, by popular consent, was confirmed upon Simon and his house for ever, " till a faithful prophet should arise " (13,14). But nevertheless, like his brothers, Simon was destined to end his days amid stormy violence and intrigue. About 142 Tryphon assassinated his protege Antiochus VI., and had himself proclaimed king; and since Demetrius II. was a prisoner among the Par- thians, his brother Antiochus VII. took up the struggle and at length succeeded in overthrow- ing Tryphon. Immediately his attitude to- wards the Jews radically changed : instead of courting them by lavish promises and profes- sions of amity, he now haughtily returned the presents which Simon sent him, and demanded tribute to the extent of 1,000 talents. Simon offered him 100 for Gazara and Joppa, and thereupon the king sent a huge army against Judaea. It was, however, routed near Modin by Judas and John, the sons of Simon, who was once more left in peace by Antiochus. But his own son-in-law Ptolemy determined to seize the supreme power in Judaea himself, and with this object invited Simon to a banquet, where he treacherously slew him, together with his sons Mattathias and Judas. Simon's other son, John Hyrcanus, who was at Gazara, for- tunately received warning in time to make good his escape and establish himself as head of the Hasmonaean house, and maintain its position (15,16). So perished the last of the five heroic sons of Mattathias. Something has been said above as to the gradual develop- ment of the objects for which they fought ; there remains to be noticed what effect the events of the time had upon the moral and re- ligious development of the nation as a whole. The Maccabaean period was one of fierce trial and sifting, which forced men to take one side or the other in the struggle. Those who re- mained faithful to the law, the hdsidhim, bound themselves by a solemn oath to preserve their ancient religious rights and customs (iMac.1.62), and in the time of their oppression they found comfort in writing and reading the literatiure of which the book of Daniel is a con- spicuous example — writings, that is, which in veiled language dwell upon the evil of the pre- sent time, the glorious future which awaits Is- rael, and the fearful retribution which shall be- fall its enemies. Many modern scholars have found in the book of Psalms also Maccabaean outbursts of righteous indignation against the persecutors, or of exultation at the victories of Judas {e.g. Ps.44,74,79,83). One conspicuous result of Jewish experiences under Syrian rule must not be passed over — viz. the dawn of a belief in the resurrection of individuals to ever- lasting life or to contempt and shame of those Israelites who had been pre-eminent as mar- MACCABEES, BOOKS OF 493 tyrs or apostates respectively (Dan.12.2). Schiirer, Hist, of Jews in N.T. Times (Eng. tr.), div. i. vol. i. ; Bevan, Jerusalem under the High-priests and House of Seleucus. [d.c.s.] Maccabees, Books of, — A. iMaccabees. (i) Versions, {a) Greek. Most MSS. of the LXX. (including A. and V.) contain the book. But B. includes none of the Maccabees. (6) Latin. There are two Latin versions, one in the Vulg. and the other (ch. 1-13 only) in the Sangermanensis MS. (c) Syriac. There are also two Syriac versions. (2) Title. MaK\-a- jSaiVcd or MaKKa^alwp j3ij3\ia. Origen (Eus. H.E. vi. 25) gives i:,ap^Tid Zap^avaieX, which is a transliteration of an original Semitic title — at present not satisfactorily identified. (3) Original Language. The book is almost cer- tainly a translation, and from a Hebrew arche- type. For this we have the witness of Origen and the explicit testimony of Jerome, who says he found iMac. in Hebrew. The internal evidence also is conclusive, (a) Hebraisms are numerous (e.g. I.29), and even translitera- tions occur {e.g. 14.28). (6) If the original were written in Gk., it would be almost im- possible to explain its many peculiarities and obscurities (2.8,5.8,65,6.37). Moreover, it is a priori probable that, as the author was a Palestinian {vide infra), he would write in He- brew, the language of the learned, especially when recounting the exploits of the Maccabees. A plausible case might, however, be made out for Aramaic. (4) Contents. The period cov- ered is the forty years between the accession of Antiochus IV. {Epiphanes) in 175 b.c. and the death of Simon Maccabaeus in 135. Sum- mary : {a) Retrospect of Gk. history, bring- ing it into relation with Judaean (I.1-9). {b) Campaign of Epiphanes and the Hellenists (1. 16-64). (c) Mattathias, and the commence- ment of revolt (2). {d) Mattathias dies (2.69). Under the successive leadership of Judas (3. 1-9.22), Jonathan (9.23-I2.53), and Simon (13.i-16.r8), Israel acquires religious and political freedom, {e) Death of Simon and escape of his son Hyrcanus (I6.19-24). (5) Unity. This seems to be guaranteed by : (a) The systematic chronology, the Seleucid era (3r2 B.C.) being followed throughout. (6) The uniformity of style and consistent omission of the Divine Name (in the true text). But some scholars (e.g. Destinon and Wellhausen) regard 14-16 as no part of the original work, arguing that they were not known to Josephus (whom Destinon considers to have used a Heb. iMac). (6) Author. The minute topographical knowledge, and the insetting of picturesque details which could have no interest for an outsider (e.g. 7.19), suggest irresistibly that he was a Palestinian, while the whole spirit of the book proves that it was written by a pious and patriotic Jew. To his mind religious and political freedom were indissolubly connected — -Judas was the saviom: of Israel (cf. 9.2 1). An ardent sup- porter of the Hasmonaean house and the priesthood, he passes over in silence the apos- tate priests Jason and Menelaus. He may have been a Sadducee (Geiger). (7) Date, (a) From the attitude displayed towards Rome it is imiversally admitted that iMac. cannot have been written after 63 b.c. (when 494 MACCABEES, BOOKS OP Pompey entered Jerusalem), (b) 16. 2 3 might seem to suggest a date subsequent to the death of'Hyrcanus in 105 b.c. (c) But this is not necessary, since 16. 18-22 may refer to the early part of his reign. Otherwise it is difficult to explain the fragmentary character of this section, (d) The vividness of the nar- rative points to a date not long subsequent to the events recorded, and the prosperous reign of Simon would give an impulse to literary activity. It is possible, therefore, that iMac. was commenced in the reign of Simon and finished during the early years of his successor (i.e. from 140-120 b.c). (8) Sources. The book itself makes only two references to sources (9.22,16.24), and in each case no certain in- ference can be drawn. If it was written during the early years of the ist cent, b.c, one must postulate documentary sources to account for the peculiar freshness of its style. But assum- ing an earlier date, the necessity for supposing documentary sources falls into the back- ground. The writer would draw largely on his personal recollections and the witness of his contemporaries. Some scholars have regard- ed the incorporated official documents as later interpolations. But a later hand would pro- bably have arranged them more artistically, and could hardly have avoided discrepancies in style and context. Certain documents the author calls dvTiypaa.ix(v being epistolary perfect), we might assume that the letter was written in 144 b.c. " In the extremity " then describes trouble now i^ast. (d) This being the case, the first letter may have been added by the author. But the contradiction between 1.15,16 (man- ner of Epiphanes' death) and ch. 9 is con- clusive against the second, and this having been subtracted, it seems improbable that the author would have added a letter so insignifi- cant in contents as the first. This result, how- ever, must be regarded as tentative. For op- ]iosing v-iew, see Eitcyc. Bibl. vol. iii. col. 2875!. (7) LanpiiaRe and Style. 2Mac. was certainly written in Gk. — so Jerome {Prologus Galea- tus). There is a striking absence of Hebraism. (Jerusalem is always 'lepocriXi'/ua, never 'lepoi;- ffaXi^fi. ) The style is generally fluent and easy^ MACCABEES, BOOKS OF though sometimes overloaded ; as a whole, the work bears a strong resemblance to contem- porary Gk. literature. (8) Historicity, Pur- pose, and Religious Character. The compara- tively later date of 2Mac., the general char- acter of its contents, its divergences from iMac, and the heightening of the miraculous (3.24,10.29,12.22), are highly prejudicial to its historical value. In fact, the author himself disclaims the responsibility of an historian (2. 28). He is primarily concerned with edifica- tion, desirous to inspire the Jews of the dia- spora with reverence for their religion and de- votion towards the central sanctuary (3.2-9. 16). Here some scholars {e.g. Rawlinson) have discerned a latent depreciation of the temple at Leontopolis. In contrast to iMac. ob- serve : {a) The strong theocratic feeling. (6) The emphasis laid on divine assistance (c/. 11.6,15.21). (c) Continuous use of the sacred name and the doctrine of resurrection and prayers for the dead (12. 43-45). The body of the work contains no explicit reference to the Messianic hope (but its resurrection doctrine belongs to the same class of ideas). In 2.i8 the writer looks forward to the reunion of Israel round the Jerusalem sanctuary. — Note on the Chronological System of i and 2 Maccabees. Both books fix their dates in terms of the Se- leucid era, which was usually reckoned from the autumn of 312 B.C. But the question arises, Do the books of Maccabees adopt this more usual standard, or do they reckon from the spring, and if so, from the spring of 312 or 311 B.C. ? Arguing from the fact that iMac. numbers the months from the spring, and from the evidence of iMac.7.i,10.i, and 6.20, most critics decide that the Maccabaean Seleucid era begins in the spring. Wernsdorff and Clinton, however, hold the opposite view. And 312 is the usually accepted year. Some of the dates in 2Mac. are reconcilable with iMac. only if we assume different starting-points for the Seleucid era in the two books. One must therefore suppose either that these dates are another instance of the chronological inac- curacy of 2Mac., or that the latter used a dif- ferent Seleucid era to iMac. — that is, probably the era prevailing in the rest of Sjnria. For a full discussion of the problem, vide Schiirer, Hist, of Jewish People in Time of J. C. div. i. vol. i. — C. 3MACCABEES. (i) Text and Title. 3Mac. is found in most MSS. of the LXX. and in the two uncials A and V. As it was not received in the Western Church, there is no official Latin version. (The first one made was specially prepared for the Complutensian Polyglot, 1 517 A.D.) There is an ancient, but very free, Syriac translation. The title, MaKKaftaiwv rpia, seems to be due to the sub- ject-matter of the book, which relates the persecution of the Jews by a foreign king : it is a peculiarly unfortunate one for a work which professes to describe events which occurred during the reign of Ptolemy IV. (Philopator) (222-204 B.C.). (2) Contents, (a) Ptolemy IV. conquers Antiochus the Great at Raphia (217 B.C.). (b) He visits Jerusalem and desires to enter the temple, but is struck with paralysis (1-2. 24). (c) In revenge, Ptolemy subjects the Alexandrine Jews to civil disabilities, (d) Enraged at the Jews' MACCABEES, BOOKS OF 495 devotion, the king orders a universal slaughter. After the scribes had worked forty days to enrol the victims, writing materials failed and the massacre was deferred (2.30-4.21). (e) Ptolemy now orders elephants to be made drunk with wine and incense, and the Jews to be thrown at their feet. (/) But on the morn- ing appointed the king over-sleeps, and the next daj' he miraculously forgets his design, (g) On the third day, at the Jews' prayer, angels descend from heaven. All is confusion, and Ptolemy's soldiers are trampled down (5. 1-6.31). {h) The king's fear of the Jews ; he permits them to slay the apostates ; they ever after commemorate the deliverance. (3) In- tegrity and Historical Character. The abrupt beginning of the book with ode ^iXoiraTCjp, the reference to " the " plot {t7]v iTnj3ovXr)i'), al- though none has yet been mentioned, and the expression " the before-mentioned com- panions " in 2.25, show conclusively that the original opening has been lost. Grimm thinks that simply an introductory chapter is needed ; but Ewald and others regard 3Mac. as a mere fragment of a large historical work. The evi- dence is usually regarded as insufficient to warrant this last hypothesis. From a review of the contents it clearly appears that 3Mac. is not an historical record. But whether it has an^' basis of fact it is impossible to determine. Josephus [Cont. Ap. ii. 5) relates an occurrence similar to the elephant story in the reign of Ptolemy VII., in which the miraculous element is prominent, but not so exaggerated as in 3Mac. Doubtless both represent two differ- ent settings of a common tradition. Ewald and others regard this as originating in Cali- gula's attempted sacrilege and the painful consequences of the Jews' resistance. But the fact that in 3Mac. Ptolemy does not claim divine honour is against this. (4) Date, Author, and Style. The date is uncertain. Whether or not the author was acquainted with 2Mac. cannot be accurately determined (but see Grimm, 214-220). He knows, how- ever, the Gk. version of Daniel (6.6). It is therefore improbable that he wrote before ist cent. B.C. His style, phraseology, and know- ledge of Egyptian affairs would suggest that he was an Alexandrian. He has a large vocabu- lary, and shows a marked preference for aira^ Xeyd/xeva and "rhetorical word-painting." His work is too rich. It is not a pleasing production, as the style is " bombastic and involved." Hebraisms are rare. In con- clusion, observe the author's use of fieyKxros (1.4,4.r6) and vipiffTos (6.2,7.4), suggesting the influence of Neoplatonism. — D. 4MACCABEES. (i) Text and Title. 4Mac. occurs in X, A, and V, and also in the works of Josephus (see infra). There is an old Syriac version. Another " 4Mac.," still extant in 1566, may have been a Gk. translation of the " Chronicles " of John Hyrcanus referred to in 1Mac.l6.24. The earliest title, Ma/c/ca/3aiwi/ 5' (LXX. MSS.), is really a misnomer, arising from the fact that the principal part of the work deals with the subject-matter of 2Mac.6 and 7. As the book partakes of the nature of a treatise, it has been referred to as irepl avTOKpdropos X07W/X0O — i.e. On the Supreme Power of Reason (Eusebius and 49G MACCABEES, BOOKS OP Jerome). (2) Contents, (i) The author de- sires to show the supremacy of pious reason over the passions (I.1-12). (ii) His conception of reason is moral as well as intellectual (I.15). Wisdom is attained by study of the Torah (1. 17). It manifests itself in four cardinal virtues, (ppovTjcni, diKaioai'vr], avSpeia, crtofppoffvvi] (I.18). Then follows a series of illustrations to 3. 18. (iii) Tyranny of Syrian kings over the Jews (3. 19-4.26). (iv) Power of reason illustrated by the Jewish martyrdoms (5-16. 25). (v) Con- cluding reflections (17-18.2). Most modern scholars regard 18. 3-23 (or 18. 6-19, Freuden- thal) as an appendix added by a later hand, for these reasons : {a) 18. 3-5 is apparently incon- sistent with 17.20-24. (b) Lack of connexion between I8.1-5 and I8.6-14. But the evidence for this is far from conclusive. (3) Author and Date. Early Christian tradition assigns this book to Josephus (Eusebius and Jerome). Hence 4Mac. is often appended to the his- torian's works. The erroneous character of this idea is clear from : (i) Literary compari- son with genuine works of Josephus and the unhistorical character of 4.15, 26,5.1, 17.22ff. (ii) The fact that the greater part of 4Mac. is based on 2Mac. — a work unknown to Jose- phus. Ewald accounts for the tradition by assuming that 4Mac. was originally ascribed to a Josephus, who was subsequently confused with the historian. The question of date is largely dependent on that of 2 Mac. That Onias is stated to have held the high-priest- hood for life (4.i) suggests a period subse- quent to the fall of the house of Hashmon, when the life-tenure was abolished (Grimm). 14.9 seems to imply that the Jews in Alexan- dria were themselves exempt from persecution, and this would point to a date before their ex- periences under Caligula in 40 a.d. If there is nothing definitely Alexandrian in the book, yet the general tone and spirit of the writing would suggest Alexandria as its i:)lace of origin. (4) Style. Although the book is of no value as history, its literary chracter is far superior to 2 or 3Mac. Classical constructions are frequent ; Hebraisms very rare. The LXX. is seldom referred to (2.5,19,17.14). Freu- dcnthal suggests that 4Mac. is a specimen of synagogue preaching. This is unlikely ; the work is too ornate for the purpose. An aca- demical lecture would be more apposite. (5) Character and Purpose. 4Mac. was addressed to Jews (18.1), but its affinities arc with Gk. rather than with Heb. literature. Its aim is primarily religious rather than philo- sophical. The author is particularly partial to Stoicism (c/. the four cardinal virtues, I.18; vide supra). But he shows himself throughout a devoted patriot and champion of the Jewish faith, and he is so because it is a reasonable faith. Wc may, however, discern an en- croachment of Gk. philosophy in his substitu- tion of the immortality of the soul for the doc- trine of the resurrection of the body (9.8-17. 18). He seems to have believed in everlasting torment as the necessary correlative of eternal life (c/. 9.9-I2.12), and it is noteworthy that he regards the suffering martyr as a vicarious sacrifice for the nation's sin (c/. 6. 24-17. 22). 4Mac. is an interesting example of the eclectic character of the Philonic school. — Ii. sMacca- MACEDONIA BEES. A compilation of i and 2 Mac. and Josephus, except ch. 14, where the author is peculiarly inaccurate on Roman history. Pro- bably originally written in Gk. (but possibly in a Semitic tongue), the work only exists in an Arabic translation to be found in the London and Paris polyglots. Tliere is a Latin render- ing at the side. It is of no historical value ; probably it was written after 70 a.d. — F. Re- lation OF THE Books of the Maccabees to THE Canon. Until the Council of Trent (1546) I and 2 Mac. ranked as " ecclesiastical " (so Jerome), subsequently as " canonical." The Reformed Churches retained the old classifi- cation. Books iii.-v. have received much less recognition from the Church. — For the Gk. text of 1-4 Mac. see Swete, Cambridge LXX. (vol. iii.). An English version of i and zMac. is published by the revisers in their edition of the Apocrypha. For books iii.-v. see The Five Books of Mace, in English, by Cotton (Oxford, 1832 : N.B. translation of book v. is from the Latin). There is a commentary on iMac. in the Cambridge Bible for Schools (1897). For general introduction see Schiirer, Hist, of Jew- ish People in Time of Jesus Christ, [d.c.s.] Macedonia, the first part of Europe to receive the Gospel directly from St. Paul, and an important scene of the subsequent mission- ary labours of himself and his companions. It is enough to say here that Macedonia is the region bounded inland by the range of Haemus or the Balkan northwards, and the chain of Pindus westwards, beyond which the streams flow respectively to the Danube and the Adriatic ; that it is separated from Thessaly on the S. by the Carabunian Hills, running E. from Pindus to Olympus and the Aegean ; and that it is divided on the E. from Thrace by a less definite mountain-boundary running S. from Haemus. Of the space thus enclosed, the most remarkable physical features are 2 great plains, one watered by the Axius, which comes to the sea at the Thermaic Gulf, not far from Thcssalonica ; the other by the Strymon, which, after passing near Philippi, flows out below Amphipolis. Between the mouths of these two rivers a remarkable peninsula pro- jects, dividing itself into three points, on the farthest of which mount Athos rises nearly into the region of perpetual snow. Across the neck of this peninsula St. Paul travelled more than once with his companions. This general sketch sufiicieutly describes the Macedonia which was ruled over by Philip and Alexander, and which the Romans conquered from Perseus. The conquered country was divided by Aemilius Paulus into four districts. This division was only temporary. The whole of Macedonia, along with Thessaly and a large tract along the Adriatic, were made one province and cen- tralized under the jurisdiction of a proconsul, who resided at Thcssalonica. This corresponds with the usage of the term in N.T. (Ac.16.9,10, 12, etc.). Three Roman provinces, all very familiar to us in the ^vritings of St. Paul, di- vided the whole space between the basin of tin- Danube and cape Matapan. The border-town of Illvkicum was Lissus on the .\driatic. The boundary-line of Achaia nearly coin- cided, except in the W. portion, with that of the kingdom of modern Greece, and ran in MACEDONIAN an irregular line from the Acroceraunian pro- montory to the bay of Thermopylae and the N. of Euboea. By subtracting these two provinces, we define Macedonia. The history of Macedonia in the period between the Persian wars and the consolidation of the Roman provinces in the Levant is touched in a very interesting manner by passages in the Apocrypha. In Esth.l6.io Haman is de- scribed as a Macedonian, and in 16. 14 is said to have contrived his plot for the purpose of transferring the kingdom of the Persians to the Macedonians. This sufficiently betrays the late date of these apocryphal chapters ; but it is ciurious thus to have our attention turned to the early struggle of Persia and Greece. The account of St. Paul's first journey through Macedonia (Ac.l6.io-17.i5) is marked by copious detail and well-defined incidents. At the close of this journey he returned from Corinth to Syria by sea. On the next occasion of visiting Europe, though he both went and returned through Macedonia (Ac.20.i-6), the narrative is a very sUght sketch, and the route is left uncertain, except as regards Philippi. The character of the Macedonian Christians is set before us in Scripture in a very favourable light. The candour of the Bereans is highly commended ( Ac. 17.1 1 ) ; the Thessalonians were evidently objects of St. Paul's peculiar affection (iTh.2. 8,17-20,3.10) ; and the Philippians, besides their general freedom from blame, are noted as remarkable for their liberality and self- denial (Ph.4.10,14-19 ; see 2Cor.9.2,11.9). Macedo'nian occurs in E.V. only in Ac. 27. 2; Est.Apoc.16.10,14. In other cases (Ac.l6. 9,19.29 ; 2Cor.9.2,4) both A.V. and R.V. render it " of Macedonia." [Macedonia.] Machbanai', a Gadite warrior who joined David at Ziklag (1Chr.i2.13). Machbenah' (Maxa/x^i'a). Sheva, the father of Machbenah, is named in the genealo- gical list of Judah as the offspring of Maachah, the concubine of Caleb ben-Hezron (iChr.2. 49). He was also "father of Gibea," probably GiBEAH (Jos. 15. 57), now Jeb'a, 8 miles W. of Bethlehem the town of Caleb. [c.r.c] Ma'ehi', father of Geuel (Num.13. 15). m.a,cM.v' {salesman). — 1. (Num.26.29.) The son of Manasseh by an Aramite concubine (iChr.7.15). His children were born on Joseph's knees (Gen.5O.23) — i.e. while Joseph was still alive. He was the founder of the most war- hke clan of Manasseh, who became possessed of Gilead (Num.32.39,40 ; Deut.3.15). The guess of Stade, Budde, Moore, etc., that the conquest of Gilead was subsequent to Deborah has no foundation beyond Judg.5.14 and 10. 3-5. [J AIR.] The word " Machtr " is probably used here as synonymous with Manasseh, but the Eastern Manasseh may have taken part in the campaign. We know Reuben was summoned (ver. 16). Driver (" Manasseh," Hastings, D.B., 5 vols. 1904) has tabulated the genealogies : Jos.l7.i,2 (J) ; Num. 26. 28-34 (P) ; iChr.7. 14-29, 2. 21-23. They cannot be reconciled, but provide interesting specula- tions as to the relations of the Machirites with J air (Judah) and with Benjamin [cf. Ishbo- sheth). — 2. (2Sam.9.4,5,17.27,29.) Son of Amniel of Lodebar (perhaps Lidebir — Jos. 13. MADNESS 497 26, R.V. marg.), the principal man in Gilead (Josephus, 7 Ant. ix. 8). He was loyal to the house of Saul and protected Mephibosheth. He was afterwards loyal to David, and came to his assistance at Mahanaim. [h.m.S.] Machip'ites, The. [Machir, i.] Mach'mas (iMac.9.73). [Michmash.] Maehnadebai', a son of Bani who put away his foreign wife (Ezr.lO.40). The namd is corrupted into " of the sons of Ozora " in iEsd.9.34. Machpelah', a cave, in an enclosed field with trees, opposite Mamre — probably to E. (Gen.23. 9, 17,19, 25.9,49.30,50.13). [Hebron.] The LXX. always renders the name as " the double cave " — a tomb chamber with an outer chamber. Perhaps, however, it meant " the locked-up cave." [c.r.c] Mae'pon (2Mac.lO.12). [Ptolemee, r.] Madai' (Gen.lO.2), the Heb. name of the Medes. [w.st.c.t.] Mad'iabun. Sonsof Madiabun, according to iEsd.5.58 only, were among the Levites who superintended the restoration of the temple under Zerubbabel. Madian' (Jth.2.26 ; Ac.7.29), for Midian — a general name for the E. deserts. It per- haps preserves the real vowel sound, suggesting the Babylonian Mad-yanu, or " land of no one," an " empty " region, corresponding to the modern Belqa, or " empty " land, which is the name for Gilead and Moab. [c.r.c] Madmannah', one of the towns in the S. district of Judah (Jos. 15. 31). Possibly the ruin Umm Deimneh, 12 miles N.E. of Beer- sheba. [c.r.c] Madmen', a place in Moab, threatened with destruction in the denunciations of Jeremiah (48.2), but not elsewhere named, and not yet identified. Madmenah', one of the Benjamite villages N. of Jerusalem, the inhabitants of which were frightened away by the approach of the Assyrians along the N. road (Is.lO.31). Madness. Frequently mentioned in both O.T. and N.T. Probably in O.T. times mad- ness was accounted for by the theory of possession ; thus, David (1Sam.2i.13), in pre- tending madness, hoped to win the regard of the Philistines. In Deut.28.34 madness is regarded as the direct result of sin, while Is. 44. 25 seems to suggest the derangement of in- tellect which so often accompanies those who palter with false magic. An accusation of this sort was made against Jeremiah (J e. 29. 2 6), and the passage suggests a somewhat drastic method of dealing with these people. In this connexion it must be remembered that religious enthusiasts such as dervishes, fakirs, and so on, have always been frequent in the East. In N.T. occurs the only case where madness is deUberately connected with Demoniacal Possession (Jn.lO.20), though the accusation by the J ews that our Lord worked His miracles by the aid of evil spirits (Mt.9.34) suggests much the same thing. The word "lunatic" occurs twice in N.T. (4.24,17.15), and in both R.V. reads " epileptic." In these passages there is a distinct connexion between lunacy and possession ; in the latter we are distinctly told of a " devil" who " departed out of" the sufferer. But in St. Mark's description of the 32 498 MADON same case (Mk. 9. 17-26) the symptoms are re- markably like those of epilepsy. [f-J-] Madon', one of the royal Canaanite cities. Its king joined Jabin and his confederates in their attempt against Joshua at the waters of Merom (Jos.ll. 1,12.19). Probably the ruin Madin, close to Ha(tin, W. of the sea of Galilee. It is the Madna of the list of Thoth- mcs III. (No. 20), in i6th cent. B.C. [c.r.c] Mae'lus (iEsd.9.26) = Miamin, i. Mag-bish', a proper name in Ezr.2.30, apparently, like others (vv. 21-35), the name of a place. Noticed with Nebo and Elam in Judah. The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Mag-dala. In the received Gk. te.xt of Mt. 15.39 only; but the Sinai and Vat. MSS. read " Magadan." Into the limits of Magdala Christ came by boat, over the lake of Gennesaret, after His miracle of feeding the 4,000 on the mountain of the N.E. side. This Magdala, which conferred her name on " Mary the Magdal-ene," was probably the place mentioned in the Jerusalem Talmud (Eriibin v. i) as near Tiberias, and is the modern el Mejdel, a small village, 3 miles N. of Tubariyeh, lying at the water's edge at the S.W. corner of the plain of Genne- saret. In Mk.8.10 Dalmanutha stands for Magdala. This is probably the Aramaic Dc Almanutha (place of high buildings), equiva- lent to the Heb. mighdol or " tower," which here barred the shore road at a point where the hills are close to the lake. [c.r.c] Mag-diel', one of the " dukes " of Edom, descended from Esau (Gen. 86.43 ; iChr.l.54). Magred (iMac.5.36). [Maked.] Magri. I. (i) The name Magi originally belonged, according to Herodotus (i. loi ; cf. Aeschylus, Persae, 316), to one of the Median tribes. The Magi were evidently, from the first, famous for their divinations, and mem- bers of the tribe were attached to the Persian court as soothsayers (Her. i. 107,128). In fact, the word magus comes to be used as simply = "soothsayer" (vii. 19, etc.), and this is its normal meaning in classical Gk. (cf. Soph. O.T. 387). The divinations of the Magi were especially connected with astrology (Her. vii. 37). (2) In O.T. we meet with allusions to them. In Je.39.3,13 the title Rab-mag (formed on the analogy of "Rabsaris," "Rabshakeh") seems to = " chief of the Magi." Probably this is the same office as that alluded to in Dan. 5.11 (dpxovra iwaoidQv fidyuv), but for another view see Rab-mag. Other allusions are Dan. 1-20,2.2,24,27. In N.T., besides the fidyoi of Mt.2, we have the verb fiayevw in Ac. 8. 9 (used in abad sense). — II. (iJThe Magi of Mt.2 probably came from Yemen in S. Arabia. The inhabitants of that region were brought much into contact with the Jews by trade, and were considerably influenced by Judaism. They seem, in fact, to have ultimately abandoned their original heathen religion for Judaism ; for, while Yemen inscrijitions of 270 A.n. sjieak of the hcathendeities of tlie land, those of 458 and 467 A.D. speak, not of those heathen deities, but of one RahmSndn — a name which seems to be connected with the Heb. "Rahman" = "the compassionate" (see art. " Yemen," in Encyc. Brit.). (2) The following facts also illustrate the narrative in Mt.2: — (a) The old heathen 1 MAGIC, MAGICIANS religion of Yemen, which was at this time, in spite of Jewish influence, the national religion, included the worship of the sun and moon. Such a worship might very well be connected with astrology (cf. Mt. 2.2, 9, 10). (b) The dis- trict was rich in gold, frankincense, and mvTrh (i6Straboiv. 4; Je.6.20; Ezk.27.22 : Is.6b.6), and an inscription of Tiglath-pileser II. (733 B.C.) mentions Saba (which was part of Yemen) as paying tribute in gold, silver, and incense, and in Annals of Sargon (715 B.C.) Saba is mentioned as paying gold and spices. Moreover, incense and ingots of gold were customary offerings to the deities of the coun- try. (With all this, cf. Mt.2. 11.) (c) The queen of Saba in the S.E. of the district actually visited Solomon, bringing gifts of gold and spices (iK. 10.2, 10). (3) Moreover, in sup- port of the credibility of the whole story in Mt.2, there are the following facts: — (a) An expectation about this time of the coming of the Messiah (cf. Mk.l.7; Jn.l.igff.). (b) A widening sympathy which showed signs of extending the Messianic liope to the Gentiles (cf. Tob.14.6,7). (c) A widespread feeling out- side Judaea that the time was ripe for the coming of a Deliverer Who should rule the world in peace. This feeling was moulded jiartly by Jewish influence. It finds expression in Virgil's fourth Eclogue, which seems sinai- larly to show some Jewish influence. See a recent volume of essays by Prof. Mayor, Mr. Warde Fowler.and Prof.Conway onFi>gj7'sil/t's- sianic Eclogue. [Star of Wise Men.] [c.e.r.] Mag-ic, IVIagricians. The belief in magic is found in every people and in every stage of a people's development — in its sim- plest form in those whose social evolution has made the least advance, while its most luxu- riant overgrowth has been attained in places and ages in the past where civilization has been most highly develo]ied. It originates in the state of culture known as animism, with the question, Who did it ? rather than What caused it ? Amongst such occurrences are primarily illness and death. And as, in fact, nobody " did it," the answer is necessarily in- volved in mystery. What is clear is that the person to be accused was acting from a dis- tance, and in secret, and must have had a mys- terious power to do what he has done and in the way in which he has done it. Now, such mysterious power to i^roduce, secretly and from a distance, events such as illness and death, or other similar happenings, which to the iirimitivc mind are extraordinary, un- natural, and incomprehensible, is Magic. The next step, and a very important one if the ill- ness is to be stopped or the death avenged, is to find out who is the magician. Now, there are people — hunchbacks, dwarfs, persons with a strange look in their eyes — whose very appear- ance causes alarm and fright ; the fear which their uncanny aspect inspires is. in the earliest stage, the best e\idencc that they have the jx)wer to do miscliief. Later, when the belief in magic has developed so far that it is assumed that it is practised not only by people whose very appearance is enough to render thera sus- pect, but also by jiersons who contrive to keep it secret, the services of a witch-tinder become necessary. We have, however, yet to under- MAGIC, MAaiCIANS stand how any person thus suspected comes to believe that he possesses this power, or how he contrives to exercise it when he is convinced that he does possess it. In the former there is little difficulty : most of our beliefs are " sug- gested " to us, and, when the suggestion is that one is an extraordinary person, to be respected, feared, flattered, and courted for the sake of powers genuinely believed to be possessed, it is not in human nature, as a rule, to resist the flattering imputation. The magician finds, however, at times, events attributed to him of which he is totally unconscious ; and while he is thus sometimes a magician malgre lui, on the other hand he finds that when he wants to ex- ercise his powers he cannot always accomplish his end. To infer from this, as is sometimes done, that he is nothing more, at any time, than a conscious impostor, is unjust and ab- surd ; he feels assured he has the power, but he cannot always make it work or prevent it from working. That is mysterious, but then magic is essentially mysterious ; and mystery, so far from shaking his belief, strengthens it, and merely leads to the conclusion that he must pay greater attentionto his methods. Cer- tain men are believed to possess the power of sending sickness and death, and they come, in consequence, themselves to believe that they have the power : possunt quia posse videntur. The simplest way in which such magicians seek to exercise this power is one in use amongst the Australian black-fellows : the magician takes a bone, sharpens it, points it in the direction of the person to be injured, and sings the name of the victim, mentioning the deathwhich he is to die. He may not die, for the magician's power is not completely at his own command ; but if he does, and sometimes he does, the magician's power is established or confirmed. That this early form of magic is symbolical seems indi- cated by the way in which illnesses believed to be thus caused are also cured by a magician. He symbolically takes a bone of this kind as it were from the body of the invalid, and the ill- ness is removed. A natural consequence is that it comes in course of time to be believed that the bone, or quartz-crystal, or whatever it may be, is actually and not symbolically pro- jected into the body of the victim, and ex- tracted from it. The next stage in the evolu- tion of magic occurs when the meaning of the symbolical action has disappeared ; the fact that the action symbolizes something comes to be forgotten altogether, and it is believed that the action, in virtue of the mysterious power of the doer, produces the result magically. The evolution then may go a step farther, and the thing used is believed to produce the result of itself ; thus it becomes a charm or an amulet. We have now to look at magic objectively. From the point of view of the sick person and his friends, the magician who caused the illness or death was a malefactor, and as such was not infrequently killed by the relatives of the deceased — not, however, because he was a magician, but because he was a murderer. The proof of this is the fact that while the victim is ill, but not yet dead, his relatives call in the as- sistance of another magician to cure him by de- feating the magic which is producing the illness. The community as a community has no feeling MAGIC, MAGICIANS 499 against magic as magic, but only against mur- der, whether committed by a magician or by any one else. The idea that " thou shalt not suffer a witch to live " is one which did not, and could not, arise at this time and under these circumstances ; the idea can only arise when magic or witchcraft is condemned by religion as a deadly offence against religion. When so condemned — as it is in O.T. — it is because magic has come to imply dealings with supernatmral beings other than God- This introduces us to a fresh stage in the evolution of magic. The magician is conceived as no longer producing his results directly, but as using his power to control or coerce spirits to do his will. Such spirits must be those that contemporary public opinion believes capable of such treatment, i.e. others than those whom the community worships. Magic thus comes to be in avowed opposition to religion ; it can only grow at the cost of religion, and religion demands its suppression, or, rather, should de- mand it, in its own interests and those of th& community — in its own interests, because the fundamental condition, without which religion cannot continue to exist, is that with the Lord God alone of spiritual beings shall His wor- shippers have to do ; and in the interests of the community, because those interests are under the exclusive care of the God of the com- munity, to which exclusive care dealings with any other spirits are derogatory. Where magic is thus practised and thus condemned, where no witch is to be allowed to live, the reality of magic is assumed both by those who practise it and by those who condemn it. Where, on the other hand, witchcraft is no longer a capital offence, and where it is only as obtaining money under false pretences that the witch comes within the grasp of the law, it is evident that the community as a whole does not believe in magic. In either case, whether the belief in magic is impious or an absurdity, it is offensive to and condemned by religion. At first magic is believed — rightly or wrongly — to be real ; eventually it is believed — rightly or wrongly — to be a pure delusion ; and the method of combating it is necessarily different in the two cases. Where its reality is believed in, re- ligious minds must and do believe that it cannot stand against the power of God and His chosen agents. Amongst the Jews it was believed in from the times depicted in Exodus to those portrayed in the Acts. When Aaron cast down his rod and it became a serpent, the Egyptian sorcerers and magicians " did in like manner with their enchantments [or, secret arts] " ; but Aaron's rod swallowed up theirs. Daniel, when put to the test with the magicians, suc- ceeded where they utterly failed. When SS. Barnabas and Paul were at Paphos, Elymas, a Jewish sorcerer, withstood them, but he was struck blind for a time at the word of St. Paul (Ac.l3.6-i2). At Ephesus, certain Jewish exorcists signally failing, both Jews and Greeks were afraid, and abandoned their practice of magical arts. Whether magic be a reality or a mischievous delusion, it cannot stand against the power of God ; nor can it be tolerated by religion, for it sets itself up as a rival to religion, and is incompatible with whole-hearted service, or service of any real kind, to God. If we do 500 MAGIC, MAGICIANS not recognize this fact, \vc can liiid no justifica- tion for the sternness of O.T. towards witch- craft ; if we do recognize it, we shall pause be- fore we venture to think that its severity was greater than was needed. The magical arts condemned by the law illustrate the growth of magic and all stages of its evolution, as set forth above. Thus a magician is naturally called " a worker of hidden arts " {m''6nen, one who acts covertly). Again, the person who produces illness and death must, ipso facto, know how to do so ; he is a wise man (yidd'oni — a word used specially of " a wizard " and of false prophets), because he knows how to do these things which are secret and hidden from ordinary people. Further, as we have seen, the person who has the knowledge and the power to work these secret arts, when he comes to work them by sending forth his power, says that he does so ; he says that he becomes a wolf, or that his victim is to die such and such a death. His words are thus a spell or en- chantment, and he is condemned by the law as "an enchanter" (nvkhashsheph, one who uses incantations). In these, the earliest, forms of magic, the mysterious power of the worker of hidden arts operates directly on the victim. It marks, however, a later stage in the evolution of magic when the wizard, instead of operating directly, confers upon some object the power of causing or averting death or illness or other misfortune. In such cases he becomes " a fab- ricator of charms" {hobher hehher), i.e. of ma- terial charms or amulets. In the time of Ezekiel (13.i7fi. )such amulets seem to have been made and sold by women for a low price. A late stage in the evolution of magic has also been reached when the magician prefers to foretell future events rather than to bring them about or avert them. This stage is in all probability late, not so much because it implies that the magician has become aware of some limitation to his power, but rather because it involves an idea of which early man, whose immediate needs are such as to occupy all his thoughts without requiring him to look far into the future, is as yet hardly conscious — viz. that the future is to some extent fixed. But in course of time his interests do come to range farther than the immediate present, and the desire for knowledge of the future arises and is not at first felt to be in any way irreligious, nor is the attempt to obtain it condemned at first by re- ligious feeling. This is shown by the descrip- tion of Joseph's cup ((len.44.5) 'IS that "in which my lord drinketh and whereby indeed he divineth." This method of divination, which was in use in the Egypt of Joseph's time, is still practised in the Egypt of to-day ; in the liquid, now generally ink, which the vessel con- tains, those who have the power to do so descry scenes which are taking place at a distance, or events which will take place in the future. " Scrying " nowadays, whether done by means of a bowl or of a crystal-ball, may be, as it is, generally considered futile and absurd, but it is not at the present time generally realized to be anti-religious, and evidently could not have been felt to be so in Joseph's time. But it came to be offensive to the Hebrew religious consciousness ; and amongst those condemned by the law wc find the " practiser of divina- MAGIC, MAGICIANS tions " {qosem q'sdmim). This transference of divination from the class of things permitted to the class of things forbidden to the Jews is a point of great significance for the history of re- ligion generally. As amongst the Jews divina- tion was not at first felt to be forbidden by re- ligion, so amongst other peoples the forms of magic just enumerated — the knowledge and the power to produce wonderful effects, either directly by means of spells or indirectly through amulets or charms — are not felt to be in them- selves inconsistent with religion ; indeed, amongst the Australians, the medicine-man is supposed, in some cases, to have received his magical power from such supernatural beings as Baiame, Daramulun, or Bunjil. But when the medicine-man is supposed to obtain his wonderful power from the god of the com- munity, then, as the community is under the protection of its god, the power obtained from this source cannot be used against the welfare of the community and its members, but only for its protection and its promotion. It is thus used in many places for procuring rain. Or it may be used to counteract the magic of evil- disposed sorcerers who use their power to pro- duce sickness : thus in Babylonia the exorcist says that it is by the command of the god Marduk that he, by magic, undoes the magic of the sorcerer. But when its use is thus sanctioned by religion and practised by priests, the tendency is to run to such extremes that, e.g. amongst the Hindoos, the gods them- selves are supposed to be constrained ; while in ancient Egypt the magician by his spells be- came the god ("I am Amon, I am the prince, the Lord of the Sword"), just as the Cherokee sings, " I become a real wolf," and then gives a howl and paws the ground like a wolf. A religious system which has not strength enough to throw off magic in its earliest stages becomes chronically subject to it. Now, it was in the form of Divination that, amongst the Jews, magic effected a lodgment for a time in religion itself ; and when we consider the consequences entailed on other religions, we shall not be in- clined to think that divination was unreason- ably forbidden to the Jews. Of the forms of magic mentioned in the Bible and already dealt with (those of the " worker of hidden arts," the " wizard," the " enchanter," the " fabricator of charms," and the "practiser of divinations"), none necessarily imply any dealings with spirits ; and though any of them may come to be carried on by the aid, or through the power, of gods, spirits, or ghosts, the probability is that in their origin they arc all worked by the ma- gician himself in virtue of the mysterious power and knowledge which is ascribed to him by popular belief. It remains to describe other forms of magic mentioned in the Bible which by their very nature imply communication with ghosts and spirits. They are three — those practised by " a consulter of the dead," by "an augurer," and by " an inquirer by a familiar spirit " ; and it should be noted that whereas the worker of hidden arts, the wizard, and the enchanter undertook to do things, the con- sulter of the dead, the augurer, and the in- quirer by a familiar spirit only undertook, like the practiser of divination, to ascertain the future or the unknown. The consulter of the MAaiC, MAGICIANS dead (doresh el-hammethim) is a necromancer in the literal sense of the term. With regard to him we notice (a) that amongst the Hebrews, as amongst other peoples, ghosts appear as having a knowledge of the future beyond that pos- sessed by the living ; (6) that the power of con- sulting and communicating with the dead is, like divination by means of the cup, forbidden as a real, and not as an unreal, possibility. When Saul commanded the witch of En-dor to call up the shade of Samuel, he had no doubt of her power, or that the exercise of that power was forbidden. The Heb. m^'nahesh, trans- lated " an augurer," is from ndhash, lit. " he or it hissed or whispered." Evidently, there- fore, such an augurer is one of those of whom Isaiah (8.19) speaks as " the wizards that chirp and that mutter." Such hissing and chirping, muttering and whispering, indicate that the augurer or wizard was the instrument through which a ghost whispered or muttered its mes- sage, for it is a widespread belief that ghosts gibber. Spirits, other than ghosts, might also take possession of such persons, e.g. the "dam- sel having a spirit of divination," from whom St. Paul cast it out (Ac.l6. 16-18). Thus we come to the last class — those who come under the prohibition of the law (Deut.l8.io,ii) : that " there shall not be found with thee an in- quirer by a familiar spirit " (sh&el 'obh). If 'obh is identical with the Assyr. ubi, then sho'el 'obh means "divining by a charm," and this class of persons must belong to the "practisers of divination" mentioned above. But if the traditional interpretation of 'obh as "a bottle" be adhered to, then the bottle was, of course, made of skin, and belongs to the class of pouches, medicine-bags, etc., which the medi- cine-man, amongst peoples in the animistic stage, uses as the receptacle for the small ob- jects which he employs in the discharge of his functions. These small objects may be peb- bles, bones, etc., and are believed to be the abode of, or to be animated by, a spirit, who may be consulted by and may assist the man who possesses them. Only the owner has ac- cess to the spirit, and because he is the only person who becomes familiar with the spirit, the spirit becomes his " familiar spirit." The mental attitude of the persoii thus brought in- to relation with a spirit whom he consults and to whom he defers bears a certain analogy to that of a priest or worshipper to his god : offer- ings may be made and requests preferred to it. Amongst many peoples it is probable that such spirits, when, or if, they come to be accessible to other persons as well as to their owner, come to have a congregation of worshippers, and so may become first family gods and then perhaps tribal gods. The possibilities of such a de- velopment amongst the Hebrews was effect- ually stopped by the prohibition of the law above quoted, and by the fundamental principle, " The Lord thy God is a jealous God" : "Thou shalt have none other god but Me." The fundamental fact in magic is the magician's belief in his power to impose his will on nature and even on the gods. That is the reason of the conflict of magic both with religion and with science. The truth is that it is only by co-operating with nature and by doing God's will that man can realise his func- MAGIC, MAGICIANS 501 tion. The attempt of man to impose his own will in either case simply impedes and obstructs the progress of both. Religion, therefore, in its war with magic was fighting the cause of science ; and religion declared war upon magic long before science did. Indeed, until com- paratively recent times (as, for instance, in the case of alchemy) science and magic have scarcely been conscious of their fundamental antagonism to each other ; while even at the present day, outside Christianity, magic has intertwined itself with religion even more closely than it did with chemistry. Magic, then, has always been essentially a parasitical growth : it clings to science and religion, and as it tightens its hold upon them it chokes them. The fact that it is found from the ear- liest times growing up with them has misled some investigators into the fallacy of imagin- ing that the parasite springs from the same seed as the tree to which it clings. In fact, however, they grow from different roots — magic from an overweening confidence in human power, the belief that man can do im- possibilities ; religion and science from the humility of spirit with which man feels that he is in the presence of God and of the works of God. We may indeed avail ourselves of the laws of nature and of the grace of God ; but first we must seek them, and seek them for the purpose of obeying them. Magic, on the other hand, seeks to impose the human will on nature and even on the gods. The fact that the distinction between magic and science is not clearly present in the consciousness of the astrologist or the alchemist constitutes no proof that magic is the same thing as science. By their fruits they are known ; if the thorn does not bear grapes, it is because the thorn is not a vine. So, too, the fact that in low reli- gions, or in the lower forms of high religions, magic flourishes in the guise of religion, con- stitutes no presumption that magic is the same thing as religion, or that religion is but a varia- tion of magic. What is required for the ulti- mate destruction of magic is a recognition of the fact that the magician simply has not the power which he is believed both by himself and by others to possess. But the discovery and establishment of that fact is retarded for ages by what we may term the " protective colour- ing " of magic, by the aid of which magic passes itself off as science or religion. It was by simulating science that magic survived in alchemy and astrology ; the really valuable, the truly scientific, elements in alchemy and astrology were truths of nature which were not dependent on any magical power. In the same way magic found its way into many forms of religion, and was only slowly — in some cases never — expelled. But even into the lower forms or stages of religion it could only find its way by divesting itself of some of its characteristics — e.g. its anti-social charac- ter. The beneficent magician might be ac- cepted, where the evil one was banned. When, however, magic thus effected its entry into re- ligion, it might come to dominate religion or it might slowly be ejected from the religious'sys- tem. In the case of the anti-social magician, the magical rites used are supposed to constrain the gods to do the will of man, or to enable the 502 MAGIDDO person using them to become agod, as in ancient Egypt and amongst some African tribes at the present day. In the case of the beneficent magician, the power of the exorcist or rain- maker, originally peculiar to him personally, came to be regarded as exercised by the sanc- tion and under the authority of the god whose name he invoked, e.g. the Babylo- nian exorcist quoted above. Elsewhere, rites for producing rain, for instance, are still performed as a matter of tradition, but pro- bably without any clear notion, on the part of those who perform them, that they once were magical when accompanied by the utterance of a prayer to the god who is to send the rain. Where such is the nature of the case, it is manifest that we have a parallel to the process by which magic was purged out of al- chemy and astrology. In the case both of re- ligion and of science, the idea of magical power is discarded; it is by, and in, obedience to the laws of nature and the will of God that man must act. As in the case of science, so in the case of religion ; it is a fallacy to identify magic with religion merely because the magic which in some cases has succeeded in creeping into it is only slowly expelled from it. [f.b.j.] Magriddo (iEsd.l.29). [Megiddo.] Ma'g'og' (Heb. mdghdgh) is applied to a land or people. In Gen.10.2 Magog appears as the 2nd son of Japheth in connexion with Gomer (the Cimmerians) and IMadai (the Medes) ; in Ezk.38.2,39.i,6 Magog is a country or people, of which Gog was the prinre, noticed with Meshech (the Moschi), Tubal (the Tibareni), and Rosh. There is evidently im- plied an etymological connexion between Gog and Ma-gog, the Ma being regarded by Ezekiel as a prefix significant of a country. In the Akkadian language Ma meant " land " or " abode." The notices of Magog would lead us to fix a N. locality ; not only did all the tribes mentioned in connexion with it belong to that quarter, but it is expressly stated by Ezekiel that fiog was to come up from "the sides of the N." (39.2), from a country ad- jacent to that of Togarmah or Armenia (38.6), and not far from " the isles " or maritime regions of Asia Minor (39.6). The people of Magog further appear as having a force of cavalry (38.15), and as armed with the bow (39.3). From the above data, combined with the consideration of the time at which Ezekiel lived, the conclusion has been drawn that Magog represents the land of the Scythians, who invaded Palestine about 620 b.c. Gog has, however, also been connected with Gugu (Gyges), king of Lydia, who fought against Assur-bani-pal about 660 b.c, and was subse- quently slain by the Scythians ; in which case Magog was in Asia Minor. [c.r.c] Magrop'-inissabib' (lit. terror on every side), the name given by Jeremiah to Pashur the priest, when the latter smote him and put him in the stocks for projihesying against the idol- atry of Jerusalem (Je.20.3 ; c/. 4). It is a com- mon ])lirase in Je. (6.25,20.io,46.5,49.20). and only fnnnd besides in I, am. 2. 22 and l's.31.i3. MagTpiash', one fif the heads of the people who sealed the covenant (Ne.lO.20). Mahalah', a child (prob. daughter) of Uammoleketh, Gilead's sister (iCbr.T.iS). MAHLI Mahalaleel'. — 1. The fourth in descent from Adam, in the line of Seth, and son of Cainan {Gen.5.i2ff. ; iChr.1.2). — 2. A descendant of Perez, or Pharez, the son of Judah (Ne.ll.4). Mahalath'. — 1. IBasiilmatii.] — 2. One of the 18 wives of Kohoboam, apparently his first (2Chr.ll. 18) ; and daughter of David's son Jerimoth. Mahalath, Mahalath - Leannoth. [Psalms, Titles of.] Mahali' (Ex.6. 19 only) = Mahli, i. Mahana'im (= two camps). It is said that this place was so named when Jacob, camping there, saw " the camp of Elohim " (Gen. 32. 2) ; and, if Succoth was N. of the Jabbok stream (32.22,33.17), Mahanaim must have been S. of the brook : which agrees with its being the capital of S. Gilead in the time of Solomon (1K.4.14). It was on the border between Gad, holding the W. of Gilead, and Manasseh, holding the E. as far S. as this city (Jos. 13. 26, 30). It was given to the Levites (21.38), and became the capital of Saul's son Ishbosheth (2Sam.2.8,i2,29). David fled to Mahanaim, and it was then a city with walls and gates (17.24,27,18.24.33,19.32). There was a region called kikkdr (perhaps the Jordan valley) on the way to the town (18. 23), but in which direction is not clear. The most pro- bable site is Mukhmah, a large ruin N.E. of Es Salt, and on W. side of a remarkable plain or basin in S. Gilead. The term mahanS in Heb. applies to such plains, which were fit camping-places for pastoral tribes. It is sometimes thought that there is an allusion to Mahanaim in Canticles (6.13), where the LXX. reads, " What would ye see in the Shunamite [for Shulammite] coming as the dancers of the camps " ; but this may be only a sarcastic allusion to camp-followers, when the " prince's daughter" was asked to turn round, that her face might be seen. [c.r.c] Mahaneh'-dan' {camping place of Dan ; Judg.13,25,18.12). This was a flat open valley, near Zorah and Eshtaol, and close to Kirjath-jearim on the W. It was the open valley of Sorek, immediately W. of the gorge by which it leaves the mountains near 'Erma. The gorge in question is perhaps the "jaw" of Lehi. [Ramath-lehi.] [c.r.c] Maharai' (2Sam.23.28 ; iChr.ll. 30,27.13), an inhabitant of Netophah in Judah; of the family of Zerah ; one of David's captains. Ma'hath.— 1. A Kohathite ; ancestor of Heman (iChr.6.35). [AniMOTir.] — 2. Also a Kohathite, son of Amasai, 4, wlio assisted in the purification of the temple under Hezekiah (2Chr.29.12). He was apparently the same as the o\'erseer of the tithes (2Chr.3i.13). Mah'avite, The, the designation of Eliel, 5, in iC'lir.ll.)6. The meaning is uncertain. Mahazioth', son of Heman, and head of the 23rd course of temple-musicians (iChr.25.4,30). Mahep'-shalal'-hash-baz' (prob. the spoil speedcth, the prey hasteth), son of Isaiah, whose name was given by divine direction toiii- diratethat Damascus and Samaria were soon to be |>liiii(ler<riest's slave whose right ear Simon Peter cut off with his sword at the arrest in the garden (J n. 18. 10 ; c/. Mt.26. 51; Mk. 14.47; Lu.22.49ff.). One of his kins- men afterwards recognized St. Peter in the house of Caiaphas (J n. 18. 26). It has been noticed that only " Euke the physician " men- tions tlie iiealing of the ear. Malchus was not an uncommon name in Syria, being a Gk. form from a Heb. root, mentioned several times by Josephus and others. [c.l.f.] MALLOWS Malefactors. [Thieves, Two : Law in O.T.] Mal'eleel (Lu.3.37), the Gk. form of Ma- halaleel. Marios, They of, who, with the people of Tarsus, revolted from Antiochus Epiphanes because he had bestowed them on one of his concubines (2Mac.4.3o). Mallos was an im- portant city of Cilicia, at the mouth of the Pyramus (Seihun), on the shore of the Mediter- ranean, N.E. of Cyprus, and about 20 miles from Tarsus (Tarsus). Mallothi', a Kohathite, one of the 14 sons of Heman the singer, and head of the 19th course of temple-musicians (iChr.25.4,26). Mallows (Job 30.4 only; Heb. malluah), i.e. some species of Orache, probably the Atriplex halimus. R. Levi (on Job 30), Luther, and others, with the Swedish and old Danish versions, hence miderstood "nettles." Others suggest some species of " mallow " (malva) ; e.g. (Sprengel) the " Jew's mallow " (Corchorus olitorins). This same mallow is still eaten in Arabia and Palestine, the leaves and pods being used as a pot-herb. But the Atriplex halimus has the best claim to represent the AlKiri.IiX 1IAI.IMI>,. vialliiah. The Heb. word is derived from inelah, salt ; and the Gk. name Halimus signifies salt. R.V. reads salt-u'ort. Wyclif's " erbis " (herbs) has simplicity in its favour. Pliny refers to the Halimus i^robably when he says (xxii. 22): " Others aflirin, that .'\limon is a sea-wort, of asalt and brackish tast, whereof it had the name. The loaves be round and yet after a sort long wit hall : and tlic whole hearbe is highly commendable for the pleasant tast, and good to be eaten " (Holland's trans- lation, i6or, ii. 128, 129). [H.C.H.] MALLTJCH Malluch'.-^l. A Merarite Levite ; an- cestor of Ethan the singer (iChr.6.44). — 2. One of the sons of Bani (Ezr.lO.29), and — 3- of Ha- rim (10.32), who had married foreign wives. — 4. A priest or family of priests (Ne.lO.4), and — 5. One of the " heads " of the people who signed the covenant (IO.27). — 6- One of the families of priests who returned with Zerub- babel (Ne.12.2) ; probably the same as 4. Mamai'as (iEsd.8.44), apparently = She- MAiAH, 12. Marn'mon (Mt.6.24 ; Lu.16.9,11), a word used here as a personification of riches, and which often occurs in the Aram. Targums of Onkelos and in the Syr. version, and signifies " riches " in Aramaic (Buxtorf) ; cf. Assyr. minima (" all ") and mamma (" everything "). Mamnitanai'mus, a name in the lists of iEsd.9.34, which occupies in Ezr.lO.37 the place of " Mattaniah, Mattenai," of which it is a corruption. Mampe', an Amorite of Hebron, in alliance with Abram (Gen. 14.13,24). Abraham camped under the " oaks of Mamre " (R.V. Gen.l3.i8, 14.13,18.1). The " tree " (I8.4) was W. of the cave of Machpelah (23.17), which was in Hebron (ver. 19), and was near the city (25.9,35. 27,49.30,50.13). T?he oak was shown in 4th cent. A.D. at Rdmet el Khalil {" Ahraham's tank"),N. of Hebron, and was then cut down. It was after- wards shown W. of the city, like the present Ballutct es Sebta, or " oak of rest." [c.r.c] Mamu'chus (iEsd.9.30) = Malluch, 2. Man represents (i) 'ddhdm, i.e. man gene- rically, including both sexes, Gk. Hvdponros, mostly collectively, the human race ; as a proper name, Gen.4.23,5.iff., iChr.l.i. (2) 'enosh, of similar use, but chiefly poetic. (3) 'ish, man as distinguished from woman, hence husband, Gk. dvrjp. (4) ba'al, owner, lord, hence husband, also inhabitant. (5) zdkJidr, a male, Gk. d^prju. (6)mHMm (onlyplur.), pro- perly " males," but sometimes men generally. (7) gebher. gibbor, mighty man, warrior. [Soul ; Spirit ; Future Life ; Adam.] [c.h.] Man, Son of. [Son of Man.] Man of Sin. [Thessalonians, II. ; Anti- christ ; Paul.] Manaen (Gk. 'Mava-qv, Heb. m'nahem), mentioned (AclS.i) as one of the " prophets and teachers" at Antioch at the "separating" of Saul and Barnabas. The name signifies consoler, and implies Jewish descent. There is nothing except the name to connect him with the Manaem {MavaTj/xo^) mentioned by Josephus (15 Ant. x. 5), who was an Essene of great repute, enjoying the favour of Herod the Great, because in early life he had foretold that prince's greatness. But some relationship is possible. What is the exact meaning to be attached to "Spudov tou rerpdpxov (rvvrpocpos (Ac.13.1) ? The Herod must be Antipas, called " tetrarch " in Luke (3.1,19), son of Herod the Great. The word crvi'Tpocpos (A.V. which had been brought tip with ; A.V. marg. and R.V. foster-brother) is capable of two interpretations, " foster-brother " (con- lactaneus) or " school-mate." The frequent occurrence of the name in inscriptions and with reference to kings makes it improbable that what is implied in ' ' foster-brother ' ' should MANASSEH 505 be taken literally. The idea of " companion in education " is simpler and more frequently possible, and Josephus states (17 Ant. i. 3) that Antipas and Archelaus were brought up in a private house at Rome, whither Manaen may have accompanied them. But there is much to be said for interpreting the phrase as a mere court-title (cf. iChr.27.33 ; iMac.1.6 ; 2Mac.9.29) from which the literal connotations had disappeared (cf. Deissmann, B.S. p. 312). This sense, if true, would add to Manaen's importance as a Christian convert, and as the possible source of St. Luke's special knowledge of the Herodian family history. [e.h.p.] Mana'hath, son of Shobal, and descendant of Seir the Horite (Gen.36.23 ; iChr.l.40). Mana'hath. The Benjamites of Geba re- moved toManahath (iChr.8.6), which was pro- bably in the lot of Benjamin ; but " half the Manahethites " (2.52) came from Kirjath- jearim, so that the town would lie on the border of Judah and Benjamin, S.W. of Jeru- salem. This is the situation of the town Manocho in the verse added by LXX. to Jos. 15.59 [Eltekon], and it answers exactly to Mdhlah, 3 miles S.W. of Jerusalem, on the border of Judah and Benjamin. [c.r.c] Manas'seas (iEsd.9.31) = Manasseh, 3. Manasseh' (making to forget). The name of the eldest son of Joseph, by his Egyptian wife Asenath, is so explained, and is due to Joseph's exclamation at his birth (Gen. 41. 51). It is remarkable, however, that the name of king Manasseh, son of Hezekiah, as spelt (Me- na-si-i) in a cuneiform record of Esar-haddon, would signify " exalted." Though Manasseh was the elder brother of Ephraim (46. 20), Jacob is related (48.19) to have foretold that the latter would be the greater tribe — an allu- sion no doubt to Joshua, the great leader of Ephraim, though Manasseh produced the great judge Gideon (Judg.6.15). The grandsons of Manasseh were born while Joseph still lived (Gen.5O.23). In the desert the tribe marched in rear of the tabernacle under Gamaliel (Num. 1.10,34,7.54,10.23), and the selected spy of the tribe was Gaddi (13. 11). Its numbers in- creased greatly [Palestine], while those of Ephraim decreased (Num.1. 33, 35,26.34,37) ; yet in the blessing of Moses (Deut.33.i7) Ephraim appears as the larger tribe, though it possessed the smaller territory ; but that of Manasseh E. and W. of Jordan was only in part wrested from the Canaanites. Half the tribe joined Gad and Reuben on E. of Jordan on account of their cattle (Num.32.33-41), and its warriors settled there after the conquest of the W. (Num.26. 29-34 ; Jos.l.i2,4.i2,12.6, 22.1,7-31). They were famous for courage and for swiftness in war against the Hagarites to their E. (iChr.5.18,19), but were wasted by Hazael of Damascus (2K.IO.33), and taken captive by Tiglath-pileser in 734 b.c. (iChr.5. 26). They appear to have inter-married with .Axameans (7. 14-19), and though some helped David against Saul (12. 19-23), and others dwelt in Jerusalem (9.3), yet in the time of Asa (2Chr.l5.9) they were regarded as strangers, after the separation of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, and on account of idolatry (34.6) even in Josiah's time. The estrangement is reflected in the Psalms (Ps.80.2; c/. 60.7,108.8) ; 506 IIANASSEH and Isaiah (9.2i) speaks of their quarrel with Ephraim, and enmity to Judah. They are hist noticed in Ezk.48, Rev. 7. 6. The Tribal Lot inchidcd two portions (Jos.13. 29-31, 17. 1-18), the first being E. of Jordan in Ba- siiAN with the E. "half" (or " jiart ") of GiLEAD, as far as Mahanaim (Deut.3.13,14), where Machir and J air conquered towns (Num. 32.40,41), included in Solomon's si.\th district (1K.4.13) with Arcob and Bashan as far N. as Hermon (iChr.5.23). W. of Jordan the tribal lot corresponded very closely to the province of Samaria, extending from Jordan to the Mediterranean, and touching Ephraim and Dan on S., with Issachak on N.E. and Asher on N. It was a mountain region (Jos. 17. 18), including apparently the woods (ver. 15) of Carmel, but the cities held by the tribe within the borders of Asher and of Issachar (Jos. 17. 10, 11,12 ; Judg.1.27) were not taken from the Canaanitcs till late times, and the plains of Manasseh remained probably unoccupied b}' the early Hebrews. [c.r.c] Manasseh'. — 1. The thirteenth king of Judah, who reigned longer than any other king of the house of David. His birth is fixed twelve years before the death of Hezekiah, 710 B.C. (2K.2I.1). Hezekiah, it would seem, recovering from his sickness, anxious to avoid the danger of leaving his kingdom without an heir, married, at or about this time, Hcphzibah (2K.2I.1), the daughter of one of the citizens or princes of Jerusalem (but see Is. 62. 4). The child born from this union was called Manasseh. This name is significant (see Gen. 41. 51). It appears nowhere else in the history of the kingdom of Judah. His accession appears to have been the signal for an entire change, if not in the foreign policy, at any rate in the religious ad- ministration of the kingdom. The result was a debasement which had not been equalled even in the reign of Ahaz, uniting in one centre the abominations which elsewhere existed separately. Not content with sanctioning their presence in the holy city, as Solomon and Rehoboam had done, he defiled the sanctuary itself (2Chr.33.4). The worship thus intro- duced was predominantly Babylonian in char- acter. With this, however, there was asso- ciated the old Molech-worsliip of the Ammon- ites. The fires were rekindled in the valley of Ben-Hinnom. The Baal and Ashtoreth ritual, imported under Solomon from the Phoenicians, was revived with fresh splendour ; accom- panied by extreme moral degradation. Every faith was tolerated except the original faith of Israel. This was abandoned and pro- scribed. It is easy to imagine the bitter grief and burning indignation of those who con- tinued faithful, many of wliom shed tlicir blond for their convictions (2 K. 21. 10). They spoke out in words of corresponding strengtli. livij was coming on Jerusahin whicli should make the cars of men to tingle (2K.2I.12). 'i"he line of Samaria and the plummet of the liousc of .Miab would bo tlio doom of the holy city. Like a vessel that liad once been full of iirccious ointment, but had afterwards become foul, Jerusalem would be emptied, wiped out, and turned upside-down. I-'oremost, we may well believe, among ^those who thus bore their wit- MANASSEH ness was the j^rophet Isaiah, now bent with the weight of years, who had in his earlier days protested with equal courage against the crimes of the king's grandfather. Retribution came soon in the natural sequence of events. There are indications that the neighbouring nations — Philistines, Moabites, Ammonites — who had been tributary under Hezekiah, revolted at some period in the reign of Manasseh, and as- serted their independence (Zeph.2.4-15 ; Je. 47,48,49). Palestine was again overrun by the Assyrian armies, and the city apparently was taken. Manasseh himself was made prisoner and carried off to Babylon. It is possible that Isaiah accompanied him, and this would account for the Babylonian clement in his book. It is inter- esting to note that on a cylinder of Esar-haddon, Manasseh is referred to with other Syrian kings, the date being c. 680 b.c. (See Plate xxix.). Later Manasseh repented, and his prayer was heard, and the Lord delivered him (2Chr.33. 12,13). It is singular that the writer of Kings does not refer to this. The omission is in part ex- plained by the character of the narrative of 2K.2I. The writer deliberately turns away from the history of the days of shame, and from the personal biography of the king ; whilst the char- acter of the writer of 2Chronic,les, obviously a Levite, and looking at the facts from the Lcvite point of view, would lead him to attach greater importance to a partial reinstatement of He- brew ritual and to the cessation of persecu- tion. One peculiarity in the history, in some measure of the nature of an undesigned cf)in- cidence, testifies to the extreme accuracy of the sacred historian, viz. the fact that the captains of the host of Assyria take Manas- seh to Babylon, and not to Nineveh. The first attempt of Babylon to assert its inde- pendence of Nineveh failed. It was crushed by Esar-haddon, and for a time the Assyrian king held his court at Babylon, so as to effect more completely the reduction of the rebellious province. In course of time Manasseh's release was granted, and he returned to Jeru- salem. The old faith of Israel was no longer persecuted. Foreign idolatries were no longer thrust, in all their foulness, into the sanctuary itself. The altar of the Lord was again re- stored, and peace-offerings and thank-offerings sacrificed to Jehovah (2Chr.33.i5,i6). But beyond this reformation did not go. The Assy- rian monarchy was tottering to its fall, and the king of Judah seems to have thought that it was still possible for him to rule as the head of a strong and independent kingdom. He fortified Jerusalem (2Ciir.27.3), and jnit captains of war in all the fenced cities of Judah. There was possibly a special reason for this. Egypt had become strong and aggressive imder Psamme- tichus, and the thought of an ligyptian alliance began to gain'favour. The name of Manasseh's son, Amon, identical in form and sound with that of the great sun-god of I'^gypt, is possibly an indication of liow gladly the alliance of Psammetichus was welcomed. There arc reasons for bcljoving that there existed, at some time or other, a fuller history, more or less legendary, of Manasseh and his conversion, from which the Prayer in the Apocr. may pos- sibly be taken. Scattered here and there, we find the disjecta membra of such a work. — 2. MANASSES One of the descendants of Pahath-Moab (Ezr. 10.30), and — 3. A layman of the family of Hashum, who both put away their foreign wives at Ezra's command (10. 33). — 4. In the Heb. text of Judg.l8.30, the name of the priest of the graven image of the Danites is given as " Jonathan, the son of Gershom, the son of Manasseh," the last word being written HE^^O, and a Massoretic note calling attention to the " nun suspended." Rashi's note upon the passage is as follows : " On account of the honour of Moses he wrote nun to change the name ; and it is written suspended to signify that it was not Manasseh but Moses." The LXX., Pesh.-Syr., and Chaldee all read " Manasseh," but the Vulg. retains the original and undoubtedly the true reading, Moyses. Kennicott attributes the nun to Jewish tran- scribers. As to the chronological difficulty of a grandson of Moses living at an apparently late period, there is reason to believe that the last five chapters of Judges refer to earlier events than those preceding. In 2O.28 Phinehas, the grandson of Aaron, is said to have stood before the ark, and there is therefore no difficulty in supposing that a grandson of Moses might be alive at the same time, which was not long after the death of Joshua. Manas'ses. — 1. (iEsd.9.33) = Manasseh, 4. — 2. (Mt. 1. 10) = Manasseh, kingof Judah. — 3- A wealthy inhabitant of Bethulia, and hus- band of Judith. He died from sunstroke (Jth. 8.2,7,10.3,16.22ff.). — 4. (Rev.7.6) = MANASSEH, son of Joseph. Manas'ses, The Prayep of. (i) The repentance and restoration of Manasseh (2Chr. 33. I2ff.) furnished the subject of many legends. " His prayer unto his God " was still preserved " in the book of the kings of Israel " when the Chronicles were compiled (2Chr.33.i8), and, after this record was lost, the subject was likely to attract the notice of later writers. " The Prayer of Manasseh," which is found in some MSS. of the LXX., is the work of one who has endeavoured to express, not without true feel- ing, the thoughts of the repentant king. (2) The Gk. text is thought to be original, and not a translation from the Heb. The \vriter was well acquainted with the LXX. But beyond this there is nothing to determine the date or place at which he lived. The allusion to the patriarchs {vv. 1,8) appears to fix the authorship on a Jew. (3) The earliest refer- ence to the Prayer is in a fragment of Julius Africanus (c. 221 a.d.), but whether to our pre- sent text is not certain (Jul. Afric. fr. 40). It is, however, given at length in the Aposto- lical Constitutions (ii. 22) in the Alexandrine MS. (4) The Prayer was never distinctly re- cognized as a canonical writing, though in- cluded in many MSS. of the LXX. and of the Lat. version, and has been deservedly retained among the Apocrypha in A.V. The Lat. trans- lation in the Vulg. MSS. is not by Jerome. Manass'ites, The, i.e. members of the tribe of Manasseh (Deut.4.43 ; Judg.12.4 ; 2K. 10.33)- Mandpakes. The dudha'im — "loves," hence our "love-apples" (occurring only in plur.), are mentioned in Gen. 30. 14, 15, 16 and Can. 7. 13. From Gen. I.e. we learn that they were found in the fields of Mesopotamia, where MANDRAKES 507 Jacob and his wives were at one time living, and that the fruit was gathered "in the days of wheat-harvest," i.e. in May; from Can.?. 13, that the plant was strong-scented, and grew in Palestine. The most satisfactory identification of the dudhcVim is the mandrake, as in A.V. The LXX., Vulg., Syr., and Arab, versions, the Targums, the most learned Rabbis, and many later commentators, favour this translation. The mandrake is scarcely odoriferous, the plant being even fetid in Eiuropean estima- tion. But Oedmann, after quoting authorities to show that the mandrakes were prized by the Arabs for their odour, justly remarks : "It is known that Orientals set an especial value on strongly smelling things that to more delicate European senses are unpleasing. . . . The intoxicating qualities of the mandrake, far from lessening its value, would rather add to it, for every one knows with what relish the Orien- tals use all kinds of preparations to produce intoxication." That the fruit was fit to be gathered at the time of wheat-harvest is clear, for Schultze found mandrake-apples on May 15th, and Hasselquist found flowers and fruit together at Nazareth early in May. Dr. Thom- son found mandrakes ripe on the lower ranges of Lebanon and Hermon towards the end of THE MANDRAKE. April. The mandrake {Mandragora officina- lis) is closely allied to the well-known deadly nightshade (Alropa belladonna), and belongs to the order Solanaceae. Pliny refers to the smell (xxv. 13) : " The right season to seeke for it is about Vintage time : the sent thereof is strong, but the root and fruite doe smell the stronger." There is no need here to deal with the multi- tude of superstitions accumulated around the mandrake and constantly occurring in our early 508 MANEH literature. Prof. Hcnslow, who overlooks the passage in Solomon's Song, reproduces an illus- tration from Dioscorides of his receiving a root from the goddess of discovery. Harris (Nat. Hist, of B., 1824) refers to the same author (1. iv. c. 76), with the words "Among the Greeks and Orientals this plant was held in high repute as being of a nature provocative of amorous inclinations." [h.c.h.] Maneh. [Weights.] Mangrei* occurs only in connexion with the birth of Christ, in Lu. 2. 7,12,16. The Gk. is (paTfT], which is found but once besides in N.T. (13. 15), and rendered " stall." In classical Gk. it undoubtedly means a manger, crib, or feeding-trough ; but, according to Schleusner, its real signification in N.T. is the open court- yard, attached to the inn or khan, and en- closed by a rough fence of stones, wattle, or other sUght material, into which the cattle would be shut at night, and where the poorer travellers might unpack their animals and take up their lodging, when excluded from the house by want of room or of means. This interpretation is at variance with the tradition, which Dean Stanley considered to be destitute of foimdation, that the Nativity took place in a cave. On the other hand, however, Conder {Tent Work in Pal. x. 145) and others think the traditional cave has much to be said for it. The tradition dates from Justin Martyr (2nd cent. A.D.). [Bethlehem ; Crib.] Ma'ni (iEsd.9.30 ; cf. Ezr.lO.29) = Bani, 4. Manifestation. [Jesus Christ ; Theo- PIIANIES.] Man'lius, T. In the account of the con- clusion of the campaign of Lysias (163 b.c.) against the Jews given in 2Mac.ll, four let- ters are introduced, of which the last purports to be from " Q. Memmius and T. Manlius, am- bassadors of the Romans " {vv. 34-38), con- firming the concessions made by Lj'sias. No such names occur among the legates to Syria noticed by Polybius ; and it is difficult to ac- cept the letter as genuine. If the true reading of 2Mac.ll.34 is " T. Manius " (not "Man- lius "), the writer is probably thinking of the mission of C. Sulpicius and Manius Sergius to Syria shortly before the death of Antiochus Epiphancs. [c.d.] r^an'na (Hcb. man) occurs in O.T. in lix.ie. 14-35 ; Num. 11. 6-9; Deut.8.3,16; Jos.5. 12 ; Ne.9.20 ; Ps. 78. 24, 25 ; Wis. 16. 20, 21. From these we learn that it came every morning ex- cept the sabbath, in the form of a small round thing resembling hoar frost ; that it had to be gathered each day early, before the sun was able to melt it ; that on the attempt to lay aside for a succeeding day, excejit on the day before the sabbath, the substance became wormy and offensive ; that it was prepared by grinding and baking ; that it was white like coriander seed, and that its taste was like fresh oil, or wafers made witli honey, equally agreeable to all palates ; lliat the whole nation ate it forty years ; that tlic supply suddenly ceased when they first got the new corn of Canaan ; and that it was always regarded as a miraculous gift from God. The natural ])ro- ducts of the Arai)ian deserts and other Oriental regions which bear the name of manna, liave not the qualities or uses ascribed to the manna MANNA of Scripture. But as regards the scriptural food, Harris's words (Nat. Hist, of B., Thos. Tegg, 1824), " Inshort, the whole history of the giving the manna is miraculous," sum up the position. That excellent writer gives an ample list of re- ferences to authorities on this subject. Accord- ing to the LXX., Vulg., Syr., and Josephus, the Heb. man, always used for this substance, is the interrogative pronoun (What ?) ; and the name is derived from the inquiry (man hii. What is this ?) which the Hebrews made when they first saw it upon the ground. The Ara- bian physician Avicenna describes the manna, used in his time as a medicine, thus: "Manna is a dew which falls on stones or bushes, be- comes thick like honey, and can be hardened so as to be like grains of corn." The substance now called mann in the Arabian desert through which the Israelites passed is collected in the month of J une from the tarfd or tamarisk lAMARI.X r.AI.I.ICA, shrub (Tamarix gallica). Burckhardt says that it drops from the thorns on tiie sticks and leaves which cover the ground, and must be gathered early, or it will be melted by the sun. The Arabs cleanse and boil it, strain it through a cloth, and put it in leathern bottles ; and it can be thus kept for years. They use it like iVtANOAH honey or butter with their unleavened bread, but never make it into cakes or eat it by itself. Rauwolf and others have compared its dried grains to coriander seed. Niebuhr observed the manna at Mardin in Mesopotamia lying like meal on the leaves of a species of oak, called in the East ballut and 'afs or 'as. The harvest is in July and August, and most plentiful in wet seasons. Near the Jordan Valley Burckhardt found manna like gum on the leaves and branches of the kharruh, which is as large as the olive-tree, having a leaf like the poplar, though somewhat broader. Two other shrubs, sug- gested as yielding the manna of Scripture, are the Alhagi maurorum, or Persian manna, and the A Ihagi desertorum — thorny plants common in Sjnria. The manna of European commerce comes mostly from Calabria and Sicily. It is gathered during June and July from some species of ash {Ornns europaea and Ornus rotun- difolia), from which it drops in consequence of puncture by an insect resembling the locust, but having a sting under its body. It is fluid at night, and resembles the dew, but begins to harden in the morning. Manoah' (Judg.13), a Danite living be- tween Zorah and Eshtaol ; the father of Sam- son. He was evidently a monogamist, and the story of his relations with his wife and with the angel, who foretold the birth of a son, are ad- mirably described. He was a man of simple faith and devout life. Manoah objected to Samson's marriage with a Philistine, and ap- parently died before his son (16. 31). [Sam- son.] [h.m.s.] Manslayep. [Homicide ; Goel.] Mantle is employed in A.V. to translate four Heb. terms, entirely independent both in derivation and meaning, (i) s'mikhd, once only (Judg.4.i8). (2) nf'tl, rendered " man- tle " in iSam.15.27,28.14 ; Ezr.9.3,5 ; Job I.20, 2.12 ; and Ps.lO9.29 ; elsewhere " coat," "cloak," and "robe." In one case only — that of Samuel — is this inconsistency of im- portance. The garment which his mother made and brought to her child was a miniature of the official priestly gown or robe ; such as the great prophet wore in mature years {iSam.15.27), and by which he was on one occasion identified (28.14). (s) ma'dtdphd (Is. 3.22 only), apparently some article of a lady's dress ; probably an exterior gown, longer and ampler than the internal one. (4) 'addereth (rendered "mantle" in iK. 19. 13, 19, 2K.2.8, 13,14; elsewhere "garment" and "robe"). By this, and this only, is denoted the coat or wrapper which, with the exception of a strip of skin or leather round his loins, formed, appar- ently, the sole garment of the prophet Elijah. It was probably of sheepskin, such as is worn by the modern dervishes. Maoch', father of Achish, the king of Gath with whom David took refuge (iSam.27.2) ; called in Syr. vers. Maachah, perhaps, there- fore, identical with the Maachah who was "father" of Achish, king of Gath at the beginning of Solomon's reign (iK.2.39). Maon', one of the cities of the tribe of Judah, in the Hebron mountains ; of the same group with Carmel and Ziph (Jos. 15. 55 ; iSam.25.2). Its interest for us lies in its connexion with David (iSam.23.24,25). Now MARBLE 509 M'atn, a ruin with a tell about lOo ft. high, 8 miles S. of Hebron, with caves, cisterns, and a mediaeval tower foundation. It is close to the desert or " wilderness of Maon." In iChr.2.43-45 Maon is connected with Hebron and Beth-zur. The Mehunim or Meunim (Ezr.2.50 ; Ne.7.52) may have belonged to this place. [c.r.c] Ma'onites, The, a people mentioned as having oppressed Israel (Judg.lO.12). Either inhabitants of Maon, near the Amalekite country, with which they are noticed, or of M'adn. [Edom.] The LXX., however (Vat. and Alex. MSS.), reads " Midianites." [c.r.c] Mara'. [Naomi.] Mapah' {bitter), a place in the wilderness of Shur or Etham, 3 days' journey distant (Ex. 15. 22-24 ; Num.33. 8) from the place at which the Israelites crossed the Red Sea, and where was a spring of bitter water, sweetened subsequently by the casting in of a tree which " the Lord showed " to Moses. Burckhardt sug- gested that Moses made use of the berries of the plant gharqad, which, however, are not so used by Arabs. 'Ain Huwdrah, distant 16J hours from 'Ayun Musa, has been identified with Marah by Robinson, Burckhardt, Schubert, and Wellsted, because of its bitter water, the distance being appropriate for 3 days' journey with flocks, women, and children. [Exodus, The.] Mapalah'(Jos.l9.ii), a place on the border of Zebulun, perhaps the S. border. It may possibly be M'aliil, a village which is 3^ miles W. of Nazareth. [c.r.c] Mapanatha', an expression used by St. Paul at the conclusion of iCor. (I6.22). It is generally supposed to be a Grecized form of the Aram, mdran dthd, " our Lord cometh," or " our Lord is come." R.V. thus rightly inserts a period after the preceding " ana- thema." St. Paul says (Ph.4.5), " The Lord is at hand " (or " nigh "), but Christian texts of Syria (c. 4th cent.) give the invocation eiselthe Kurie (" Come, O Lord "), which suggests the reading m&csin-'ethd {" Come, O our Lord"). [Semitic Languages.] Another explanation is that it is the beginning of a cursing formula, muhrdn 'attd = " cursed art thou " ; hence, " Let him be [subject to the] anathema," muhrdn 'attd. Mapble. Like the Gk. /j.dp/iiapos, the Heb. shesh, the generic term for marble may pro- bably be taken to mean almost any shining stone. At the present day it is applied by builders to any limestone that will take a polish ; sometimes even to rocks of quite dif- ferent composition. The so-called marble of Solomon's architectural works, which Josephus calls \idos XevKds, was probably the pale- cream-coloured limestone, which is about the age of the English chalk and is quarried in many parts of Palestine. It was very likely obtained, as that for Herod's temple almost certainly was, from the great excavations, called the Royal Caverns, which run beneath the city from near the Damascus Gate, but it is possible that in the latter building some foreign marbles may have been used for de- corative purposes. A compact, pale-reddish limestone, that should polish well, is worked to the S. of J erusalem. The marble pillars and 510 MARCHESVAN tesserae of various colours of the palace at Susa came doubtless from Persia itself (Esth. 1.6). [T.G.B.] Mapchesvan. [Months.] Map'cus (Col.^.io ; Ph.24 ; iPe.5.13) = the evangelist Mark. Mapdoche'us, the Gk. form of — 1. Mor- DECAi, I (Est.Apoc.l0.i,etc. ; 2Mac.i5.36). — 2. {iEsd.5.8) = MoRDECAi, 2. Mapeshah'. — 1. A town in the slfpheld region of Judah (Jos.i5.44), fortified by Re- hoboam (2Chr.ll. 8). It was in the valley of Zephathah (14.9,10), evidently therefore the ruin Mer'ash, a mile S.W. of Beit Jibrin. The site was known in 4th cent. a.d. (Onomasti- con). The name means " chief town " ; but in Micah (I.15) there is a play on the word. See also iChr.2.42,4.21, where the place-name occurs as if a personal name, and 2Chr.2O.37. It is noticed as Marisa (2Mac.i2.35), with Adullam, and was burned by Judas Macca- baeus in 164 b.c. (Josephus, 12 Ant. viii. 6), and taken by John Hyrcanus in no b.c. (13 Ant. ix. i). [c.R.c] Map'imoth (2Esd.l.2) = Meraiqth, i. Ma'pisa (2Mac.i2.35) = Mareshah. Maplsh (Ezk. 47.11). The A.V. so renders Heb. gebhi, " a deep place," referring to marshes and bogs near the Dead Sea. The word is an old Eng. form of the word " marsh " (Skeat, Ety. Diet.), a " mere-ish," or swampy, place — Low Ger. marsch, Low Lat. mariscus. Cf. Marishes Road Station on N.E. Railway. [c.r.c] Mapk is mentioned in nine places in N.T. (Ac.l2.i2,25,13.5,i3,15.37ff. ; Col.4.io ; 2Tim.4.ii ; Ph.24; iPe.5.13). The "John Mark " of Ac. is the same as the " Mark " of St. Paul's epistles, as proved by Col.4.io, where he is called the cousin of Barnabas, and Ac.l2.i2 shows his identity with the " Mark " of iPe.5.13. He was son of a Mary who was an influential member of the church at Jerusalem, the church meeting in her house. Papias (c. 130 a.d.), says, " He neither heard the Lord, nor accompanied Him." He was at Jerusalem during the famine in 45 a.d., and Barnabas took him to Antioch on returning thither from Jerusalem at that time. SS. Paul and Barnabas took him with them on St. Paul's first missionary journey. He laboured with them at Salaniis, in Cyprus ; but, after crossing to the mainland and arriving at Pcrga, St. Mark would go no further. Probably he was not yet prepared for so great a work as the conversion of the Gentiles, or for the substitution of the leader- ship of St. Paul for that of St. Barnabas. He returned to Jerusalem, and was probably at Antioch about the time of St. Paul's rebuke of St. Peter (Ac.15.30,37). Possibly he was one of those who lurged SS. Peter and Barnabas to withdraw from full fellowship with Gentile Christians. Whether he did so or not, St. Paul refused to take St. Mark with him on his second missionary journey (49 a.d. ). St. Barnabas then wenthomctoCypruswithSt.Mark. Wehearno more until c. 61 a.d., when he was with St. Paul at Rome. The two arc completely reconciled. St. Mark is St. Paul's " fellow-worker " and his "comfort" (Col. 4.10, II ; Ph.24). The way in which St. Paul urges the Colossians to re- ceive St. Mark kindly, possibly implies that MARK, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. wide dissatisfaction had been felt at his previous desertion of St. Paul. Some four years later St. Paul, in writing, shortly before his martyrdom, to Timothy, requests him to come to Rome and to take up St. Mark on the way, " for he is useful to me for ministering " (2Tim.4.ii). The last notice in N.T. of St. Mark shows how completely SS. Peter and Mark had widened their policy in harmony with that of St. Paul. St. Peter refers to " Mark, my son," and his words show that the two were then together at " Babylon " — i.e. Rome. St. Mark at the last found it possible to be equally loyal to both SS. Peter and Paul. From Papias we learn that St. Mark was the interpreter of St. Peter ; probably because St. Mark, who was of some social standing, originally knew Gk. better than the humbly-born prince of the apostles. In the 4th cent, it was widely believed that St. Mark was the founder of Christianity in Alex- andria, and therefore in all EgN^pt, and the first bishop there. This is quite possible. St. Mark might have been there either after his first separation from St. Paul or after the death of St. Peter, c. 65 a.d. [l-p-] Mapk, Gospel ace. to St. It was univer- sally believed in the ancient Church that this gospel was written by St. Mark, the companion of SS. Peter and Paul, and written under the influence of St. Peter. Eusebius, the great Church historian (c. 320 a.d. ), quotes {Hist. Eccl. iii. 39) from Papias, who lived c. 130 a.d., the testimony of the still earlier John the Pres- byter, that St. Mark, the interpreter of St. Peter, wrote down what he remembered. Irenaeus (c. 185 a.d.. Adv. Haer. iii. i) says that the gospel was written after the deaths of SS. Peter and Paul. Papias says that St. Mark " wrote down accurately," but " without re- cording in order, what was either said or done by Christ." This has occasioned some diffi- culty. For there is a considerable degree of chronological order in Mk., and our Lord's missionary journeys around Capernaum can in Mk. be accurately traced. Probably Papias was contrasting the arrangement of Mk. with that of Jn., where the dates are carefully given in due order. Justin Martyr (bom c. 100 a.d.) says (Dial. 106) thatClirist clianged an apostle's name to Peter, and that this is written " in his memoirs." Sonxe suppose that this refers to a forged gospel of " Peter " written in the 2nd cent. It is more likely that it refers to Mk., especially as Justin certainly called the gospels " memoirs." The connexion between this gospel and St. Peter is strongly corroborated by internal evidence. It consists almost en- tirely of things which St. Peter personally knew. It omits things which reflect credit oa St. Peter, and inserts things which were of a nature to humble him. St. Mark records the reprimand that St. Peter received from our Lord (8.33) and his fanciful plan of erecting tabernacles on the scene of the Transfiguration (9.5). It was St. Peter who informed Christ that the fig-tree had withered after His curse (1 1.21), St. Peter whom Christ awoke in Gcth- seniane by uttering his n.inie " Simon," and St. Peter's denial appears doubly guilty in this gospel, as lie did not repent until the cock crew twice (14.68,72). The whole gospel is MARK, GOSPEL, ACC. TO ST. beyond all reasonable question by St. Mark, except the ending (16. 9-20). The gospel can- not have originally ended at 16.8. The best solution of the difficulty is that the last page of the gospel was lost soon after St. Mark's death, when only one copy was in existence. A new ending was written by some person of author- ity. An Armenian MS. written 986 a.d. attri- butes it to " the presbyter Ariston," probably the Aristion mentioned by Papias as one of the Lord's disciples. — The date is proved to be very early by internal evidence, and by the use of this gospel by SS. Matthew and Luke. Clem- ent and Origen were probably right in thinking that it was written in the lifetime of St. Peter — i.e. before 66 a.d. Papias, however, implies that it was written after St. Peter's death. If so, it must have been almost immediately after. But the use of it by St. Luke is in favour of a date previous to the death of St. Paul, probably c. 61 a.d. — Style and Character. The literary style is distinct and peculiar. It abounds in colloquial expressions such as might naturally have been used by a man of Jewish origin who had never received a Gk. education. The diminutives are frequent, re- sembling words such as " lassie " and " dog- gie " common in parts of Great Britain (see Mk.3.9,5.23,39,7.27). Latin words which had passed into colloquial Gk. are found. Such are centurion, speculator, quadrans, census, and denarius. There are 10 peculiar words not found elsewhere. The grammar is rough, and there are several Aram, words transliterated into Gk. Such are Boanerges (3.17), Taleitha koum (5.41), Ephphatha (7. 34), Abba (14.36): and the words Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthanei (15. 34), represent our Lord using a Hebraized form of the Aram, name for God. There are a number of Aram, idioms (6.7,39,40). There are Aram, phrases (3.28,5.43,16.2). Prepositions are repeated after compound verbs, and the participle of verbs is used with the imperfect indicative of " to be " or " to become." These important irregularities have led to the theory that this gospel was first written in Aram, and then translated into Gk. This theory is not im- possible ; but it is opposed to the singular freshness of the style, and also to the most ancient traditions as to the date of composition. If St. Mark wrote in Rome after SS. Peter and Paul had gone there, it is most unlikely that he would have written in any language but Gk., which was the common language of Christians in Rome for a long period. All we can affirm is that the evangelist had learnt to think in Aram, before he could think and write in Gk. Freshness of detail, graphic touches describing the looks, gestures, and conduct of our Lord and the feelings of those who sur- rormded Him, characterize Mk. It is the most life-like of the gospels. Only here do we learn that SS. Simon and Andrew lived together (1. 29), how the mud roof was broken to let the paralytic through it (2.4), that there was a single pillow in the boat in which Christ slept (4.38), that the five thousand on the grass looked like " garden beds " (6.40), that Jesus took little children into His arms (9.36,10.16), how He looked at the rich young man (lO.aif.), how a denarius, a Roman coin, was brought MARK, GOSPEL, ACC. TO ST. 511 into the temple, where only Jewish money was current (I2.15). St. Mark, too, knows the names of Levi's father (Alphaeus, 2.14) and of the sons of Simon of Cyxene (Alexander and Rufus, probably familiar names in the church at Rome; 15. 21). The emotions of our Lord are far more often described by St. Mark than by SS. Matthew and Luke. Only St. Mark records His sternness in the matter recorded in 1.43 ; His grief in 3.5 ; His wonder at the people's unbelief (6.6) ; His indignation at the disciples (10. 14) ; the amazement mingled with our Lord's grief in the Agony (14. 33). While such emotions are recorded with great simplicity and reverent boldness, there is no toning down of the truth of our Lord's divine origin and supernatural authority. He is essentially and throughout the Son of God (1.1,3.11,5.7, C/.I5.39). He is " the Holy One of God " (I.24), and God's " beloved Son " (1.11,9.7). His death has an atoning power, only possible in the death of One both divine and human (10.45,14.24). He is " the Son of Man," the supernatural Messiah and repre- sentative of mankind, who will come hereafter in glory (d.38,14.62). He has authority to forgive sins (2.5,10), and can abrogate the Jewish law, being " lord of the sabbath " (2. 28). He knows the thoughts of man (2.8,8. 17, 12.15), and knows what will happen in the future (2.20). He foretells His Passion (8.31, 9.31), the destruction of the temple (13.2), the universal Gospel (13. 10). He is not with- out human limitations — just as He sleeps, eats, and drinks. He asks for information (5.9,8.5, 9.16), and, as man, says that He is ignorant of the day of judgment (13. 32). This is the one authentic instance of Christ so speaking, and even in this passage He puts himself apart in the matter of knowledge, above all beings ex- cept the Father. St. Mark records numerous references made by our Lord to O.T., though fewer than SS. Matthew or Luke, but the only quotations made by St. Mark himself are in 1.2,3 (Mal.3.i ; Is.40.3) and 15.28 (ls.53.i2). On the other hand, there are 1 8 miracles, only two less than in the much longer gospel of St. Matthew. The two peculiar to Mk. are the healing of the deaf stammerer (7.3iff.) and of the blind man at Bethsaida (8.22ff. ). The only parable peculiar to Mk. is that of the seed growing secretly (4.26ff). One of the most distinctive features of Mk. is the clearness with which it shows how our Lord trained His dis- ciples, and relates the dulness of His friends and apostles. St. Mark relates how early in Christ's ministry His friends (3.2 1) said that He was mad, and that " His mother and His brethren" (3.31) sought to bring Him back. He also notices Christ's silence at the disciples' obtrusive remonstrance (5.31,32), His care in bidding them to rest (6.31), His rebuke of their childish misinterpretation of His words (8.17), their lack of intelligence when He speaks of His Death and Resurrection (9.32), their dispute about their own precedence (9.34), their hesita- tion in following Him to Jerusalem (10. 32). St. Mark alone tells us of the wonder of Pilate at His death, and his inquiry of the centurion (15. 44). St. Mark's love of vividness in style leads him sometimes to a use of redundant ex- pressions, which SS. Matthew and Luke omit. 512 MARKET-PIiACE The old theory that he " abbreviated " their gospels must be abandoned for the theory that they frequently abbreviated Mk., even omit- ting details of interest. Great caution is necessary in accepting the theory that SS. Matthew and Luke deliberately removed possible stumbling-blocks which the " can- dour " of St. Mark narrated (e.g. Mk. 1.32,34, cf. Mt.8.i6 and Lu.4.40 ; Mk.l.45, cf. Mt.4.25 and Lu.5.15 ; Mk.6.5f., cf. Mt.i3.58 ; Mk.7.24, cf. Mt.l5.2i ; Mk. 10.35, cf. Mt.20.2O ; Mk.ll. 20, cf. Mt.2i.19). It is at least possible that in some cases SS. Matthew and Luke are follow- ing the Logia when they show divergences from Mk. This is also more probable than the hypothesis that SS. Matthew and Luke used an older version of Mk. into which variations were afterwards inserted. Our Mk. is, with the exception of its ending, the Mk. used by SS. Matthew and Luke. It is highly primitive, reaUstic, historical, and practical. Having fewer Hebraisms than Mt. and fewer Grecisms than Lu., it is a gospel well fitted for the Chris- tians of Rome amongst whom St. Peter preached. [l-P-] Mapket-place. The Gk. ayopd signified any open space, originally used for the pur- pose of assembly. Hence it suggests any open or public place, in contrast with what goes on in privacy. It is found in N.T. in connexion with business dealings (Mt.20.3 ; Mk.7.4), with children's games (Mt.ll.i6 ; Lu.7.32), with the greetings of passers-by (Mt.23.7 ; Lu.ll.43), with trials (Ac.l6.19), and (in Athens) with public discussions (Ac. 17. 17). [t.a.m.] Map'moth (iEsd.8.62) = Meremoth, i. Mapoth' (bitterness, sadness), one of the towns of the W. lowland of J udah whose names are played upon by the prophet Micah (l.r2). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Mappiag-e. The institution of human marriage is commonly regarded from one or other of two points of view. Either it is con- sidered as the merely human regulation of the sexual relation involved in human nature as we find it, or it is regarded as a divine institution, having laws and regulations imposed by God. The second of these standpoints is indicated by our Lord Jesus Christ : "What therefore (lod hath joined together, let no man put asunder" (Mt.l9.G ; Mk.lO.9). It will be adopted in this article. In Holy Scripture the divine laws may best be considered under three heads : (i) marriage as instituted in the state of iimocence ; (2) marriage as retained after the Fall by perverted man ; (3) Christian marriage. — I. Marriage in the State of Inno- cence. Such indications as are given in the early chapters of Genesis show the race as descended from a single pair. Polygamy is not liere con- templated (Gen.2.i8) ; nor does divorce find place in the primal institution (Mt.19.8). — II. Marriage after the Fall. If neither polygamy nor divorce found place in marriage as God instituted it, both are very generally found in the marriage usages of Asiatic peoples in his- toric times. The narrative of Genesis sliows polygamy already in the case of Laniech (Gen. 4.19), polygamy with divorce in tliat of Ahrani (16.) These features would appear to have been introduced into the divine institution by perverted man ; and both polygamy and MARRIAGE divorce are suffered and regulated in the codes of the Pentateuch. We are told that God suffered these declensions for a time " for the hardness of men's hearts" (Mt.19.8). Man was not yet reconciled ; and in the time of education these faults could be left alone. If, however, polygamy and divorce are found to be suffered, there is ordinarily no sufferance of the marriage of near kin, which is esteemed un- holy. It is probable that in the vast majority of cases the marriages of the Israelites would show the life-long union of one man with one woman, as is the case with poor Moham- medans at the present day. The addition of one servant-wife would be the most usual form of polygamy. Two marriage codes may be discriminated in the Pentateuch. The regulations of Deuteronomy are foimd in ch. 21-24, those of Leviticus in ch. 18, 20. There are also other regulations in Exodus (ch. 21). A. Polygamy. The Codes, (i) A woman to her sister. The prohibition of " a woman to her sister . . . beside the other in her lifetime " (Lev.l8.i8) seems to admit polygamy in cases not so barred. (2) Slave wives. The provision that a slave wife is to retain undiminished her food, her raiment, and her duty of marriage, if the master " take him another," is clearly a toleration of polygamy (Ex. 21. 10). (3) Royal polygamy. The pro- vision affecting the marriage of kings (" neither shall he multiply wives to himself, that his heart turn not away ") must be un- derstood to bar only the unrestrained licence of Asiatic monarchs, of which Solomon is a notable example (Deut.l7.i7). ^4) Ceremonial checks. The ceremonial uncleanness following the copula, taken together with the right of each wife, anxountsto a distinct check upon the extent of the polygamy suffered (Lev.l5.i8). (5) Laws of inheritance. The law governing the distribution of property as between the sons of two wives gives a certain sanction to such marriages with two wives (Deut.21. 15-17). (6) Captives of war. The permission to take as wi\'es the women captured in war clearly admits polygamy (Deut.20.T3-i5). But such unions are restricted : (a) the woman is to be free from solicitation for a month after cajiture ; (h) she is then, if tlie man desire it. to be his 'Wife ; (c) if he tire of her, he is not to sell lier, but to let her go whither she will, because he has humbled her (Deut.21. 10-14). Summing up these provisions as they affect polygamy, it a])|H'ars (a) that they find the practice admitted, {!>) that tliey regulate and restrict it, (f) that they do not condenui it. — Practice of the Hebrew people. The following instances may be noted. " Gideon had three- score and ten sons of his body begotten : for he had many wives" (Judg.8.30); Elkanah hadtwo wives (iSam.1.2) ; Saul had wives which were afterwards given into David's " bosom " (2 Sam. 12.8); David took him more concubines and wives out of Jerusalem, after he was come frniu Hebron (5.13); Solomon "had seven liundred wives, ]irincesses, and tliree hundred ciiii(ul)ines " (1K.II.3) ; tlie sons of Issachar "had many wives and sons" (iChr.7.|) : Husliim and Baara were wives of Shaharaini (8.8) ; Rehoboam " took eighteen wives ami threescore concubines " (2Chr.ll. 21) ; Abijah MARRIAGE tnarried fourteen wives (13. 21) ; Jehoiada took for Joash two wives (24.3). Polygamy must be inferred from the 30 sons of J air the Gileadite (Judg.10.4) ; from the 30 sons and 30 daughters of Ibzan of Bethlehem (I2.9) ; from the 40 sons of Abdon (12. 14). Holy Scripture contains no instance of polygamy in the post-Baby- lonian period. The practice was then probably rare. Josephus states that Herod the Great had nine wives at one time (17 Ant. i. 3). The gospels have no mention of poly- gamy as contemporaneously practised. But in the Mishna, treatise Yebamoth (? 220 A.D.), there is con- stant reference to the two or more wives of one man, the appellation used being zaroth, i.e. adversaries or rivals. There has been but little practice of polygamy among the Jews in later times. B. Divorce. The permission to divorce a wife, if the husband have " found some uncleanness in her," is clearly given in Deut.24. 1-4. He is to " write her a bill of divorcement, and give it in her hand, and send her out of his house." She is then free to marry again. The phrase rendered "some uncleanness" (R.V. "un- seemly thing ") is literally the "nakedness of a thing " {'erwath dabhdr). The exact meaning of the phrase has been disputed [Divorce], but that divorce was permitted for the ground here indicated is undeni- able. It is clear, however, that although the code of Deuteronomy suffers the practice of divorce, it neither originated the practice nor rendered it more easy. The regulations are in the direction of restraint, not in that of en- couragement. Some ground of uncleanness is required, and a formal document, the bill of divorcement, must be given. There are in- dications of a sense of unholiness attaching to divorce. Priests are forbidden to marry divorced women (Lev. 21. 7). The prophet Malachi writes, " The Lord, the God of Israel, saith that He hateth putting away " (Mal.2. 16). Our Lord confirms this attitude (Mt. 19.8). Divorce seems to have been freely practised. The tone in our Lord's time may be seen in the opinion of the disciples that without freedom of divorce marriage was too hazardous (Mt.l9. 10). (See also Divorce.) C. Forbidden Degrees. Next may be noticed the prohibitions of marriage on grounds of kinship. If in the codes of the Pentateuch concessions are admitted in the matters of polygamy and divorce, there is no tone of con- cession as to the marriage of near kin. The prohibitions are introduced (Lev. 18. 3) with a warning that the children of Israel are not to do " after the doings of the land of Egypt," or " after the doings of the land of Canaan," and are followed by a warning to obey, " that the land whither I bring you to dwell therein, spue kARRIAGE 513 you not out " (20.22). We infer that these prohibitions are held to be binding on all men by the law of nature, at least in a fallen state in which the " uncovering of the nakedness " of near kin is consciously shameful. The list of prohibited degrees includes a considerable number of relationships of affinity, as well as of consanguinity. They may be best shown in tabular form :^ Table of Marriages forbidden (to the Man) Consan- No. guinity or Affinity. Prohibitions of Lev. 18. Penalties of Lev. 20. I Con. Mother. 2. Aff. Father's wife.* Death to both. 3- Con. Sister (including half- sister).* Cut off. 4. Con. Son's daughter. 5. Con. Daughter's daughter. 6. Con. Father's sister. Bear their iniquity. 7. Con. Mother's sister. Bear their iniquity. 8. Aff. Father's brother's wife. Die childless. 9- Aff. Son's wife. Death to both. 10. Aff. Brother's wife. Childless. II. Aff Wife's daughter '^ (" woman and her | daughter"). Wife's mother.* J All three to be burnt. 12 Aff. 13- Aff. Wife's son's daughter. 14. Aff. Wife's daughter's daughter. 15. (Aff.) (Wife's sister ?). A curse attached to these in Deut. 27. 20,22,23. In such an enumeration it would be unreason- able to expect exhaustive completeness or analytical arrangement. There is (a) a pre- amble, (&) a general enactment : " None of you shall approach to any that is near of kin to him to uncover their nakedness : I am the Lord " (Lev.18.6) ; (c) a number of representative cases. The cases thus expressed are defective on any possible principle, if regarded as an exhaustive statement ; while there is some redundancy (18. 11). But the prohibitions appear to involve certain great principles : (a) that near relationship of blood is a bar, involv- ing all ascendants and descendants, but only the nearer cases of collaterals ; (b) that near re- lationship of affinity, or connexion by marriage, is a bar, because a man and his wife are one bdsdr, flesh or kin (of the 14 relationships certainly barred, 6 are relationships of con- sanguinity and 8 of affinity) ; (c) that re- lationship through the woman is precisely analogous to relationship through the man. The application of these principles will be found to result in the expanded table familiar to English Churchmen in the pages of the Prayer Book. It is not indeed to be asserted that such logical expansion always found ac- ceptance among the Hebrew people ; but that principles are recognized as binding outside the actual enumeration may be gathered from the lament of Amos, "A man and his father will go in unto the same maid, to profane My holy Name " (Am.2.7.) The case of the wife's sister has been the occasion of much 33 514 MARRIAGE controversy. It is beyond all question one of the nearest of the relationships of affinity. As such it must be held to be barred by the great scriptural principle of marriage unity, that a man and his wife arc one bdscir, flesh or kin. This principle, unrecognized by other ancient codes (e.g. Roman and Hindu systems), is un- reservedly stated in the account of the Creation in Genesis (Gen. 2.24), in the provisions of Levi- ticus (Lev. 18. 8, 16). in the teaching of our Lord (Mt.19.3 : Mk.10.8), and in that of St. Paul (iCor.6.if)). It is the principle which governs the prohibitions of marriage in cases of affinity. Thus, " the nakedness of thy father's wife shalt thou not uncover : it is thy father's nakedness " (Lev. 18.8). The father and the father's wife are one bdsdr. Similarly, in ordinary cases marriage with a husband's brother is pro- hibited, the penalty of childlessness being in- dicated. It is clear that if the principle of one bdsdr is to be applied logically, the mar- riage of a man with his deceased wife's sister is not permissible. But the actual prohibi- tion of 18. 18 is, " Neither shalt thou take a wife to her sister, to vex her, to uncover her nakedness, beside the other in her lifetime." The case indicated is such a case as that of Leah and Rachel, the wives of Jacob. Its significance lies probably in the emphasis with which it is insisted that even the honoured e.xample of Jacob must not be followed in this matter. There may be no thought of other cases of marriage with a wife's sister. But the marriage of a man with the sister of his de- ceased wife is not in this verse expressly barred. And in history it does not appear that the Jewish people have commonly disallowed such marriages, but Christian practice undoubtedly has. The levirate law is considered elsewhere. [Levirate Law.] If the prohibition of mar- riage with a brother's wife is ordinarily to be insisted on because of the nearness of kin, rendering such marriage vmholy and involving the penalty of childlessness, the levirate law must probably be regarded as a temporary concession to established practice, analogous to the concessions of polygamy and divorce. Reference may here be made to the strong con- demnation by St. John the Baptist of Herod's marriage with Herodias, his brother Philip's wife (Mt. 14.3, 4 ; Mk. 6.17,18 ; Lu.3.19). St. Mark gives the words of the BajHist thus : " It is not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife." Herodias was the divorced wife of Philip, who was still living. This no doubt was felt to be an aggravation of the offence. But under the existing law and jiractice of the Jews, divorce was admissible, while the mar- riage with a brother's wife was no*^. It must therefore be understood that the condemna- tion f>f the Baptist had to do mainly with the bar of affinity. For the prohibition of marriages with non-Israelites, see Mixed Makkiaoes. — III. Christian Marriage. Our Lord, in the Sermon on the Mount, asserted that He was not come todestroy the law, l)ut to fulfil ; and further, that unless the righteous- ness i>{ his hearers should exceed the righteous- ness of the scribes ami Pharisees, they should in no case enter into the kingdom f>f heaven (Mt.6.20). Among the instances of this principle is that of the law of Divorce (Mt.5. MARRIAOE 32), dealt with under that head. The Western Church has consistently barred all remarriage after divorce, as representing the true mind of our Lord ; and that this could be done in the face of the laxity of consensual divorce pre- valent in the Roman empire is sufficient evidence of the strength of the early convic- tion. In the Eastern Churches divorce is admitted for various causes. Polygamy has never been suffered among Christians, but in apostolic times there was no practical diffi- culty with regard to it. .\t the time of our Lord there appears to have been no practice of polygamy among the Jews; and as regards the Roman empire, the law of Rome did not suffer a man to hold two women as in any sense his wives at one and tiie same time. Thus by the Roman law, if a man had a legally recog- nized concubine, he could not at the same time have a legal wife. Polygamy thus nowhere confronted the Christian in apostolic times. It was never jiermitted to him at any time. The requirement of St. Paul in iTim.3.2 that a bishop be " the husband of one wife " has been generally understood to bar those who had married more than once in successive mar- riages. It is analogous to the requirement that a widow on the cliurch roll should have been the wife of one man (iTim.5.9). .As re- gards prohibited degrees, the two codes of law with which the first Christians had to do, the Jewish and the Roman, were agreed in con- demning most near unions, alike of consan- guinity and of affinity. Thus St. Paul notices an aggravation of the sin of the incestuous Corinthian with his step-mother that it was a " fornication . . . not so much as named among the Gentiles" (iCor.S.i). To an obedient Christian no question could arise, except as regards relationships outside the consent of the Jewish and the Roman codes. The Christian Cluirch seems to have accepted from the first the princiiile of the Roman law that the consent of the parties was in all cases essential tf) a valid marriage. This principle had not been recognized by the Jewish law. Christians could not, however, accept the principle of the Roman law that marriage was a contract pure and simple, in which notiiing could be recognized which the contract had not placed there. To them marriage was an " honourable estate instituted of God," and accordingly the nature, i)bligations, and privi- leges of marriage were to be sought not only or chiefly in the terms and conditions of the con- tract, but in the institution of the Founder (iCor.7; Lph.5). — .Marriage Procedure, (a) Hehreiv marriages. In O.T. marriages may be distinguished (i) the choice of the bride, (2) the betrothal, (3) the wedding, (i) In pat- riarchal times the head of the man's family, usuallv the father, chooses the bride (Gen. 24. 3,28.1,38.0). Hagar chooses a wife for Ishmael (21.2 1). The woman is regarded as subject to her father's control (29. n))- Listances occur of direct choice bv the bridegroom — e.g. Esau (26.34), Jacob (29.i8). In later times, as in earlier, marriages seem to have been more usually arranged for the parties than by them. (2) Legallv the marriage was effected by the act of betrothal, the (-hief feature of which was the pavmciit bv the bridegroom of the moliar MARRlAOfi to the parent or guardian of the bride. The mohar was not a dowry which the bride brought with her, nor was it a donatio propter nuptias, or settlement on the bride by the bridegroom. It was an exchange or purchase-money paid by the bridegroom to the parents of the bride (Deut. 22.29). The bride's consent was unne- cessary. The law has no reference to it. Once the mohar was paid, the betrothal was effected. The bridegroom was then at liberty to take his wife home when it was convenient to him. (3) The actual wedding was the solemn home- bringing of the bride to her husband's house. The bridegroom, fitly arrayed, came with his companions (Mt.9.15) to the bride's house to fetch her. She, in wedding-attire, and veiled, came forth with her companions, and the marriage procession took place. It was commonly at night, and by torchlight. It was characterized by such pomp and circum- stance as were available. There would gener- ally be music and singing (Gen.3i.27 ; Je.7. 34). On the way the procession might be joined by other* companions (Mt.25.6). The marriage feast took place in the bridegroom's house (22.4,25.10). (b) Christian marriages. The marriages of Gentile Christians in the Ro- man empire in apostolic times were doubtless in accordance with Roman custom. The pro- cedure would include (i) the sponsalia, and (2) the wedding. These might be separated by an interval of time, or the marriage might follow the sponsalia directly, (i) At the sponsalia the tables were signed after some or all of the subsidiary ceremonies of (i) the arrhae, (ii) the ring, (iii) the kiss, (iv) the joining of hands. The benediction of the Christian bishop or priest seems to have found place at Christian espousals from the earliest times probably, as a rule after the signing of the tables. The congratulations of the friends followed. (2) The actual wed- ding was by Roman custom, as by Jewish, the ceremonial home-coming of the bride. She would be adorned in the usual way with the long white robe, the girdle, and the yellow bridal veil and shoes, with her hair loosed, or bound only in a net, and crowned with a floral wreath. As with the Jewish marriages, there would be the torchlight procession, the supporters and friends in attendance, and the singing by the way. There would be, further, the ceremonial salutation of the door- posts, and the carrying the bride across the threshold of her new home. The husband would be ready with the fire and water to wel- come her, the marriage feast would be set out, the lectus genialis solemnly prepared. It was not till later times that there would be any religious ceremonial in the public congregation, and historically the Christian practice of mar- riage in church appears to have grown out of the general wish for the celebration of the Holy Eucharist on the occasion. Such celebration is mentioned in the 2nd cent, (confirmat abla- tio— Tertullian, Ad Uxorem ii. 9). [Crimes; Family ; Law in O.T.] Selden, Uxor Hebraica ; Kalisch, The Matrimonial Laws of the Hebrews ; Watkins, Holy Matrimony (1895) ; Thiersch, Das Verbot der Ehe in- nerhalb der nahen Verwandtschaft (1869). For Christian canon law : Freisen, Canonisches MARTHA 515 Eherecht (1888); Zhishmann, Eherecht der Orientalischen Kirche (1864). [o.d.w.] Maps' Hill, better known by the name Areopagus, of which the " hill of Mars " or Ares is a translation, is a rocky height in Athens, opposite the W. end of the Acropolis, and separated from it only by an elevated valley. It is memorable as the place of meeting of the Council of Areopagus, frequently called the Upper Council to distinguish it from the Council of Five Hundred which held its sittings in the valley below. It existed as a criminal tribunal before the time of Solon, and was the most ancient and venerable of all the Athenian courts. It consisted of all persons who had held the office of Archon, who were members of it for life unless expelled for misconduct. It enjoyed a high reputation throughout Greece. Before the time of Solon the court tried only cases of wilful murder, wounding, poison, and arson ; but he gave it extensive powers of a censorial and political nature. The Council con- tinued to exist even under the Roman emperors. Its meetings were held on the S.E. summit of the rock. There are still 16 stone steps cut in the rock, leading up to the hill from the valley of the Agora ; and immediately above the steps is a bench of stones excavated in the rock, forming 3 sides of a quadrangle, and facing the S. Here the Areopagites sat as judges in the open air. On the E. and W. sides is a raised block. The Areopagus possesses peculiar inter- est to the Christian, as the place from which St. Paul delivered his memorable address to the men of Athens (Ac.17.22-31). It has been supposed by some that St. Paul was brought before the Council of Areopagus ; but there is no trace in the narrative of any judicial pro- ceedings. St. Paul " disputed daily " in the "market" or Agora (17. 17), which was situated S. of the Areopagus in the valley between this hill and the hills of the Acropolis, the Pnyx and the Museum. Attracting more and more attention, " certain philosophers of the Epicureans and Stoicks " brought him up from the valley, probably by the stone steps already mentioned, to the Areopagus, that they might listen to him more conveniently. Here the philosophers possibly took their seats on the stone benches, while the multitude stood upon the steps and in the valley below. Mapsena^ one of the 7 princes of Persia and Media, counsellors of Ahasuerus (Esth.l.14). Maptha. The only person of this name in the Bible is the elder sister of Mary and Lazarus, mentioned in Lu.lO.38ff. and Jn. 11. iff., 12.2. These three were honoured in being specially loved by our Lord, andat their home in Bethany He spent much of the last few days of His life on earth. In all three passages cited above Martha comes before us as the busy, active house- keeper, anxious to entertain her guests with an almost excessive hospitality, rather than, like her sister, to profit by their society and in- tercourse— this characteristic being specially marked when her guest was the Son of Man, and He gently rebuked her for this fault. It has been conjectured with some plausibility, in order to reconcile the various anointings, that she was the wife of Simon the leper (Mt.26.6 ; Mk.14.3) whose house was at Bethan}'. [Simon, 9 ; Mary of Bethany.] In any case, she 516 MARY MARY MAGDALENE AKL'J|■Al;^■-^. UR MAK^' H1LI-, AT AriU-NS. (Showing the steps that led from the Agora lo the top of the hill.) See art. and her sister held a good position in the vil- lage where they lived (Jn. 11, 19,30,33,45,46). In the account of the raising of Lazarus we find further signs of the practical nature of her affections and interests — even her confidence in our Lord is limited by considerations of common sense and reason {vv. 11,12,28,39). A somewhat late tradition connects Martha as well as Mary and Lazarus with the early history of the church in S. France. Adeney's art. in Hastings, D.B. (5 vols. 1904), gives the best authorities for this. [c.l.f.1 Mapy (Ro.16.6), a Roman Christian who ministered to St. Paul. Mapy Mag'dalene (17 MaySaX-qv-q). The best explanation of the name is, that she came from tlie town of Magdala, or Magadan, near Tiberias. Oheyne (Encyc. Bib. 1635) sug- gests Migdal-nunia, near Tiberias. Magdala was famous for its wealth, but its citizens had a bad character for licentiousness, (i) Mary was one of the company of women (Lu.8.2) who ministered to Christ of their substance. It is said that " seven devils went out of licr." We must think of her as having liad " in their most aggravated forms some of the phenomena of mental and spiritual disease which we meet with in other demoniacs, the wretchedness of despair, the divided consciousness, the pre- ternatural frenzy, the long-continued fits of silence" (Pluinptre). At the Crucifixion slu- was one who " stood afar off " (Lu.23.49;, and then followed the body of Jesus to the grave. On Easter Day she came with the others [Mary of Cleophas] to anoint His body. Hurrying on, she found the stone rolled away and rushed ofT to fetch SS. Peter and John (Jn.20.2). Again returning after they had left, and stooping to look in, she saw two angels, and repeated, as one in a dream, what she had said to the apostles. Turning round, she failed to recognize the risen Lord, sup- posing Him to be the gardener. Her name spoken by Him brings joyful recognition in the cry " Rabboni." This was a title of reverence, but she must be taught that the old life of companionship was at an end. Touch Me not. When Christ had ascended, a closer communion in the spirit would be granted. (2) Mary Magdalene has been identified with the woman who was a sinner, and with Mary of Bethany. Probably these were two distinct incidents. Lu. 7. 36-50 describes how a poor sinner washed the Lord's feet in the house of Simon the Pharisee. Jn.i2.1-9 narrates the anointing of His head with precious ointment in the house of Martha and Mary. We can only say that the identification is improbable in either case. But it has become the tradi- tion of the Western Church, e.g. in the services for the Feast of St. Mary Magdalene. The translators of R.V. assumed it, as did Bishop MARY, MOTHER OF MARK Andrewes, Donne, Jeremj^ Taylor, Dr. Pusey, and other Anglican divines. [a.e.b.] Mapy, mothep of Mapk, auni to Barna- bas (Col.^.io), and evidently a wealthy widow, owned a house at Jerusalem large enough to be a principal meeting-place of the local church (Ac.i2.12). St. Peter probably lodged there (12. 12), and, becoming intimate with her son, effected his conversion (iPe.5.13). [c.h.] Mapy of Bethany, the sister of Lazarus. All that is certain about her is that which is re- corded in Lu.lO.38ff., Jn.ll.iff.,12.iff. These three passages reveal her as the direct contrast to her sister Martha in character. On the first occasion, while Martha is busy in preparing food and in waiting on her much-loved Guest, Mary sits at His feet and listens to His gracious talk, being exonerated by Him from the rebuke which Martha asks Him to join her in administering for her idleness. In the ac- count of her brother's raising from the dead, but few words of hers are recorded. When our Lord's arrival is announced, she remains in the house till Martha secretly summons her to Him. Thereupon she goes out quickly, without ex- planation, and falUng at His feet, simply echoes her sister's lament, " Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother had not died." It is perhaps significant that the mourners are, three times out of the four, said to have come to Mary, not to Martha (the elder sister) : see vv. 31, 33, and 45 compared with ver. 19. At the supper in their house six days before the Passover at which our Lord suffered, Mary's act was again characteristic. From the worldly point of view it was wasteful and unpractical to take a pound of costly ointment in order to anoint her Friend and Master's feet, and then wipe it off with her hair ; but, as before, she was exonerated from blame by our Lord Himself, Who expressed His approval of the act as done against the day of His burial. Nothing further is known of this Mary, unless the identification with Mary Magdalene is correct. For mediaeval legends about her, see Martha. [c.l.f.] Mapy of Cleophas (.\.V. marg. and R.V.; properly Clopas) is mentioned (Jn.19.25) as standing by the cross. If, as a reference to the parallels (Mt. 27.56 ; Mk.i5.40) renders probable, she is identical with " Mary the mother of James and Joseph [Joses]" [James ; Alphaeus], she had followed Jesus in Galilee, and ministered to Him of her substance. She and Mary Magdalene watched our Lord's burial, and remained sitting disconsolately opposite the sepulchre (Mt.27.6r ; Mk.i5.47). Very early on Easter morning she and Salome and Mary Magdalene went to the sepulchre with the spices, which thev had prepared on Friday night (Mt.28.i ; Mk.16.1 ; Lu.23.56), and heard the words of the angel announcing the Resurrection. As they returned, they met the risen Lord (Mt.28.9). Several diffi- culties are connected with Mary's name. ( I ) Was Clopas her husband or her father ? R.V. and A.V. translate Mapta 17 rod KXcottS, " Mary the wife of Clopas." But (there being no indication to the contrary in the context) the natural translation is, "Mary the daughter of Clopas." (2) Was this Mary the Virgin's sister? A cursory reading of Jn.19.25 sug- gests it, bitt further consideration renders it MARY, THE BLESSED VIRGIN 517 doubtful. From Mk.i5.40, Mt. 27.56, we learn that besides the Virgin, and Mary Magdalene, and Mary of Clopas, a fourth woman stood by the cross. Her name was Salome, and she was St. John's mother. It is probable there- fore, especially as St. John would not be likely to ignore the presence of his own mother, that the Virgin's sister of J n. 19. 2 5 is not Mary of Clopas, but Salome. The omission of Kal before Mapt'a is not fatal to this view (see Mt.lO.2-4). For (3) Was Clopas the same as Alphaeus ? see Alphaeus ; (4) Were Mary's sons the " brethren of the Lord " ? and (5) Was her son James an apostle? see James. [c.h.] Mapy, the Blessed Vipgin. Holy Scriptxrre tells us of St. Mary only in so far as she is connected with our Lord. Consequently we find no mention whatever of her before the visit of the archangel Gabriel or after the narration of the descent of the Paraclete. But owing to her unique position in the history of our Redemption, the passages in which she is mentioned, and even those which only in- directly refer to her, are of immense import- ance, bearing as they do so closely upon the fact of the Incarnation. Of Mary's personal history we are only told her name, her lineage (though even this is not quite certain), that she lived at Nazareth, that she had a sister, that she was related to St. EUsabeth, the mother of St. John Baptist, that she was betrothed to one named Joseph who was a carpenter, and that after the Death and Resurrection of her Son (her husband presumably being dead too), she made her home with the apostle J ohn. — Her name was the common Jewish name of Mary, the Gk. MapLd/j., the same in the original as that of the sister of Moses (Ex. 15. 20). In the gospel St. Elisabeth speaks of her as " the mother of my Lord," 17 ixr^r-qp rod Kvpiov fiov (Lu.1.43) ; St. John once only, and the writer of the Acts once only, calls her the mother of Jesus (Jn.2.i ; Ac.l.14) ; most commonly she is called simply " His mother " (nine times) or " Mary " (eleven times). On the first of the three occasions on which our Lord is recorded to have addressed her, He uses no title, though it may be noticed that on that occasion He seems to have been addressing St. Joseph also (Lu.2.48) ; on the other two He uses the common title of respect, yvvai, translated in E.V. " woman " (Jn.2.4,19.26). — Her Lineage- We cannot be sure that St. Mary as well as St. Joseph belonged to the house of David. The genealogies given by SS. Matthew and Luke are both of them almost certamly the genealogies of St. Joseph and not of St. Mary ; St. Luke's words in I.27 ("of the house of David ") are ambiguous ; they may belong to either Joseph or Mary. In 2.4 St. Luke ex- pressly mentions Joseph only. Still, in none of these passages is it said that St. Mary was not of the lineage of David. Some have thought that the fact of her being related to St. Elisabeth, whom we know to have been descended from Aaron, proves that St. Mary was not of the tribe of Judah. On the other hand, St. Paul's words in R0.I.3, " Who was born of the seed of David according to the flesh," have been understood as referring to our Lord's actual birth r^tijer tjiaft to bis 518 MARY, THE BLESSED VIRGIN birthright as the legal heir of Joseph, in which case, of course, they must imply that His mother, as well as His foster-father, was of Davidic lineage. St. Mary is described by SS. Matthew and Luke as a virgin at the time of the conception and of the nativity of her Son, and as such she has been regarded by the Catholic Church in all ages. With regard to this belief, it must be said in the first place that some such mode of generation as that of the Virgin Birth is required by the necessity of the case. The necessity of the case was that One should be born Who could become the new Head of the human race. Who should become related, not to one human personality, but to Human-kind in general. Ordinary birth results inevitably in the transmission of a tainted human nature and in a personality distinct and separate from all other persona- lities. Human-kind needed a perfect repre- sentative and a second Head. Granting for a moment the necessity for a mode of generation which should cut off the entail of sinfulness and provide for mankind a second Head, from VVhose human nature mankind might retrieve what it had lost in Adam, we can readily understand the fitness of the birth which is described in the first and third gospels. And we can go on to consider the credibility of the account there given with reference to the ob- jections urged against it. With regard to the objection on the score of its miraculous nature the Virgin Birth must stand or fall with the whole miraculous element of the gospel narra- tive. H we refuse to accept anything which may be described, to use the term commonly employed, as miraculous, the Virgin Birth must of course be rejected. If, on the other hand, we adopt an attitude of at least an un- willingness to dismiss as incredible all that lies outside our complete apprehension, we shall probably feel that the Virgin Birth and the sujiernatural element of the gospels generally is but the natural and fitting accompaniment of the manifestation of Him Whose glory the evangelists beheld full of grace and truth. And we may go on to inquire whether the ob- jections urged against the narratives of SS. Matthew and Luke are really valid against them. It has been urged that the silence of the other evangelists and of St. Paul are fatal to what SS. Matthew and Luke tell us. But it may be said, in answer, that to narrate the birth and infancy of our Lord comes within the scope of neither of the other evangelists nor of St. I'aul. St. Mark sets out witli tiie clear intention of recording tiie public ministry of our Lord, and obviously the narration of the birth does not come within his proper scope. St. John, writing after the other gospels were well known in the Church, is not only con- cerned with a different portion of our Lord's ministry, but is largely occupied with the prin- ciples which imderlie the facts narrated by the Synoptists rather than with the facts them- selves; as this explains his omission of the ac- count of the institution of the Eucharist, so it may also explain why he docs not narrate the history of the Lord's birth. So, too, St. Paul — his letters are written with a wholly different objei t from that of supplying the facts of our l^ord'ii life i stiil less dues it come within the MARY, THE BLESSED VIRGIN scope of his writing to speak in any detail of those facts. Another objection has been found in the fact that the evangelists of the Nativity do not themselves mention it after their opening chapters, and that they even speak of the Lord as though He were the Son of Joseph (e.g. Mt. 13.55 ; Lu. 2. 48, 4.22;. But clearly the Lord must have passed for the Son of Joseph during His earthly life, since not to have done so would have been to bring that very shame on His Mother which Josepli was so anxious to avoid (Mt.Lig) ; and He would no doubt have addressed Joseph as " father," as being the obvious title for one who was His foster-father and the natural protector of His childhood. And SS. Matthew and Luke do but prove themselves honest and true his- torians by narrating the actual words of the contemporary men and women, from whom the miraculous circumstances of the birth had been concealed. Again, it is urged that there is so much discrepancy between the accounts of SS. Matthew and Luke themselves, that it casts doubts upon their credibility. Against this objection it may be urged (i) that there is no discrepancy between them as to the main assertion made by both that the Lord's Mother was a virgin at the time of His conception and nativity, and that she was enabled to become a mother whilst retaining her virgin- ity by the power of the Holy Ghost ; (2) that to say that St. Matthew " knew nothing " of a previous residence of St. Mary at Nazareth, and that St. Luke " knew nothing " of the flight into Egypt, is only to say that in the documents used respectively by the two evangelists for the compilation of their narra- tives those particular incidents were perhaps not mentioned ; and (iii) that we should naturally expect a different point of view in narratives which bear upon them so plainly the evidence of being derived from such differ- ent sources, St. Matthew having clearly de- rived his information, whether directly or not, from St. Joseph, St. Luke even more clearly from the Lord's Mother. It may, therefore, be said that the virginity of St. Mary can only be denied at the cost of the repudiation of the belief of the universal Church as formulated in the Catholic Creeds, and of the early chapters of the first and third gospels,, and it may further be questioned whether the birth of the Redeemer as the natural son of Josejih and Mary could have met the needs which His be- coming man was intended, in the counsels of God, to supply. A furtiii-r question arises, namely, whether Holy Scripture warrants us in believing that the Mother of the Lord was, in the words of Bisht)p Pearson, " not only before and after His Nativity, but also for ever, the most immaculate and blessed virgin " (on the Creed, art. iii. 3), or in the words of St. Augus- tine, " virgo concipiens, virgo pariens, virgo moriens " {De Catech. Rud. § 70). This ques- tion arises, in any consideration of the Scrip- tural notices of the I.ortl's Mother, out of the several passages in which the Lord's brethren are mentioned in Ht)lv Scripture (Mt.i2.46 ; Mk.3.3i ; Lu.8.19; Jii.7.3,20.17 : I Cor. 9. 5 ; (iai.l.ic)). But, as shown under J a.mes, where the subject is discussed at length, they were almost certainly not children of Mary, mid MARY, THE BLESSED VIRGIN most probably were children of Joseph by an earlier marriage. Those who have maintained the view that the Blessed Virgin bore children to St. Joseph after she had become by the power of the Holy Ghost the mother of the Christ, rely upon the two passages, Lu.2.7 and Mt.1.25, as implying subsequent child-bearing; but though they may do so, they do not do so necessarily, since irpurdroKos was the title given to the eldest even if he were the only son, and the ecus ov of Mt.l.25, whilst safe-guarding the truth of the virginity up till the birth of the Lord, does not necessarily imply, at least in Scriptural usage, that there was any change after it. In accordance with this belief the title given to St. Mary in the writings of the Greek fathers and in the ancient liturgies was not only wapdivos but deiirapdevos. It is, however, to be noted that this title, like the title QeordKos, while both of them expressing her unique and unapproachable honour, was not given to her primarily out of honour to her, but rather to the Person of our Lord, though not of course needed in the way that OeordKos was to guard the One and indivisible Personal- ity of the Word incarnate. This later title, the watch-word of the Faith at the third General Council against the heresy of Nestori- us, finds its Scriptural justification in the teaching of Holy Scripture as to the unity of the two natures of our Lord in the One Person. Holy Scripture predicates of the two natures united in the One Person what is strictly true of only one of them. Birth and death, strictly speaking, are properties of the human nature, but because the human nature was so closely united to the divine. Holy Scripture predicates them not of the human nature only but of the Divine, speaking of the Blood of God (Ac. 20. 28) and of the crucifixion of the Lord of Glory ( I Cor. 2. 8). In the same way the Church spoke of the Mother of God, not because God could be born, any more than God could shed His Blood, but because so closely were God- head and manhood united that she who bore the manhood bore that which was never, from the very moment of conception, separate from the Godhead. The Child on His Mother's knees was God ; therefore, as the Fathers of Ephesus rightly argued, the Mother of the Child was BeoroKos, Mother of God. There is, therefore, it may be said. Scriptural ground for the three titles given to St. Mary in the theo- logical and liturgical language of the Church — wapdevos. denrdpdevos, QeordKos — though again, it must be said that the second is not needed in the same way as the other two are for the safe- guarding of the great doctrine of the Incarna- tion. The consideration of these three titles practically exhausts the passages of Holy Scripture which have reference to the Blessed Virgin. After the gospel narrative she appears again for the last time as being present with the little Christian company in the upper room after the Lord's Ascension (Ac.l.14). After that notice she is withdrawn from the knowledge of the Church, dwelling no doubt in the home of the apostle John until the time of her " falling asleep." In the Apocalypse (12. 1-6,13-17) the " great sign " of the woman arrayed in light and crowned with stars, MASH 519 travailing in birth with the Man-child and persecuted by the great red dragon, may be regarded, as Prof. Milligan regards it, as, not indeed the actual picture, but as the ideal pre- ceding and underlying it, of the Birth of Jesus. [Incarnation ; Immanuel.] It may be added in conclusion that whilst Holy Scripture gives no encouragement to the position assigned to St. Mary in some popular devotions, it does represent her, not alone in place and station, but in character, as worthy of the highest honour and regard. If we had only the narra- tive of the Annunciation, there is in it ample testimony to the wonderful faith and humility of the Blessed Virgin. She is there pourtrayed to us as accepting in simple trust a message and a commission which required a consummate act of faith in the power of God, which entailed upon herself great suffering, and which more than any call that has ever been given to man demanded a readiness to accept the Will of God courageous and heroic in the extreme ; yet in all that is told us of her we recognize nothing that is out of keeping with the most womanly and most tender character. It is doubtless to her way of pondering (Lu.2.19) over the say- ings and doings in which she played so great a part that we owe the narrative contained in the first chapter of St. Luke's gospel, a narrative which shows throughout the pure and delicate colouring of a true woman's thoughts. In the Mas^nificat those thoughts find an expression which for all ages has stood as the highest example of exalted rapture and of lowly self- abandonment. In what we are told of St. Mary's relationship to her Divine Son we seem to see a readiness to accept at once oiu: Lord's own estimate of that relationship, even though something of a reproof, or at least of a correc- tion, was involved in it (Lu.2.49 '> Jii-2.4,5). We may say that in all that is said about the Blessed Virgin, and in all that is impUed, in Holy Scripture, her own prophecy about her- self, that all generations should call her blessed, is more than justified ; and we may find an exact expression of the mind of the Church as to her unique and unapproachable position in the eloquent words of Bishop Pearson : " We cannot bear too reverend a regard unto the Mother of our Lord, so long as we give her not that worship which is due unto the Lord Him- self. Let us keep the language of the primitive Church : let her be honoured and esteemed, let Him be worshipped and adored." [h.v.s.e.] Mas'aloth, a place in Arbela, which Bacchides and Alcimus, the generals of Deme- trius, besieged and took with great slaughter on their way from the N. to Gilgal (iMac.9.2). The word may, as Robinson suggests, have originally signified the " steps " or "terraces " of the ciiff N. of Irbid. [Arbela.] Maschil. [Psalms, Titles of.] Mash, son of Aram (Gen. 10. 23). In iChr. 1.17 the name appears as Meshech (the Moschi). Josephus (i Ant. vi. 4) connects the name with Mesene in lower Babylonia, on the shores of the Persian Gulf. Bochart and others think that the name Mash is represented by the Mons Masius of classical writers, a range which forms the N. boundary of Mesopotamia, between the Tigris and Euphrates. Kalisch connects the names of Mash and Mysia. In the Amarna 520 MASHAL letters (Berlin 42, 76 ; Brit. Mus. 44) the Mist are noticed as aiding the king of Gebal, in the 15th cent. B.C., with ships, against the Amoritcs. [c.R.c] Mashal' (iChr.6.74). [Misheal.] Masi'as, one of Solomon's servants, whose descendants returned with Zerubbabel (lEsd. 5.34 only). Mas'man (R.V. Maasmas) occurs for She- MAiAH, 12, in iEsd.8.43, 3nd is a corruption of l"a/taias (A.V. Mamaias), which is misplaced in \er. 44. Mason. [Handicrafts, (3).] Mas pha. — 1. A place opposite to Jerusa- lem, at which Judas Maccabaeus and his followers assembled to bewail the desolation of the city and the sanctuary (iMac.3.46), and where " they prayed aforetime in Israel." Clearly Mizpeh (Tell en Nasbeh). — 2. One of the cities which were taken from the Am- monites by Judas Maccabaeus in his campaign on the E. of Jordan (iMac.5.35). Probably Mizpeh of Gilead (S'li/). [c.r.c] Maspekah', an ancient place, the native spot of Samlah, one of the old kings of the Edomites (Gen. 36. 36 ; iChr.l.47). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Massa', a son of Ishmael (Gen. 25. 14 ; iChr.1.30), or a tribe at a place so called near DuMAH. Some scholars read : " Words of Lemuel king of Massa that his mother taught him" (Pr.Sl.i). [c.r.c] Massah', = " temptation " ; the " rock in Horeb " — apparently at Rephidim (Ex. 17. 7, 8) — stricken by Moses for water. It is usually placed at the fine stream of Wddy Feirdn (the valley of Paran). Horeb (desert) applying to the vicinity of Sinai. The name occurs also in Deut. 6.16,9.22, 33. 8, and in Heb. and R.V. of Ps.95.8, where it is rendered " tempta- tion " in A.V. [.VIeribah.] [c.r.c] Massi'as (iEsd.9.22) = Maaseiah, 3. Massopa, [Old Testament.] Mastick-tpee (Sus.54 only; A.V. marg. and Geneva text, lentisk). That the Gk. word MASTICK {Pi4(itaa ltnliiciis\. MATTATHIAS is correctly rendered is evident from the de- scriptions of Theophrastus, Pliny, Dioscorides, and other writers. The fragrant resin known as "mastick" is obtained by incisions made, in the month of August, in the trunk of the Pista- chia lentiscus, order Anacardiaceae, which is common on the shores of the Mediterranean, and (Strand, Flor. Palaest. No. 559) has been observed at Joppa, both by Rauwolf and Pococke. It is used with us, as it was by the ancients, to strengthen the teeth and gums, and was much prized for its many supposed medi- cal virtues. Pliny says, "The very best Mas- ticke is brought out of the Island Chios ... it issueth forth as a gum out of the Lentiske tree. Mingled this is also, like as Frankincense with Rosin " (xii. 17). See, for another species, under Nuts ; and a third, under Turpentine. Mathan'ias (iEsd.9.31) = Mattaniah, 6. Mathu'sala (Lu.3.37) = Methuselah. Matped', a daughter of Mezahab, and motherof Mehetabel (Gen.36.39 ; i Chr.t.50). Matpi', the Benjamite family to which king Saul belonged (1Sam.lO.21). Mattan'. — 1. The priest of Baal slain be- fore his altars in the idol temple at Jerusalem, when the usurpation of .\thaliah was over- thrown (2K.II.18 ; 2Chr.23.17)-— 2. The father of Shephatiah, 5 (Je.38.i). Mattanah', a station in the latter part of the wanderings of the Israelites (Num.21. 18, 19). It lay next beyond the well, or Beer, and between it and Nahaliel ; Nahaliel again being but i day's journey from the ^amoth of Moab. The site is doubtful. [c.r'.c] Mattaniah'. — 1. The original name of Zedekiah, king of Judah, changed by Nebu- chadnezzar when he placed him on the throne instead of his nephew Jehoiachin (2K. 24.17).— 2. A I.evite singer of the sons of Asaph, de- scribed as the son of Micah (iChr.9.15), >Iicha (Ne.ll.17), or Michaiah(12.35). He was leader of the temple-choir after its restoration (11. 17, 12.8), and one of the " keepers of the thres- holds" (I2.25). .•V comparison of 12.35 with4i, where Zechariah is represented as a priest's son — Mattaniah being a Levite — and with 1 2.26 (cf. 11.17 for similar association with Bakbukiah), which represents Mattaniah as a contemporary of Nehemicih.whichZedekiah (if his great-grand- son) could scarcely also be, seems to indicate that 12.35 is corrupt, and that the latter part of it belongs to ver. 36, where " his brethren " are mentioned (cf. ver. 8). — 3- A descendant of Asaph, and ancestor of Jahaziel the Levite, in thereignof Jehoshaphat (2Chr.2O.14). — 4. One of the sons of Elam (Ezr.lO.26), — 5. of Zattu (10.27), — 8. of Pahath-Moab (IO.30), and— 7. of Bani (IO.37), who, like the three preceding, put away his foreign wife. — 8. A Levite, father of Zaccur, 6, and ancestor of Hanan, 8 (Ne.13. 13). — 9. One of the 14 sons of Heman ; ap- pointed bv David head of the oth course of the temple-choir ( I Chr. 25. 4, 16). — 10. A descendant of Asaph, who assisted in the purification of the temple under Hezekiah (2Chr.29.13). Mat'tatha,sonof Nathan, and grandson of David, in the genealogy of our Lord (Lu.3.31). Mattathah', a descendant of Hashum, who put awav his foreign wife (Ezr.lO.33). Mattatht'as. — 1. (iEsd.9.43) = Matti- THiAii, .). — 2- The father of the Maccabees (i MATTENAI Mac.2.i,etc.,14'-'29). — 3. Son of Absalom, and brother of Jonathan, 14; one of two captains who stood by the latter in the panic of Nasor (iMac.ll. 70,13.11). — 4. Son of Simon the Hasmonaean, treacherously murdered, with his father and brother, in the fortress of Docus, by Ptolemeus, son of Abubus (16. 14). — 5. One of three envoys sent by Nicanor to treat with Judas Maccabaeus (2Mac.l6.19). — 6. Son of Amos (Lu.3.25), and — 7- Son of Semei (8.26), in the genealogy of our Lord. Mattenai'. — 1. One of the family of Hashum (Ezr.10.33), and — 2. A descendant of Bani (ver.37), who put away their foreign wives at Ezra's command. — 3. A priest in the days of Joiakim, the son of Jeshua (Ne.i2.19). Mat'than, the son of Eleazar, and grand- father of Joseph " the husband of Mary " (Mt.1.15). He occupies the same place in the genealogy as Matthat in Lu.3.24, with whom indeed he is probably identical. [Genealogy OF Jesus Christ.] Matthani'as (iEsd.9.27) = Mattaniah, 4. Mat'that. — 1. Son of Levi and grand- father of Joseph (Lu.3.24 ; c/. Matthan). — 2. Also the son of a Levi, and ancestor of Joseph, midway between David and Salathiel (3.29). Matthe'las (iEsd.9.19) = Maaseiah, i. Matthe^v. We know but little of this apostle. He is called Levi, the son of Al- phaeus. There can be no doubt as to the identity, for the Synoptists agree in their ac- count of the feast associated with a publican called Levi in Mk.2. 14 and Lu.5.29, and Matthew in Mt.9.9. Also it was common with Jews at that time, as at the present, to have two names, one strictly Jewish and the other not. He was a " publican," or collector of customs, in the service of Herod Antipas at Capernaum. As our Lord had lived at Capernaum He had probably noted something in the man which made him fit to be an apostle. At the call of Christ " he forsook all and rose up and followed Him." He then made a great feast, to which he invited many publicans and sinners, doubtless that they too might come under the Master's influence. It led to criticism from certain scribes and Pharisees, and our Lord's statement that He had not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. The call was thus a repudia- tion of the Pharisaic principle of " separation." After the appointment of the apostles, St. Matthew was put in the second of the three groups of apostles, and is placed seventh in the lists in Mk. and Lu., and eighth in those in Mt. and Ac. The N.T. gives us no further information. St. Paul does not seem to have found any of the apostles at Jerusalem when he was therein 56 a. d. (Ac.2i.17ff.). Accordingto Clement of Alexandria (200 a.d.), St. Matthew led a strictly ascetic life, such as is recorded of St. James. In the 4th and 5th cents. Parthia, Ethiopia, and India were believed to have been visited by him. Clement says (Strom, iv. 9) that he did not suffer mart^nrdom. The fact that he disappears almost completely from the realm of history strengthens the tradition which connects our first gospel with his name. A false tradition would have connected this favourite book of the primitive Church with a more popular figure. [l.p.] MATTHEW, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. 521 Matthew, Gospel ace. to St. In our art. Gospels we have already noticed that our first gospel is a composite work. Its main elements are Mk. and an early Gk. version of the Logia or Oracles of our Lord which St. Matthew wrote down in Aramaic, then popularly called " Hebrew." The Fathers and early historians of the Church repeatedly say that St. Matthew wrote his gospel in Hebrew. Their evidence is all the stronger because it is doubtful whether it can all be traced to Papias (c. 130 A.D.). Irenaeus(c. 185 a.d.), seems to be writing independently of Papias when he says that St. Matthew wrote in the dialect of the Heb- rews, " while Peter and Paul were preaching the Gospel in Rome " [Adv. Haer. iii. i). That St. Matthew did write a book on our Lord's teaching it would be captious to deny. Never- theless, our first gospel is not a mere transla- tion of that work. Its coincidences with the other gospels and its divergences from them cannot be fully explained on this hypothesis. St. Matthew's original work disappeared, though a translation of it is embedded in the present gospel. In 392 a.d. St. Jerome, one of the greatest of Biblical scholars, thought that he had found the original in the possession of the Jewish Christian sect of Nazarenes at Beroea. It was ordinarily called " the gospel according to the Hebrews." Jerome trans- lated it into Greek and Latin. But he found reason to doubt his first opinions about it, and modified his former assertions. The frag- ments of it which still remain tend to show that it was a forgery, written by one who used our first and third gospels and mixed them with Jewish Christian traditions and superstitions. In addition to the matter taken from Mk.andto sayings drawn from St. Matthew's early work, the first gospel contains a considerable amount of important primitive tradition. These refer to our Lord's birth and infancy (1,2), inci- dents connected with St. Peter (14.28-31,16. 18,17.24-27), and details of Christ's trial and resurrection (27. 3- 10, 19,24,25, 5 ia-53, 62-66,28. II- 1 5). Many of the quotations were pro- bably taken from a list of O.T. Messianic pass- ages in use among Jewish Christians. — The date is almost certainly a little before 70 a.d. In fact the struggle with Judaism to which it bears witness, and the writer's conception of Christ's second advent as connected with the fall of Jerusalem, cannot be later than 70 a.d. And there is no reason for holding that the book has been frequently re-edited and al- tered. The use of the word " Church " (16. 18, I8.17) and the doctrine of the Church implied in certain parables, is no proof of a late date. Similarly the baptismal formula (28.19) cannot be called a mark of a post-apostolic age if we consider the Trinitarian language of other parts of N.T. In view of this early date we cannot say that St. Matthew himself did not write the book. But it may be the work of a disciple who based it on St. Matthew's collec- tion of sayings. In either case it is fitly called the gospel " according to " St. Matthew. — Style and Character. The writer is a Gk.- speaking Jew living in Jerusalem or Palestine. The litersiry style of St. Matthew is halfway between that of SS. Mark andiLuke."^ St. Mark is farthest from the LXX. because he is by 522 MATTHEW, GOSPEL ACC. TO ST. birth a J c\v, and hisown language was Aramaic; St. Luke nearest, because he is a (lentile who deeply read the O.T. in Greek after his con- version ; St. Matthew is a Jew long familiar with the great Gentile language. Of the 112 words which are peculiar in the N.T. to Mt. 76 are in the LX.X., and 18 are unclassical Greek. Mt. was probably written for Christians of Heb. origin, and intended to strengthen waverers in the great crisis of 68-70 a.d. It has also a directly apologetic purpose, for it is in- tended to establish the truth of Christianity against Jewish assailants. Hence great stress is laid upon the fact that Jesus is the Messiah foretold in O.T. ; hence also the frequent notice that this or that event happened so as to fulfil a prophecy, and the contrast repeatedly drawn between the spiritual ethical teaching of our Lord and the external and hypocritical doctrines of the scribes and Pharisees. It is strongly anti- Pharisaic throughout. The Pharisees are of " the offspring of vipers " in the Baptist's sayings (3.7). In the Sermon on the Mount our Lord points out that their " righteousness " will not bring them into the kingdom (5. 20). They are "the sons of the kingdom " who will be cast out (8.12). They ascribed His power to cast out demons to Beelzebub (12. 24). They accused Him of breaking the sabbath (12.io). They plotted to destroy Him (12.14,26.4). They tried to entrap Him in His speech (22.i5ff.). Hence the tremendous indictment of the scribes and Pharisees in ch.23. In spite of its direct bearing on Palestinian Judaism, Mt. became the most popular gospel among the earliest Gentile Christians. The reasons arc not hard to see. The Jews prejudiced the heathen against Chris- tianity, and the heathen soon began to copy Jewish criticism of the claims of Christ and the Church. The gospel which answered the ob- jections f)f the Jew answered the objections of the Gentile. Hence the gospel which is furthest from the Gk. spirit was specially acceptable to the Gk. mind, though it was soon rivalled by St. John's Gospel, also the work of a Jew and also in some degree a work defending Christianity. Again, like Jn., Mt. is doctrinal and didactic. The evangelist is deeply interested in our Lord's teaching, and records it in a solemn and dignified style. He concerns himself but little with chronological order. He groups together kindred passages in our Lord's teaching, as they could be best adapted to purposes of instruction. The Church wanted to know the nature of righteousness, of the calling of the dis- ciples, the kingdom of God, tiie duties of the Church as a sniiety, the true character of Pharisaism, and the future of the kingdom. The answer is given in 5-7,10,13,18,23-25. Jesus is shown to have been the (li\inely fore- ordained Messiah, miraculously born, the King of Israel, the " Son of Man," or the Man Who is to come in glory, the unique Son of (Jod. He was legally descended from David, and through liim from Abratiam ; in Him tlie family of David had risen to a truer royal jiower (1. iff. ,2. 2). As King He was born, as King He entered Jerusalem (21. "i), as King He died on the Cross (27.37,42). He was born of the Holy Spirit of a virgin, He was so truly MATTHIAS divine as to be "God with us" (l.iSff.). Ch. 1 and 2 contain answers to three Jewish questions : " Granted that Joseph treated Jesus as his son (which according to Jewish law would ratify legal descent), was Joseph descended from David?" "Was God likely to let the Messiah be literally the son of a carpenter ? " " Was there not a scandal attached to the birth of Jesus?" These three questions are answered effectually. St. Matthew makes his reply more effective by including in the genealogy four women — Rachab, Bathsheba, Tharaar, Ruth — which show how God orders circumstances very differ- ently from man's expectation. The authority of Jesus as Son of Man (9.6,16.28,24.30,26.64), and His unique relation to the Father (11. 27) deserve special attention. The refer- ences to Isaiah (Mt. 1.22,3. 3, 12.17), Hosea (Mt.2.15), Micah (Mt.2.5), Jeremiah (Mt.2.i7), Zechariah (Mt.21.5), etc., are made to show how all the course of the humble and suffering life of Jesus had been foreseen and ordained by God for His Son. The central subject of our Lord's teaching is represented as " the kingdom of heaven," the approach- ing reign of God on earth, with its new demands on man and new blessings from above. [Kingdom of God.] The kingdom was inaugurated by the Person and ministry of Jesus, but is to be consummated when He shall finally return again in glory. The Gospel is represented as universal ; it is free to all na- tions ; the Gentiles will replace the unfaithful Jews (8.iif., 21.28- 22.14, 24.14, 26.13, 28.19)- Besides these passages, there are others which are said to manifest a Jewish particularism, implying that the Gospel was to be limited to Jews (5.17-20, 10.5f., 15.24. 19.28, 23.2f.). Writers who hold this view think that the call of the Gentiles to salvation is merely inserted as an after-thought. This is a misconception. Even St. Paul, the apostle of the Gentiles, held that the Gospel was " to the Jew first " (Ro.l. 16 ; cf. Lu.1.77). The same principle is found in Jn., a gospel of completely universalist character (Jn.4.22). Our Lord came to the Jews and offered Himself to them as their Messiah. He always recogni/ed and taught the special connexion of His work with Judaism. It was from the Jews that He deter- mined to secure a group of absolutely loyal apostles. But, as the fact that He was the Messiah rested on the still greater fact that He was the Son of God, so when the truth that He was the Son of God was proved by the Resur- rection, the mission to Judaism expanded by His own command into a universal mission. A word must be added as to the jiermanent obligation of the Jewish law, which some find implied here (as in 5. 18). Except the probably corrupted reference to our Lord's teaching about divorce (5.32, cf. 19.Q, where see R.V. marg.), there is no clear trace of positive J udaizing influence on the gospel. The whole iaw is regarded as spiritually fulfilled by the law of lovc(22.37f.), and this agrees essentially with the Gospel preached by St. Paul (Gal.5. 6). [L.P.] Matthias, the apostle divinely chosen to fill the place of the traitor Judas (Ac.l.26). Bcvond this, all that we certainly know of him MATTHIAS is that he had been a constant attendant upon our Lord throughout His ministry ; for such was declared by St. Peter to be the necessary qualification of one who was to be a witness of the Resurrection. There is a tradition that he preached and suffered martyrdom in Ethiopia. Matthi'as (iEsd.9.33) = Mattathah. Mattlthiah'. — 1. A Levite, the first-born of Shallum the Korhite, who presided over the offerings made in the pans (iChr.9.31 ; cf. Lev. 6.20 ff .). — 2. A Levite, one of the six sons of J edu- thun (iChr.25.3) ; appointed by David head of the 14th division of the temple-choir (25. 21), under Asaph before the ark (15.18,21,16.5), " with harps upon Sheminith." — 3. One of the Bene-Nebo, who had married a foreign wife (Ezr.10.43). — 4. One, probably a priest, who stood at the right hand of Ezra when he read the law to the people (Ne.8.4). Mattock (Is. 7. 25). The tool (ma'der) used in Palestine for digging, answers generally to our hoe. The ancient Egyptian hoe was of wood, and served the purpose of hoe, spade, and pick. MEALS 523 EGYPTIAN HOES. (Wilkinson.) Another word (mahdreshd, iSam.l3.2o) ren- dered "mattock " refers to a sharpened instru- ment : the meaning is doubtful. In 2Chr.34.6 "mattocks" is a clear error for "ruins" (R.V.), or perhaps for " villages." [c.r.c] Maul. [Arms.] Mauzzim'. The marg. of the A.V. of Dan. 11.38, for "the God of forces''' (R.V. god of for- tresses), gives "Mauzzim, or God's protectors, or munitions." In ver. 39 the word occurs again CR.V. fortresses ; raaiVg. oi A.W . munitions). In the Gk. version it is treated as a proper name, as in the Vulg. See ver. 19 (A.V. fort; R.V. fortresses). The opinion of Gesenius is that " the god of fortresses " was Jupiter Capito- linus, for whom Antiochus built a temple at Antioch (Liv. xli. 20). A suggestion made by Layard {Nin. ii. 456, note) is worth recording. After describing the Assyrian Venus as " standing erect on a lion, and crowned with a tower or mural coronet, which, we learn from Lucian, was peculiar to the Semitic figure of the goddess," he adds, " May she be connected with the ' El Maozem,' the deity presiding over bulwarks and fortresses, the ' god of forces ' of Dan. 11. 38 ? " Maziti'as (iEsd.9.35) = Mattithiah, 3. Mazzapoth'. Job 88.32 (A.V. marg.) gives " the twelve signs " as the equivalent of " Mazzaroth," and this is in all probability its true meaning. The Peshitta-Syriac renders it by "the Wain" or "Great Bear." Fiirst understands by Mazzaroth the planet Jupiter, the same as the " star " of Am. 5. 26. On referring to 2K.23.5, we find the practically equivalent word mazzdloth (A.V. the planets), rendered in the margin " the twelve signs," as in the Vulg. In later Jewish writings maz- zdloth {houses) are the signs of the Zodiac. MeadoAV. The A.V. so renders two Heb. words, (i) 'a/iM (Gen. 41. 2,18). The LXX. renders this "Axet, which occurs also in Ecclus.40.i6 (E.V. weed), and in Is.19.7 for Heb. 'droth (green things ; A.V. incorrectly paper reeds, by the Nile). The word is like the Egyptian akh for a "plant." In Job 8. 11 (A.V. flag) the LXX. understands the flower- ing rush (Butomus umbellatus) ; the edible rush (Cyperus esculentus) may be intended (Tristram, Nat. Hist, of Bible, p. 435). (2) ma' are (meadows) is probably for m<^'drd (cave; Judg.2O.33) ; it was a place where an ambush was set — at Gibeah, a site where there are no meadows. Josephus (5 Ant. ii. 11) understands a " hollow place." At Gibeah (Jeb'a) there are caves, one of which is large (Surv. W. Pal. iii. pp. 9, 94). [c.r.c] Meah, To^vep of. [Jerusalem.] Meal-offeping'. [Sacrifice, 3, i. & ; 3, V. b.] Meals. The early Hebrews do not seem to have given special names to their several meals, for the terms rendered "dine " and " dinner " in A.V. (Gen. 43. 16 ; Pr.l5.i7) are general ex- pressions which might more correctly be ren- dered " eat " and " portion of food." In N.T. the Gk. terms Apiarov and delirvov, are rendered by A.V. " dinner " and " supper " respectively (Lu.l4.i2 ; Jn.2i.12), but are more properly " breakfast " and " dinner." The ordinary meals were at mid-day, a light meal (iK.20.i6 ; Ru.2.14), and at even (cf. the Passover meal ; Ex.16. 12 ; Judg.l9.2i). The posture at meals was that of squatting on the ground on mats, later, on chairs (Gen.27.iq ; Judg.19. 6 ; I Sam. 20.. 5, 2 4 ; iK.13.2o ; Am. 3. 12, 6.4.). Tables in the modern sense were unknown in early Israel, shulhdn often implies no more than a mat spread on the floor ; cf. the sufra (a leathern mat) of modern Arabs. Never- theless, tables proper are ancient (2K.4.10). [Table.] In N.T. times reclining was the universal custom, as is implied in the terms used for " sitting at meat," as A.V. incorrectly has it. The couch itself is only once mentioned (Mk.7.4 ; A.V. tables), but there can be little doubt that the Roman triclinium had been in- troduced, and that the arrangements resembled those described by classical writers. Generally speaking, only three persons reclined on each couch, but occasionally four or even five. The couches were provided with cushions on which the left elbow rested in support of the upper part of the body, while the right arm remained 524 MEAL.S free ; a room provided with these was described as larpwuivov, lit. "spread" (14.13; A.V. furnished). A guest might thus be said to " lean on the bosom " of his neighbour (Jn.l3. 23,21.20). The ordinary arrangement of the couches was in three sides of a square, the fourth being left open for the servants to bring the dishes. Women were present at meals (iSam. 1.8; Deut.l6.ii,i4 ; Jobl.4; Ru.2.14) ; the Israelites differing herein from the present cus- tom of the East. Before commencing the meal, the guests washed their hands. Another pre- liminary step wasthe grace or blessing,of which we have but one instance in O.T. (iSam.9.13), and more than one pronounced bv our Lord Himself (Mt.i5.36; Lu.9.i6 ; Jn.6.11). The mode of taking food did not differ materially from modern usages of the East ; generally there was a single dish, into which each guest MEAT feet (Lu.7.44) ; the head, beard, feet, and sometimes the clothes, were perfumed with ointment (Ps.23.5 ; Am.6.6 ; Lu.7.38 ; Jn.12.3); on special occasions robes were provided (Mt. 22.1 r); and the head was decorated with wreaths (Is.28.i ; Wis.2.7,8 ; Josephus, 19 Ant. ix. i). The regulation of the feast was the function of a special officer, named apxtrpiKKivos (Jn.2.8 ; A.V. governor of the feast), whose business it was to taste the food and the liquors before they were placed on the table, and to settle about the music and amusements ; he was generally one of the guests (Ecclus.32.i,2), and might therefore take part in the conversa- tion. The places of the guests were settled according to their respective rank (Gen. 43. 33 ; iSam.9.22 ; Mk.i2.39 ; Lu.14.8 ; Jn.i3.23) ; portions of food were placed before each (2Sam. 6.19 ; iChr.16.3), the most honoured guests AN ANCIENT EGYl'lIAN UlNNKR PAR I'V. (Wilkinson.) i. ft, r. Tables with various dishes, b, p. Figs. d, e, q, and s. Baskets of grapes. Fig. 3 is taking a wing from a goose. Fig. 4 holds a joint of meat {g). Figs. 5 and 7 are eating fish (k, 0). Fig. 6 is about to drink water from an earthen vessel. dipped his hand (Mt. 26.23); occasionally separ- ate portions were served out to each (Gen. 43.34; Ku.2.14; iSam.1.4). A piece of bread was held between the thumb and two fingers of the right hand (forks, spoons, and table- knives being, of course, unknown), and was dipped either into a bowl of melted grease [Sop] or into the dish of meat, the bread being folded round a piece of meat to convey it to the mouth. The meal being ended, grace was again said in conformity with Deut.8.10, and the hands again washed. On state occasions more cere- mony was used, and the meal was enlivened in various ways. Such occasions were numer- ous, both in connexion with public and private ! events. A sumptuous repast was then pre- jiared ; the guests were previously invited (Esth.5.8; Mt.22.3), and on the day of the feast a second invitation was issued to those i that were bidden (Esth.6.14 ; Pr.9.3 ; Mt.22.3). The visitors were received with a kiss (Tob.7.6 ; J.,U.7.45) ; w^ter w^s produced to w^b their 1 receiving either larger (Gen. 43. 34; cf. Herod, vi. 57) or more choice (iSam.l.4,5,9.24 ; cf. II. vii. 321) portions than the rest. The meal was enlivened with music, singing, and dancing (2Sani. 19.35; Ps.69.i2; Is.5. 12; Am. 6.5), or with riddles (J udg. 14.12); and the festival was some- times prolonged for several days (Esth. 1.3,4). Me'ani. The same as Mehunim (iEsd.5. 31 ; cf. I';zr.2.5o). Meapah', a place named, in Jos.13.4 only, as " Mearah, which is to tlie Zidonians." The word vv'drd means in Hcb. "a cave" — Arab, maghdrah. Probably el Mogheiriyeh {place of the little cave), a village 6 miles N.E. of Sidon. [c.r.c] Measupes. [Weights and Measures.] Meat. Of the 12 or 13 Heb. words which A.V. renders " meat "(nearly 90 times), scarcely any mean " meat " in its modern sense ; thougli Gen. 27. 4, Ps.44. 11, are exceptions. All refer to " food," which only in the rarest instances con- sisted of n^eat. Whea"me4t " in tbe restric^et} MEAT-OFFERING modern sense is referred to, the word bdsdr {flesh) is used. In a large number of instances A.V. renders the Heb. minhd " meat -offering " ; it should be meal-offering, as always in R. V. (either text or marg.)- In O.T. "meat" is never used figuratively. In N.T. also "meat " often means " food" generally, but occurs some 7 or 8 times with the modern limitation. In the gospels the figurative use of the word predominates. [Food.] [w.o.e.c] Meat-ofTeping (properly Meal-offering). [Sacrifice, 3, i. 6 ; 3, v. 6.] Metaunnai'(2Sam.23.27only) = SiBBECHAi. [HUSHATHITE.] Meche'pathite, The, i.e. the inhabitant of a place called Mecherah (1Chr.ll.36). In 2Sam.23 the name appears as " the Maacha- thite " (ver. 34) ; Kennicott concludes that this is correct. Me'daba (iMac.9.36), the Gk. form of Medeba. Medad. [Eldad and Medad.] Medan' (Gen.25.2,37.36 ; iChr.l.32), a son of Abraham and Keturah, and a tribe descended from him. Glaser has found mention of Medan (if the reading is correct ; the first character is not certain) in a Minean temple- inscription, where a slave-girl of that tribe is named Mephhlat. The Massoretic Heb. text has M edaniles (not " Midianites," as A.V. and LXX.) in Gen. 37. 36, where (c/. ver. 28) they seem to be identified with the latter. Has the same omission of yodh in 25.2 led to the repe- tition " and Medan and Midian," both being the same name ? This is the more possible, as nowhere else in the Bible do we read of Medan (iChr.1.32 being copied from Gen. 25. 2). Glaser, Mittheilungen ; Hommel, Die altisraelitische Ueberlieferung. [w.st.ct.] Medeba, a city in the "plain" (mishor, or "plateau") of Moab (Jos.13.9,16) ; first no- ticed in the Amorite song of triumph (Num.21. 30). It is denounced by Isaiah (15.2) ; and, according to iChr.19.7, was the scene of David's victory over the Ammonites and Arameans. [Helam.] On the Moabite Stone Mehdeba is noticed as possessed by Omri and Ahab, and recovered, in 9th cent, b.c, by king Mesha. In no b.c it was besieged and taken byJohnHyrcanus (Josephus, 13 ^Mt ix. i). It is now the ruined town Mddeba, on the high- road, 6 miles S. of Heshbon, on the Moab plateau. The ruins (Surv. E. Pal. pp. 178-183) are those of the Roman city, as late as the 5th cent. A.D. Gk. and Lat. inscriptions have been found, with others in Aramaic. On W. are remains of a cathedral, on the S. a large tank, and on N.E. the ruins of a gate and street of columns. The most notable discovery, however, is that of a mosaic pavement in the cathedral, of which fragments remain (see Die Mosaikkarte von Madeba, P. Palmer and Dr. Guthe, 1906) ; for it represents a map of Pales- tine, with Gk. lettering, dating c. 440 a.d., and giving a valuable representation of the tradi- tional topography of that age and of the walls and buildings of Jerusalem. [c.r.c] Medes (Heb. madhay, Assyv. Amadd, Madd, Matd, Akhaem. Pers. Mdda, Gk. MrjSoi : first mentioned in Gen. 10. 2 as descended from Japheth), an Aryan tribe, closely connected MEDES 525 with the Persians in language and descent. On the Assyr. tablets the Medes (/I wzarfa) are first spoken of by Shalmaneser II. (Nimr., Obi. 1. 121), c. 840 B.C., as dwelling in what was after- wards called Media Atropatene, the modern Azarbaijan. From the E. of Assyria their territory stretched to the Caspian Sea. Like the Gks. and other Aryans, they were divided into a number of small independent states ruled by " kings " [of. Je.25.25). Rammanu- nirari HI. of Assyria (810-781 or 812-783 b.c) boasts of having conquered the " land of the Medes" and the "land of Parsua " (Persia), as well as Mesopotamia, Palestine, etc. (W. Asiatic Inscriptions, vol. i. p. 35). Asshur- nirari II. in 749-748 b.c made an expedition into Namri in S.W. Media (W.A.I, vol. ii. p. 52). Tiglath-pileser II. and Sargon also warred with the Medes, and the latter king added Kisheshin, Kharkhar, and several other parts of the W. of Media to his dominions (716 b.c), transplanting Israelite captives to the " cities of the Medes " and elsewhere (2K.I7.6). Sargon conquered the territory of a prince called Dayaukku (probably the Deiokes of Herodotus) in 713, having captured the prince himself in 715 b.c According to Herodotus, Deiokes founded the " Median " empire, and his successor Phraortes conquered Persis. The inscriptions of Darius seem to prove that the kings of Persis were then subject to the sovereign (of the Manda). [Persians.] Esar- haddon I. also warred in Media with success. But at last the tide turned. Esar-haddon II. (Sarakos) mentions the " lord of the city of the Medes," one Mamiti-arsu (the latter word reminds us of the Pers. Arsha, Gk. "A/jirijs), as confederate with Kastarit (Cyaxares ?) of Kar-Kassi in Ararat, the Kimmerians and the Minni (Manna, cf. Fan) against him. The leader of the Kimmerians {Gimirrd, Gomer) was Teushpa (Teispes), a name found again among the ancestors of Cyrus. But the chief agents in the overthrow of Nineveh, which followed c. 606 B.C., were the Manda, under their king Iriba-tukte, in alliance with Nabu-pal-usur of Babylon, father of Nebuchadnezzar. These Manda (more commonly Umman-Manda, or "host of Manda ") were a number of Aryan tribes, probably the Scythians ; but are by Herodotus confounded with the Medes proper. The Manda are first mentioned by Esar-haddon I. They formed a confederacy, which ulti- mately became a kingdom, having as its capital Ecbatana (Hamadan). Being closely con- nected with the Medes in language, it is not surprising that, when they formed an alliance with them, the union should have been spoken of by the Greeks as the Median empire, though it is not so styled by the Babylonians and Persians. Cyrus compelled Ishtuvegu (Asty- ages, Deiokes' third successor, according to Herodotus), king of the Manda, to raise the siege of Haran. He defeated Astyages, cap- tured him, plundered his capital, and carried the spoil to Anshan in 549 b.c The true Medes seem to have shortly after thrown in their lot with Cyrus, and advanced with him to the overthrow of Nabu-na'id of Babylon (Je. 51. II, 27,28). As Cyrus, though of Per- sian descent, did not take possession of Persis, or Persia proper, till 546 B.C., being originally 626 MEDIA king of Anshan in Northern Elam, the Medes are at first spoken of before the Persians as more important (Dan. 8. 20 ; cf. 5.28,6.8,12). So Thucydides speaks of the " Medes " when he means the Persian empire. Later this posi- tion was reversed (Esth. 1.3,14, 18, 19), as in the Behistan inscriptions. It is quite possible that Mada and Manda may be forms of the same word, whatever its meaning may be ; as both in Assyr. and in Skt. the root mad has another form -/mand, though these two tongues belong to quite different families. A serious revolt in Media occurred under Darius I. The leader of the rebels, Fravartish (Phraortes), claimed the throne of Media, as descended from Cyaxares, and fought many battles before being captured at Raga ( Kei, near Tehran). Darius cut off his ears, nose, and tongue, put out his eyes, and crucified him finally at Ecbatana. Henceforth the history of Media forms part of that of Persia. The religion of the Medes was pro- bably very similar to that of the Pers. Zoro- astrians. It is very probable that the Avesta represents their language in various stages, while the Akhaemenian Persian of the Inscrip- tions is that of Persia proper. However that may be, the few Median words mentioned by Gk. writers (e.g. s/)a^a, Herod, i. no, "bitch, "is the .\ves. svan fnom. spa], cf. Russ. sohdka : and Tt>pis, Eust. ad Dionys — raxvs ws ji^Xos, M jjSot yap riypiv KaXovcn rb r6^ev/j.a : Aves. iighra, " sharp," tijihri, "an arrow") are found in the Avest.i. Darius the Mede (Dan. 5. 31, etc.) is almost certainly the Gitbaru, or Ugbant, of the Babylonian Inscriptions, where the latter per- forms the part ascribed to Darius the Mede in Dan. /.c. [Media; Persia; Persians.] Raw- linson's W. A. Inscriptions, etc. ; Inscriptions of Cyrus and Darius; Pinches, O-T. in the Light of Hist.; Records of Assyr. and Bab.; Sayce, Higher Crit. and the Mon. [w.st.c.t.] Media. The meaning of this term varied at different times. It is impossible to define the limits of the " land of the Medes " when we first meet with them in the Assyrian annals about 840 B.C. When Media became a " pro- vince " of the Persian empire under Darius I., it extended from somewhat N. of Isfahan (Aspadana) as far as the river Araxes, or even to the Kur (Cyrus), to the VV. and S.W. of the Caspian. Under the Parthians it was bounded on the E. by the Caspian. Hyrcania, and Parthia, on the S. by Persis, on the W. by Assyria and Armenia, on the N. by the, Cyrus. Its main divisiims were Atropatene (Azarbai- jan) to the N. and Media Magna to the S. Its capital under the Manda was Ecbatana (Hama- dan). Another famous city was Raga (Rhagae), now represented by the ruins of Ret, near Tehran. From the central plateau of Persia, 5,000 feet above the sea, where the soil is mostly unjiroductivc through want of water, the ground sinks gradually (though broken by mountain-chains) to the Casjiian. Beyond Tehran the rainfall is greater, the olive grows wild, and grass grows on the gentler hills. Along the shore of the Caspian the land is low and unhealthy. The Nisaean plain, to the N. of licbatana, was of old celebrated for its hf>rses. Atropatene was (as its name, Atrpat- akan in .Armen., implies) a great centre of fire- worship in the past. It is, generally speaking. Medicine more fertile than most of Media Magna. [Medes; Persia ; Persians.] [w.st.c.t.] Me'dian. Darius "the Mede" (Dan.ll.i) is thus described in Dan. 5. 31. Mediator, (i) Gal.3. 19,20. St. Paul contrasts the elaborate basis of contract on which the legal relationship between God and Israel was founded with the simplicity and directness of " the promise." The law is an agreement between two parties, arranged by a mediator, Moses (not, of course, Christ, as Origen supposed), and " ordained through angels" (cf. Deut.33.3, LXX.). "Now a mediator is not a mediator of one," i.e. the idea of mediation implies a contract to which there are two parties. " But (iod is one " ; to the covenant there is no second party ; God's promise is independent ultimately of human wills, however much for a time they mav thwart it. Thus Christianity implies a direct relationship between God and man, and in this sense mediation is a thing of the past. (2) Nevertheless St. Paul's epistles are full of a Christian doctrine of mediation ; not, however, a mechanical and outward mediation like that of Moses, but one that rests on the union of the divine and human natures in Christ, the "one niediatf>r between God and men, Himself man" (iTim.2.5, R.V.). [Paul.] (3) One of the central ideas of the Ep. to the Hebrews is that Christ is the Mediator of the "new covenant" fore- told in Jc. 31. 31-34, a "better covenant enacted upon better promises " than that of Moses (Heb.8.5.6). But this mediation is the antitype of Aaron's as well as Moses' (9. 13-13). It is the priestly mediation of the unblemished life devoted in sacrifice to God, and therefore of cleansing efficacy. Christ not only declares the terms of a contract ; He enters the holy of holies " through His own blood," and trans- forms the relationship of man to Ciod. The material terrors and legal code of Sinai are re- placed by the communion of saints and that new covenant whereof Jesus is the Mediator (12. 18-24). [Hebrews, Ep. TO.] [k.d.m.] Medicine. Considering what a high pitch of civilization the nations of the O.T. history reached, it is astonishing that we have not more evidence of their knowledge of the art of healing. That the Egyptians had a very con- siderable knowledge of the matter is evident from various sources. It has been said that their acquaintance with anatomy was very deficient, but although a casual observer might deduce this from the lack of perspective in their descriptive drawings on the monuments, such a conclusion is unwarranted. In the British Museum are portions of Egyptian sculpture, which in themselves are sufficient evidence of very considerable anatomical skill on the sculptor's part. Moreover, the better class of Embalming was not carried on without much knowledge of anatomy. Doubtless, there- fore, the Jews must have had by the time of the Exodus a good deal of such knowledge. Yet it is a remarkable fact that, with the exceptions of circumcision and of the making of eunuchs, there is no rclirence in either the O.T. or N.T. to any pra'tice of surgery, though mid-wifery seems to have been known and followed as a profession among the very earliest peoples (Gen. 35.17; Ex.1. 17; iSam.4.2o). It is in- Medicine teresting to note that the Code of Hammurabi (c. 2100 B.C.) includes laws concerning the responsibihties and fees of doctors. In the present article we deal with our subject under the three heads of disease, treatment, and hygiene, (i) Disease. Many diseases are mentioned in O.T. — often, as in the case of the plagues of Egypt, as a direct punishment for sin. Indeed, the primary idea with regard to sickness in the Jewish mind seems always to have been to connect it with wrong-doing, either on the part of the sufferer himself or of those intimately related to him. Thus, when Abraham denied his wife, the womenkind of Abimelech become barren (Gen. 20. 1 8), dis- eases occur among the plagues of Egypt (Ex. 9.9), the " plague " is the direct punishment of the evil spies (Num. 14. 37), and of those who followed Korah (16. 47), and so throughout the whole of O.T. Even in N.T. times this idea was still prevalent among the Jews — e.g. in St. John (9.2) the disciples jump to the conclu- sion that a man born blind must of necessity be either himself a notorious sinner or the child of such. At the same time it is only right to remember that many things which to the un- enlightened appear to be abnormal divine in- terpositions are really the simple working out of the divine law of nature. Thus Dent. 28. i5ff. might well be taken at first sight to refer to some miraculous punishment upon evildoers, whereas it is simply a statement of the natural results of national wrong-doing in the fields of economics, justice, and morals. To discuss how far disease miraculously followed sin in the case of the Jewish nation is outside our scope, though the cases of Korah and of the evil spies, together with many others, seem fairly conclusive as far as the principle is con- cerned. To turn to the examination of dis- eases in general. It is exceedingly difficult to identify many of the symptoms mentioned in the Bible with special modern diseases. Lep- rosy is fully treated elsewhere, but we may mention, in passing, that skin diseases of one sort and another are, and probably always have been, exceedingly common in the East. We therefore find many references to such : to boils (Ex.9.9 ; Job 2.7 ; Is.38.2i), to the " botch of Egypt," coupled with the scab and itch (Deut.28.27,35), this last at least suggest- ing that syphilis was present then as now, and to gangrene or cancer (whichever interpreta- tion is placed upon 2Tim.2.i7). Other dis- eases mentioned in the Scripture are as follows. Emerods were the punishment of the Philis- tines who profaned the ark of God (iSam.5. 6-12,6.4-11; see also Deut.28.27). These were possibly haemorrhoids or external piles, but more probably bubonic plague. [Plague.] Blindness was exceedingly frequent in the East, owing to various local conditions, the dryness of the atmosphere, the sand and glare, and above all the innumerable foul-living files, though no doubt all these conditions were ameliorated by the exceedingly careful laws of the Jews with regard to cleanliness and sani- tation. Consumption is mentioned in Lev. 26. 16 and in Deut. 28.22, but the word must be regarded as purely generic, and not as having necessarily any connexion with phthisis. The withered hand of 1K.13.4-6 and Mt.l2.io is MEDICINE 527 either paralysis or atrophy. It might be the result of disease or injury to nerve or artery. We have a case of sunstroke in 2K.4.19, and possibly of dropsy in 2Chr.l6.12. Antiochus (2Mac.9.5-io) and Herod Agrippa I. (Ac.l2. 23) are said to have been "eaten of worms," and this fate is also ascribed by Josephus to Herod the Great (ijAnt.vi.). Colic is specified as the direct result of over-eating (Ecclus.37.30), and scurvy, like all other skin affections, is a bar to a descendant of Aaron exercising the priest's office (Lev. 21. 20). Madness is frequently mentioned or implied. Finally, as a proof that, however deficient the medical knowledge of the ancients might have been, they were certainl}' not lacking in powers of observation, we have the magnificent description of old age and its symptoms in Ec.l2. (2) Cures and Treatment. Here Scripture affords us very little information. We find throughout Holy Writ a constant mention of physicians, but few indica- tions as to how they performed their office. In all probability there was, at least in the earlier days, a great deal of superstition mixed up with their ideas of treatment. Thus, the mandrake is supposed to correct barrenness in women (Gen.3O.14), and according to the ancient Jewish legends, Shem and Heber are credited with power to work magical ciures, and Abraham has a talisman the touch of which will cure all diseases. On the other hand, it is interesting to note that there is no suggestion in O.T. of the healing art being a preserve of the priesthood, as is usual in the earlier development of a nation. The priest is the proper judge of leprosy, but this is apparently more because of the ceremonial uncleanness it involves than from the point of view of the physician. Indeed, while most careful direc- tions are given in Lev. 13 as to the diagnosis of leprosy, there is not a word said as to its cure, apparently intimating that the priestly work finished with the pronouncement of clean or unclean. At the same time it is reasonable to imagine that the greater dignity and leisure of the Levites would make them the students, and therefore the physicians, of the nation. Healing and physicians are frequently men- tioned in the Bible (see Ex. 21. 19 ; 2K.8.29 ; 2Chr.l6.12 ; Je.8.22, etc.). Solomon, who "spake of trees" (iK.4.33), is very fond of discussing questions of disease and remedy (Pr. 3.8,6.15,12.18,17.22,20.30). Elisha has know- ledge enough to heal the bitter water (2 K. 2.21) and to cure the poisonous pottage (4.39-41). [Poison.] Hezekiah's boil is treated with a compress of figs (Is.38.2i), and Asa is blamed because he thinks of the physicians rather than of Him from Whom their skill comes (2Chr.l6. 12). The Babylonish Captivity brought the Jews into contact with new methods of thought and feeling, and no doubt increased their knowledge of medicine as of other civilized arts. Ecclesiasticus shows, by its repeated mention of physicians, etc., the increased re- gard given to the study of medicine, as is natural in a book probably belonging to the period of the Ptolemies. The wisdom of pre- vention is recognized in 18. 19. Rank and honour are said to be the portion of the phy- sician, and his office to be firom the Lord (38. i, 3,12). The repeated allusions to sickness (7. 528 MEDICINE 35,30.17,31.22,37.30,88.9), coupled with the former recognition of merit, have caused some to speculate that the author was himself a phvsician, but of this there is no evidence. In Wis. 16. 1 2 plaister is spoken of ; anointing in Tob.6.8 (see also Rev.3.i8). In the period of N.T. St. Luke, " the beloved physician," who had practised at Antioch, could hardly have failed to have been conversant with all the leading opinions current down to his own time. Situated between the great schools of Alexandria and Cilicia, within an easy sea- transit of both, as well as of the Western homes of science, Antioch enjoyed a more central position than any great city of the ancient world, and in it, therefore, all the streams of contemporary medical learning probably found a point of confluence. The medicine and siurgery of St. Luke were probably not inferior to those in demand among educated Asiatic Greeks, and must have been, as re- gards their basis, Greek and not Jewish. (The Greek origin of Jewish medicine is pro- bably indicated by a number of words for drugs, doctors, etc., in the Talmud, all of which are Greek.) Hence a standard Gk. medical writer, if any is to be found of that period, would best represent the profession to which the evangehst belonged. Without absolute certainty as to date, we seem to have such a writer in Aretaeus, commonly called "the Cappadocian," who WTote certainly after Nero's reign began, and probably floiurished shortly before and after the decade in which St. Paul reached Rome and Jerusalem fell. If he were of St. Luke's age it is striking that he should also be perhaps the only ancient medical authority in favour of demoniacal possession as a possible account of epilepsy. Assuming the date above indicated, he may be taken as expounding the medical practice of the Asiatic Greeks in the latter half of the ist cent. There is, however, much strongly marked individuality in his work, more especially in the minute verbal portraiture of disease. As the general science of medicine and surgery of this period may be represented by Aretaeus, so we have near that time a representative of Materia medica in Dioscorides. He, too, was of the same general region, a Cilician Greek, and his first lessons were probably learnt at Tarsus. His exact period is likewise uncertain, but he has usually been assigned to the end of the ist or the beginning of the 2nd cent. (3) Hygiene. In regard to this aspect of the treatment or avoid- ance of disease, we find much more advanced knowledge than in the branches already treated. The tradition of personal cleanliness among the Jews was pushed to an extreme which even in these days of great care in such matters seems at first to be unnecessary. But further consideration shows that it was not so. The washing of hands before every meal (Mt. 15.2 ; Mk.7.3) becomes a mere axiom of clean- liness, when we remember that hands were constantly used as we use forks (Mt. 26.23 > J^- 13.26) ; our Lord did not find fault with the custom, but with the Pharisees for their lack of a sense of proportion (c/. Mt. 23.23). Again, in Deut. 23.12, 13 we have a direction given professedly for ritual reasons, because such reasons would appeal to the Eastern mind MEGIDDO more than mere considerations of hygiene, but which contains all the essentials of that most recent scientific device, the " earth- closet." The O.T. rules as to diet and the killing of animals for food are most interesting. The Talmudical laws of " Bediqah " elaborate these, and, if carefully observed, are said to reduce the chance of infection through meat to a minimum. It is also worthy of notice that in a country where dead bodies rapidly putrefy and infectious flies abound, the prohibitions as to touching dead bodies (Num. 19. 11, etc. ; Lev. 17. 13-16) become absolutely necessary for health. In the case of infectious diseases, especially of leprosy, most elaborate precau- tions are enjoined ; all of which are amply justified by modern research. These pre- cautions are summed up by Dr. Adler, the Chief Rabbi, as follows : " They comprise (i) complete isolation of the sick from his family, friends, and the general community till the malady had disappeared ; (2) a thorough purification of the patient before he is allowed to re-enter the camp ; (3) a second period of quarantine ; (4) lastly, the destruction of his clothes and other effects." To compare these directions with modem ideas, running as they do on almost exactly the same lines of pro- hibition, protection, and purification, would be a fascinating subject for further investigation. The precautions as to " leprous houses " [Leprosy] have called forth much criticism, but in this connexion it is interesting to note the comments ol Dr. John Sutherland. " When a house," he sa^'s, " has been built in a locality where the air is moist and loaded with putre- scent matter, or where a house has been over- crowded or inhabited an undue length of time, without the walls having been cleansed, the plaster becomes saturated with damp and with organic matter, etc. Whenever this takes place the house will become unhealthy and the colour of the walls will be changed. A green- ish or reddish tint (these are the very colours of the house-leprosy in Deut.), apparently arising from minute lichens or fungi, appears in various places, and it is in houses with walls in this condition that cholera and other epidemics usually select their earUest victims." In view of these and many more instances of the near approximation of ancient and modern hygiene, is it very far-fetched to say, as one writer on this subject has done, " Still throughout the land, in this twentieth century, Moses hath in every city them that preach him " ? [F.J.] Me'eda (iEsd.5.32) = Mehida. Megriddo' (place of cutting. The ter- mination in vail shows the name to belong to the old Canaanite language, which — like the Babylonian — had a nominative ending in u, as in Jericho, etc.), a royal Canaanite city (J0S.I2.21), noticed between Taanach and Kedesh (perhaps of Naphtali). It lay in Issachar, though held by Manassch (17.ii), being one of " three countries " (nephcth, "open lands "), the other two being En- dor aiul Taanach. It was one of the places not taken from the Canaanites (Judg.l.27), and is noticed in this passage next to Ibleam. The kings of Canaan fought "near Taanach unto [or above] the waters of Megiddo " (5.19) ; but MECUDDO the battle in question was fought near En-dor. [KiSHON, River.] Megiddo was included in Solomon's fifth district — answering to Issachar — which reached to " Taanach, and Megiddo, and all Beth-shean " (1K.4.12); and it was fortified by him (9.15). Ahaziah of Judah fled before Jehu from Jezreel, " by the way of Beth-hag-gan," to Gur by Ibleam, where he was wounded, and driven thence to Megiddo (2K.9.27). King Josiah met the Egyptians at Megiddo, and was there slain (23.29,30). As Magiddo (iEsd.l.29) it is mentioned as having a " plain " near it ; but in Zechariah (12.ii) we read of the "valley [biq'd] of Megiddon" —a term applying, not to a plain, but to a wide valley between mountain chains. The Armageddon of the Apocalypse (16. 16), stated to be a Heb. word, is evidently har-iwghid- don, " the mountain of Megiddo," where a future triumph is represented as occurring, on the lield where Israel lost its freedom at the death of Josiah. None of these notices very clearly indicate the position of Megiddo ; but it was a strong place, well watered, in or near a broad valley, on the highway of armies, in the lot of Issachar. As being in a separate " open space," it appears not to have been in the same district as Taanach. But the site was unknown in the 4th cent., and the Talmud does not notice Megiddo. Robinson's sugges- tion that it lay at Lejjun (the Roman Legio), 4^ miles N.W. of Taanach, is a mere conjec- ture, due to Megiddo being several times noticed next to Taanach, and to the site being well watered, near hills and plains, and evi- dently important. Lejjun, however, is not on the high-road from Egypt to Damascus, which runs on E. side of the plain of Esdraelon, whereas that on the W. leads to Accho, past Taanach. There is no highway across the plain itself, and it is improbable that Ahaziah, even if he fled S. to Jenin, would then have fled again to N.W. to Lejjun. Nor is it likely that two royal cities (Megiddo and Taanach) would have been within five miles of each other, especially as they were in different " coun- tries " — or " regions," according to the Targum on Joshua (17. 11). [Dor.] The monumental notices are rather vague, but cast some light on the question. About 1580 b.c. Thothmes III., on his first campaign, met the Hittites, and other Syrians, at Makitha (or Magida), a city which appears to be Megiddo, since Taanach is noticed in the account of his advance. He was marching on Damascus, and the account of his first campaign, on the walls of the Karnak temple (Brugsch, Hist. Egt. i. pp. 318-327), though fragmentary, is valuable. He rejected the N. roads near Taanach, and apparently followed the more open trade route by Do- THAN, leading to Aaruna (perhaps 'Arrdneh, near Jezreel), whence he entered a " valley," and invested Megiddo on N., and on the side of the " southern mountain." The enemy fled into the fortress, which was finally taken, and great spoils captured. About a cent, and a half later an Egyptian traveller (see Brugsch, Hist. Egt. ii. p. 106) crossed Lower Galilee to the vicinity of Beth-shean and Rehobu (Tell er Rehab, near Beisdn), and speaks next of the " ford of J ordan " and the "passage" opposite Makitha or Megiddo. This — like the notice of ME-JAEJCON 529 Megiddo with Beth-shean (iK.4.12) — suggests that the " valley " of Megiddo was near the Jordan, and that the " passage " was the broad vale leading W. to Jezreel. If so, the " waters of Megiddo "maybethe streams near the large ruin of Mujedd'a, which lies 3 miles S.W. of Beisan, with a mountain to its S., where the valley of Jezreel enters the Jordan Valley. It commands the high-road to Damascus, and that down the Jordan Valley, which reaches Jerusa- lem by the Jericho road — a route followed by Pompey and Vespasian. Thus king Josiah, marching N. up the valley, would be on the flank of the Egyptian advance ; and Ahaziah, flying to Megiddo, would thence be carried to Jerusalem down the valley. The name Mujedd'a (the cut-off place) is the only one known in this region recalling Megiddo (the place of cutting). [c.r.c] Meg'iddon', Valley of, the extended form of Megiddo (Zech.l2.ii only). Mehetabeel' (Mehetabel, R.V.), ancestor of Shemaiah, 15 (Ne.6.io). Mehetabel', daughter of Matred, and wife of Hadad, or Hadar, the eighth and last-men- tioned king of Edom (Gen. 36. 39 ; iChr.l.50). Mehida', a family of Nethinim who re- turned from Babylon with Zerubbabel (Ezr.2. 52 ; Ne.7.54)- Mehip', son of Chelub, i (iChr.4.ii). Mehol'athite, The, a word occurring once only (iSara.18. 19). It no doubt denotes that Adriel belonged to a place called Meholah, but whether that was Abel-meholah, afterwards the native place of Elisha, is uncertain. Mehujael', son of Irad, and fourth in de- scent from Cain (Gen. 4. 18). Mehuman', one of the seven eunuchs (A.V. chamberlains) of Ahasuerus (Esth.l.io). Mehunim', or Meunim' (plur. forms). According to 2Chr.26.7, Uzziah, king of Judah, gained victories over the Philistines, Arabians of Gurbaal, and the Meunim. These are apparently the same as the Maonites, who are mentioned with the Zidonians and Amalekites among the oppressors of Israel (Judg.lO.12), though the LXX. reads Midian and the Vulg. Chanaan. In iChr.4.41 the word rendered in A.V. by "habita- tions" should probably be " Meunim," accord- ing to the q'-ri reading in the Massoretic text in the LXX. The verse refers to a raid by the Simeonites on the people of Ham and the Meu- nim. In 2Chr.20.i the LXX., possibly correctly, reads "Meunim" for "Ammonites." In the lists of those who returned from captivity the Meunim are reckoned among the Nethinim or temple-servants (Ezr.2.50; Ne.7.52). The LXX. renders " Meunim " in all three passages of Chronicles by MsLva'ioi, and in Job 2.ii " Zophar the Naamathite," the third friend of the patriarch, is called Sw^dp 6 M etrai wv jSacriXevs, evidently an attempt to connect this people with the Minean Arabs, who were well known to the ancient geographers. Probably, however, the Meunim (or Maonites) were an Edomite clan. [Maon.] [f-J.f.-j.] Me-jarkon' (water of greenness, Jos. 19. 46), mentioned with Rakkon (Raqqeit) and J APHO ( Ydfa), as in the lot of Dan. Probably the 'Aujeh stream, flowing from Antipatris to the sea, is meant. It is remarkable for the 34 530 MEKONAH green turf by its head springs ; and there are bushes and canes along its course, [c.r.c] Mekonah' (R.V. Meconah), one of the towns which were re-inhabited after the Cap- tivity bythemenof Judah(Ne.ll.28). Jerome (Onomasticon) notices Machamim as 8 Roman miles from Eleutheropolis. This is possibly el Meqenn'a, a ruin 12 miles N.W. of Beit Jibrin. The modern name means " veiled one," but may be a corruption of Mekonah. [c.r.c] Melatiah', a Gibeonite, who assisted in rebuilding the wadl of Jerusalem (Ne.3.7). Mel'chl. — 1. Son of Janna (Lu.3.24), and — 2- Son of Addi (3.28), both ancestors of Joseph in the genealogy of Christ. Melchiah'. [Malchijah, i.] Melchi'as. — 1. {iEsd.9.26) = MALCHiAH, 2. — 2. (9.32) = Malchijah, 4. — 3. {9.44) = Malchiaii, 6. Melchler, father of Charmis (Jth.8.15). Melchis'edec, the form of Melchizedek in A.V. of N.T. (Heb.5,6,7). Melchi-shu'a (iSam.14.49,31.2). Cor- rectly Malchishua. Melchizedek, king of Salem and priest of the Most High God, met Abram in the valley of Shaveh (the king's dale), brought out bread and wine, blessed Abram, and received tithes from him (Gen.l4.i8-2o). In Ps.llO.4 the Messiah is described as a priest for ever, " after the order of Melchizedek," and in Heb.5,6,7, these two passages of O.T. are quoted, and the typical relation of Melchizedek to our Lord is stated at great length. There is something surprising and mysterious in the first appear- ance of Melchizedek, and in the subsequent reference to him. Bearing a title ("king of righteousness ") which Jews in after ages would recognize as designating their own sovereign, bearing gifts which recall to Christians the Lord's Supper, this Canaanite crosses for a moment the path of Abram, and is unhesitatingly recognized as a person of higher spiritual rank than the friend of God. The faith of early ages invested his person with superstitious awe. A Jewish tradition pro- nounces Melchizedek to be a survivor of the Deluge — the patriarch Shem. Equally old, jierhaps, but less widely diffused, is the suppo- sition, not unknown to .\ugustine, and ascribed by Jerome to Origen and Didymus, that Melchizedek was an angel. The Fathers of the 4th and 5th cents, record with reprobation the tenet of the Melchizedekians that he was a Power, Virtue, or Influence of God, and the not less daring conjecture of Hieracas and his followers that Melchizedek was the Holy (ihost. Epiphanius mentions the erroneous opinion of some Christians that Melchizedek was the Son of God appearing in hmnan form. Similar to this was a Jewish opinion that he was the Messiah. The context in Gen. would lead to the inference that Melchizedek was of one blood with the children of Shem, among whom he lived, chief (like the king of Sodom) of a settled Canaanitish tribe. As Balaam was a prophet, so Melchizedek was a priest, among the corrupted heathen, not self-appointed, but constituted by a special gift from God, and recognized as such by Him. The " order of Melchizedek," in Ps.llO.4, means likeness in official dignity as king and priest. The relation MELITA between Melchizedek and Christ as type and antitype is : that each was a priest, (i) not of the Levitical tribe ; (2) superior to Abraham ; (3) whose beginning and end are unknown ; (4) who is not only a priest, but also a king of righteousness and peace (Heb.5,6,7). [He- brews, Ep. to.] Salem may have occupied in Abraham's time the ground on which after- wards Jerusalem stood: and Shaveh was possibly the Kidron Valley E. of Jerusalem. Jerome, Ep. Ixxiii. ad Evangelum ; Aquinas, 3 Summa, xxii, §6; Turretinus, Theologia, ii. pp. 443-453 ; Mozley, Lectures on O.T., pp. 20, 21 ; and for a parallel story from the monuments as evidence to his historical character, see Sayce, Higher Crit. and Man. ch. iv. [c.r.d.b.] Mel'ea, son of Menan, and ancestor of Joseph in the genealogy of our Lord (Lu.3.31). Mel'ech, second son of Micah son of Merib-baal, or Mephibosheth (iChr.8.35,9.41). Melicu' (Ne. 12.14) = Malluch, 6. Mel'ita, the modern Malta. This island is noted in Scripture as the scene of that shipwreck of St. Paul which is described so minutely in the Acts, (i) We find St. Paul's ship about a day after she left Fair Havens, i.e. when she was under the lee of Clauda (Ac. 27. 16), laid-to on the starboard tack, and strengthened with " undergirders," the boat being just taken on board, and the gale blow- ing hard from the E.N. E. (2) Assuming (what every practised sailor would allow) that the ship's direction of drift would be about W. by N., and her rate of drift about a mile and a half an hour, we come to the conclusion, by measuring the distance on the chart, that she would be brought to the coast of Malta on the 13th day (see ver. 27). 13) A ship drifting in this direction to the place traditionally known as St. Paul's Bay would come there without previously touching any other part of the island, since the coast trends from this bay to the S.E., as may be seen in any chart of Malta. (4) On Koura Point, which is the S.E. extremity of the bay, there must infallibly have been breakers when the N.E. wind was blowing. Now the alarm wasjcertaiuly caused by breakers, for it took place in the night (ver. 27), and it does not appear that the passengers were at first aware of the danger which the quick ear of the " sailors " recognized. (5) Yet the vessel did not strike: and this corresponds with the position of the point, which would be some little distance on the port side, or to the left, of the vessel. (6) Off this point of the coast the soundings are 20 fathoms (ver. 28), and a little farther, in the direction of the supposed drift, they are 15 fathoms (ib.). (7) Though the danger was imminent, we find from examining the chart that there would still be time to anchor (ver. 2<)) before striking on the rocks ahead. (8) With bad holding ground there would have been great risk of the ship dragging her anchors. The bottom of St. Paul's Bay is remarkably tenacious. (9) The other geological characteristics of the place are in harmony with the narrative, which describes the creek as having in one place a sandy or muddy beach (ver. 39), and which states that the bow of the ship was held fast in the shore, while the stern was exposed to the action of the waves (ver. 41). (10) Another point of local detail is of considerable interest — viz. that as the ship took the ground, the place was observed to be St^aXdcrcros, i.e- a connexion was noticed between two currents. We see from the chart that this is the case. [Sea.] (ii) Malta is in the track of ships between Alexandria and Puteoli ; and this corresponds with the fact that the Castor and Pollux, an Alexandrian vessel which ultimately conveyed St. Paul to Italy, had wintered in the island (28. ii). (12) Finally, the course pursued in this conclusion of the voyage, first to Syracuse, and then to Rhegium, contributes a last link to the chain of argu- ments by which we prove that Melita is Malta. The question has been set at rest for ever by Mr. Smith of Jordan Hill, in his Voyage and Shipwreck of St. Paul, the first published work in which it was thoroughly investigated from a sailor's point of view. The island of Malta, when St. Paul was there, was a dependency of the Roman province of Sicily. Its chief officer (under the governor of Sicily) appears from inscriptions to have had the title of irpujTos MeXtraiw;', or Primus Melitensium, and this is the very phrase which St. Luke uses (Ac.28.7). Malta, from its position in the Mediterranean, and the excellence of its harbours, has always been important both in commerce and war. It was a settlement of the Phoenicians at an early period, and their language, in a corrupted form, continued to be spoken there in St. Paul's day. Melons (Num.11. 5 only). The Heb. 'dbafjihim probably represents both the melon (Cucumis melo) and the water-melon (Cucurbita citrullus) ; the Arab, noun baffikhah is identical with the Heb. The water-melon is by some considered to be indigenous to India, whence it may have been very early introduced into Egypt. The common melon {Cucumis melo) is cultivated in the same places and ripens at the same time as the water-melon. The water-melon, now extensively cultivated in all hot countries, is not unlike the common melon, but the leaves are deeply lobed and gashed, the flesh is pink or white, and contains a large quantity of cold watery juice without much flavour; the seeds are black. [The read- ing of Wyclif and Geneva versions is pepons (or pumpkins). Pliny says of cucumbers : " Now when they exceed in greatnes, they be called Pepones, i.e. Melons or Pompons . . . with meats they are not unwholesome : and yet for the most part swim they will aloft, and ride upon a man's stomacke " (Holland's trans.), h.c.h.] Melzap (the Melzar, Dan.l.ii,i6 ; the steward, R.V.). Not a proper name, as in A. v., but probably the Assyr. word massaru (masaru, mazzaru), " a guardian," "warden," \/nasdru, " to guard " : cf. minzdr in Na.3. 17. (The latter form retains the n of the root, which in melsdr is softened to I, and in Assyr. is assimilated to the s following.) In Assyr. we find masar sibitti, " guardian of the prison," " gaoler"; masar 6a&«, "guardian of the gate," etc., in frequent use. But see Semitic Languages. [w.st.c.t.] Mem'mius, Quintus (2Mac.ll. 34). [Manlius, T.] Memphis, a city of ancient Egypt on the W. bank of the Nile, mentioned by Isaiah ]yrEM:l»His 5.31 (I9.13), Jeremiah (2.16,46.14,19), Ezekiel (30.13,16) under the name of Noph and by Hosea (9.6) under the name of Moph; but the LXX. everywhere reads Me'/x at Iribi-Bfil, but l)('ing unsiicr.cssful in resisting the Assyrian attark, fled, wnnndrd, and succeeded in escap- ing (709 n.c). Sargon died in 705, and Merodach-baladan reigned again at Babylon for 6 months, when he was attacked by MEROM, WATERS OF Sennacherib, and defeated at Ki§, Bel-ibni (Beli- bus) being placed on the throne. The Chaldean king then took refuge in Nagitu, an Elamite city on the Persian Gulf. This city was attacked by Sennacherib in 695 b.c, but Mero- dach-baladan's fate is unknown. [t.g.p.] Mepom, Waters of (Jos.ll.7). These are usually identified with theHiileh Lake, but without any good reason. J oshua was fighting a league of petty Galilean kings, allied to the king of Hazor. Josephus supposed Hazor to be above the lake Semechonitis, which is the Huleh (5 Ant. v. i, 3 Wars x. 7, 4 Wars i. i) ; but of Joshua's battle he only says that it was fought at a place called Beroth, not far from Kadesh in Upper Galilee (5 Ant. i. 18). Beroth is unknown, and may be a clerical error. The term for the Huleh in Heb. would be yam {sea), and not mayim (waters), usually applied to streams. The kings who fought at the waters of Merom were kings of Madon, Shimron, Achshaph, Chinneroth, Dor, and Hazor, all places in Lower Galilee and the plains. The pursuit was to Zidon and Hazor (vv. 8, 10). It is very unlikely that a chariot force ( ver. 6 ) could have been assemblednear the Huleh Lake, which is flanked by steep moun- tains ; and the swamps would have made their evolutions impossible. The LXX. reads Ma- p(hv (Maron), and the site might possibly be near Shimron-meron (Semunieh) ; in which case the " waters of Merom " would be the perennial stream of Wddy el Melek, which passes W. from the Buttauf Plain to join the KisHON. This stream runs 3 miles N. of Semunieh, and the flat open valley is the easiest approach to the plain S. of Hazor (HazzHr), where chariots could be used easily, [c.r.c] Mepo'nothite, The, i.e. native of a place probably called Meronoth, perhaps Marrina, a ruin 7 miles S.W. of Bethlehem. Two Meronothites are named in the Bible : — 1. Jehdeiah, who had charge of the asses of David (iChr.27.30) ; and — 2. Jadon, also described as a man of Gibeon, who assisted in repairing the wall after the Captivity {Ne.3.7). [c.r.c] Mepoz' (refuge), a place mentioned only in the Song of Deborah (Judg.5.23), and there denounced because its inhabitants had refused to take any part in the struggle with Sisera. Meroz must have been in the neighbourhood of the Kishon, but its real position is not known ; possibly it was destroyed in obedience to the curse. No modern name representing correctly the Heb. word is known, [c.r.c] Me'puth (iEsd.5.24), a corruption of Im- mer, I. Me'sech, Me'shech, a son of Japheth (Gen.10.2 ; iChr.l.5), and the progenitor of a race noticed in Scripture in connexion with Tubal, Magog, and other northern nations. They appear as allies of Gog (Ezk.38.2,3,39.i), and as supplying the Tyrians with copper and slaves (Ezk.27.13) ; in Ps.120.5 Mesech is mentioned with Kedar. Both the name and the associations favour the identification of Meshech with the Moschi ; the form of the name adopted by the LXX. and the Vulg. approaches most nearly to the classical designation. The position of the Moschi in the age of Ezekiel was probably that described by Herodotus (iii. 94), viz. in Armenia, MESHEZABEEL 535 where a mountain chain connecting Anti- taurus with Caucasus was named after them the Moschici Montes, and where was also a district named by Strabo (xi. 497-499 ) Moschice. In the Assyr. inscriptions the name appears as Muskai — a people noticed with the Tublai [Tubal], N. of Cappadocia. [c.r.c] Mesha'. — 1. King of Moab in the reigns of Ahab, Ahaziah, and Jehoram, kings of Israel, and tributary to the first. Upon Ahab's death at Ramoth-gilead and the accession of Ahaziah, Mesha rebelled and refused to pay the tribute of " a hundred thousand lambs and a hundred thousand rams, with the wool" (2K. 3.4,5). The inscription on the Moabite Stone (lines 3-8), however, seems to imply that the deliverance of Mesha from the yoke of Israel began at an earlier period — namely, in the middle of Ahab's reign. [Moab. J When Jeho- ram became king of Israel, one of his first acts was to secure the assistance of Jehoshaphat, his father's ally, in reducing the Moabites to their former condition of tributaries. The united armies of the two kings marched by a circuitous route round the Dead Sea, and were joined by the forces of the king of Edom. The Moabites were defeated, and the king took refuge in his last stronghold and defended himself with the energy of despair. With 700 fighting men he made a vigorous attempt to cut his way through the beleaguering army, and when beaten back, withdrew to the wall of his city, and there, in sight of the allied host, offered his first-born son, his successor in the kingdom, as a burnt -offering to Chemosh, the god of Moab (3.26,27). His bloody sacrifice had so far the desired effect that the besiegers, shocked thereat, retired to their own land. — 2. The eldest son of Caleb ben-Hezron (iChr. 2.42) by his wife Azubah, as Kimchi conjec- tures.— 3. A Benjamite, son of Shaharaim, by his wife Hodesh, who bare him in the land of Moab (8.9). Me'sha, the name of one of the geo- graphical limits of the Joktanites when they first settled in Arabia (Gen.lO.30). If Mesha was, as seems indicat ed in the verse, the W. limit of the Joktanites, it must be sought in Yemen. The seaport called MoCcra or Moi;fa, mentioned by Ptolemy, Pliny, Arrian, and others, perhaps presents the most probable site. It was a town of note in classical times, but has since fallen into decay, if the modern Mousa be the same place. Gesenius, from the latitude given by Ptolemy (vi. 7), places Mesha at Manshid on the W. coast of Yemen. [c.r.c] Meshach', the Babylonian name given to Mishael, one of the companions of Daniel (1-3). It probably means, "Who is as Aku [i.e. the moon-god] ? " [Shadrach.] [h.a.r.] Meshech. [Mesech.] Meshelemiah', a Korhite, "son" of Kore, of the sons of Asaph, who with his 7 sons and his brethren, " sons of might," were gate- keepers of the house of Jehovah in David's reign (iChr.9.2i, 26.1,2,9). [Meshullam, 20; Shallum. 8, 9.1 Meshezabeel'. — 1. Ancestor of Mesh- ullam, 13 ( Ne.3.4). — 2. One of the " heads of the people," probably a family, who sealed the covenant (IO.21). — 3. Father of Pethahiah, and descendant of Zerah, son of J udah (11. 24). 536 MESHILLEMITH MeshiUemith', the son of Immer, a priest (iChr.9.i^), called in Ne.ll.13 Meshillemoth. Meshilleinoth'.->-l. An Ephrainiite, an- cestor of Berechiah, 5 {2Chr.28.12).— 2. (Ne. 11.13)=Meshillemith. Meshullam'. — 1. Ancestor of Shaphan the scribe (2 K. 22.3). — 2. The son of Zerub- babel (iChr.3.19). — 3. A Gadite who dwelt in Bashan in the reign of Jotham, king of Judah (5.13). — 4, 5. 6. ThreeBenjamites (8.17,9.7,8). — 7. The father of Hilkiah the high-priest (iChr.9.ii ; Ne.ll.ii); called Shallum in iChr.6.13. — 8. A priest, son of Meshillemith (iChr.9.i2 ; cf. Ne.ll.13).— 9. A Kohathite in the reign of Josiah (2Chr.34.i2). — 10. One of the "heads" (A.V. chief men) sent by Ezra to Iddo " the head," to gather together the Levites to join the caravan about to return to Jerusalem (Ezr.8.i6). — 11. A Levite in the time of Ezra who assisted Jonathan and Jaha- ziah in annulling the marriages with foreign wives (IO.15). — 12. A descendant of Bani who had married a foreign wife (10. 29). — 13. The sin of Berechiah. who assisted in rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem (Ne.3.4), as well as the temple wall, adjoining which he had his " chamber" (8.30). His daughter was married to Johanan, son of Tobiahthe Ammonite(6.i8). —14. Son of Besodeiah : he assisted Jehoiada, son of Paseah, in restoring the old gate of Jeru- salem (3.6). — 15. One of those who stood at the left hand of Ezra when he read the law to the people (8.4). — 16. A priest (10. 7), and — 17- One of the heads of the people who sealed the covenant (IO.20). — 18. A priest in the days of Joiakim, son of Jeshua, and representative of the house of Ezra (I2.13). — 10. Another priest at the same time as 18, and head of the family of Ginnethon (12.i6). — 20. A family of porters, descendants of Meshullam (12. 25), who is also called Mesuelemiah (iChr.26.i), Shelemiah (26.14), and Shallum (Ne.T.is). — 21. One of the princes of Judah at the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem (I2.33). Meshulle'meth, daughter of Haruz of Jotbah, wife of Manesseh, king of Judah, and mother of his successor Amon (2K.2I.19). Meso'baite (R.V. Mezo'baite), The, a title which occurs only once, attached to the name of Jasiel (1Chr.ll.47). Mesopotamia, the ordinary Gk. rendering of the Heb. Aram-naharaim, or " Aram of the Two Rivers," so frequently mentioned in the earlier books of O.T. (Gen. 24. 10 ; Deut.23.4 ; Judg.3.8,io). It was properly the tract be- tween the Tigris and the Euphrates, measuring about 700 miles in length, and from 20 to 200 in breadth, extending in a south-easterlv direction from Telek (lat. 38° 23', long. 39° 18') to Qurnah (lat. 30°, long. 47° 30'). The Ara- bian geographers call it " the island," a name which is very ai)pr(>priate, as only a few miles intervene between the sources of the Tigris and the Euphrates at Telck. The greater portion is a vast plain, but it is crossed in its upper part by the Sinjar hills, running nearlv I':, and W. froni about Mosul to a jioint hvhtw Rakkch; and in its northern portion it is even mountainous, the Upper Tigris valley lieing separated from the Mesoi>otamian j)lain bv an important group, which includes the Mnns Masius of Strabo. The N.W. district— ;.f. the country MESSIAH between the great bend of the Tigris and the Upper Euphrates (lat. 35° to 37° 30') — is that most referred to in O.T. It consists of mountainous country, extending from Bircjik to Jezireh on N., and the great undulating plain as far as the Sinjar hills, and the river Khabur on S. From the N. side of the northern range short rivers flow into the Tigris, and on the S. side into the Euphrates, ultim- ately forming the Belik (ancient Belichus) and the Khabur (Habor or Chaboras). Besides Orfa and Harran, the chief cities of modern -Mesopotamia are Mardin and Xisibin, S. of the Jebel-tur, and Diarbekr, N. of that range, on the Tigris. We first hear of Mesopotamia in O.T. as the country where Nahor and his family settled after leaving Ur of the Chaldees (Gen. 24.10). Bethuel and Laban lived there, and thither Abraham sent his servant to fetch Isaac a wife " of his own kindred " (ver. 38). Thither, too, Jacob journeyed a century later, returning with his two wives after an absence of 21 years. It is next referred to after the wanderings in the wilderness (Deut.23.4) ; and half a century later appears as the seat of a powerful monarchy (Judg.3.8). Mesopotamia is the Nairi of the Assyrian inscriptions and the Naharina of the Amarna tablets; the non-Semitic Mitanni being a principal state, of which, in the opinion of Sayce, Chu- shan-rishathaim was king. The Nairi of the later Assyrian inscriptions seems to have been more N., near the sources of the two great rivers, and Assyria had settlements there, one of the places being Tuiha, whose prince, Amme-ba'ala, paid tribute" to Assur-nasir- apli, but was afterwards slain by his nobles (about 870 B.C.). Indeed, this king claims to have captured no less than 250 strongly fortified cities of " the lands of Nairi " during his expeditions. That some of the tribes or petty nationalities of Mesopotamia were very warlike may be gathered froni the fact that the Ammonites hired chariots and horsemen from Mesopotamia, Syria-maachah, andZobah, in their war against David (iChr.19.6). The amount of spoil taken from the inhabitants by the Assyrian kings testifies to the prosperity of the region. On the fall of the Assyrian em- pire, Mesopotamia seems to have been divided between the Medes and the Babylonians. The conquests of Cyrus brought it wholly under the Persian yoke, and it remained thus until the time of Alexander. [t.g.p.] Mess (tnas'i'th, lit. something lifted up, a burden), used of a " portion " of food which a superior sends to a guest, during a feast, as a mark of honour (Gen. 43. 31 ; 2Sain.ll.8) ; also of any portion of food (Heb. 12. id), [w.o.e.o.] Messiah. The expectation of the Messiah may be said to be the characteristic feature of Jewish belief, just as the advent of the Messiah is the characteristic feature of the Christian religion. Christianity is the religion of the Christ, but the name Christ, or Messiah, and its meaning, was created by the Jewish faith and experience. In O.T. the word is generally found united with Jehovah, and means "the Anointed of Jehovah." David gives the title to Saul in iSam.24.6. 10, where the Vulg. translation is " (juia C hristus Domini est." The high-priest is also styled MESSIAH "the anointed" (Lev.4.3) ; and in iK.19.i6 Elijah is directed to anoint Islisha prophet in his room. Anointing to an office in God's name implied a solemn dedication to it, and consequently a special gift of God's grace for the fulfilment of it. For the most part, however, by the " Lord's anointed " is meant the ruling king of the Jewish nation, who re- presented God to the nation and the nation to God. The personal relation of God to His people was regarded as embodied in a personal ruler. The consequence was that the ideals which were planted by revelation in the minds of the people of Israel were more and more ex- pected to find their reali/ation in a perfect king. Those ideals had been quickened by a peculiarly vivid experience. Great charac- ters arose in the nation who, in spite of their imperfections, exhibited in singular force the great offices of life. Moses was an ideal law- giver and deliverer ; Joshua was an ideal leader in war ; Samuel exhibits the highest type of a judge. Similarly, as soon as the kingly office was called into existence, David arose, who, notwithstanding his great sin, nevertheless exhibited in the main the ideal character of a righteous king, in a form in which it fascinated the eyes of subsequent generations. It is remarkable that, as de- scribed in Ps.72, its primary characteristic is not warlike success or power, but righteous- ness. " Give the king thy judgments, O God, and Thy righteousness unto the king's son," is the keynote. The experience of the nation had taught them also the necessity to their national well-being of a Prophet to declare and expound to them the laws of God, and of a Priest to make atonement for their violations of those laws. For each of these offices they needed an anointed person, and the three functions became gradually concen- trated in one. In Ps.llO the king is " a priest for ever, after the order of Melchizedck " : and, in the person of Moses, the leader of the people had been at once the lawgiver and the prophet. Revelation and national experience thus combined to fix in the mind of the people of Israel the conception of the dependence of the national welfare upon an ideal King, Priest, and Prophet. Later on, amidst the experience of bitter disappointment and suffering, the conviction seemed to be forred on them of the need of an expiation for their sins by suffering borne on their behalf by a national representa- tive, of an ideal " Servant of Jehovah " who should bear witness to His will by patient sub- mission to misery and death. This conception also attached itself naturally to the typical national representative, the Messiah. So the conception arises, not artificially, by means of isolated and mysterious predictions, but natur- ally and unconsciously, through a living ex- perience, of the realization of blessing, national and individual, under the rule and guidance oi a perfect King, Priest, and Prophet. This is the view which, in our Lord's time, fills the mind of an inspired man like Zacharias : " He hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of His servant David, . . . that we, being delivered from the hand of our enemies, might serve Him without fear, in holiness and righteousness before Him." In this song of MESSIAH 537 Zacharias a jioint is mentioned which became a fixed element in the Messianic hope. The horn of salvation was to be raised " iti the house of His servant David." It was recorded from the time of David onwards that a promise had been made to him that his descendants should remain the royal house of the nation, however they might be for a time obscured. In David's seed the Jewish nation was to find its centre, and in time its ideal King. Now, it is characteristic of the Jewish nation that it lived on these promises, and it is characteristic of the Jewish literature that it was perpetu- ally renewing and enforcing them. The at- tachment of the vision of perfect rule to the House of David gave to the promise a definite- ness by which it acquired an extraordinary solidity in the national mind. Other nations have had hopes of a great future, but none other has had its whole hope and vitality based on a specific promise, which enabled and compelled it to look forward to the realization of a definite deliverance, rule, and guidance by an individual king of an historic house. When the gospel of St. Matthew opens with the words, " The book of the generations of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham," it summed up the whole of Jewish history, and announced the fulfilment of all Jewish hopes. But the manner in which i)rophetic revelation kept alive this hope is of the utmost import- ance to it. The history of the natirm after the time of David is one continuous failure. The people fall away into idolatry and moral cor- ruption, and are conseqviently left to be the vic- tims of internal dissension or external violence. The visions which had been held before them of peace, righteousness, and prosperity are shattered ; at length the nation is dispersed ; to all human appearance there is an end to it. But throughout these disasters, amidst them, and after them, the prophets maintain the divine assurances of a reign of perfect righ- teousness, justice, and peace, and generally of its realization under the rule of the House of David. Sometimes the predictions or pro- mises are simply of the establishment of a reign of righteousness under Jehovah Himself ; and this is the case even in prophets who at other times associate such predictions with the House of David. But the Messianic hope in this double sense is the life of the prophetic messages. The divine rule and the Messianic rule are indissolubly associated, and the figure of the Messiah thus assumes more and more of divine attributes. The vision is, indeed, more or less dim. The inspired intimations given to the prophet combine with his own and the national experience to adumbrate a king, prophet, and priest who needs divine qualifica- tions for his office ; but the realization in the actual Incarnation itself is but dimly within his ken. The rjlder interpretation of the Messianic prophecies was, therefore, right in substance so far as it saw in the prophetic utterances promises and hopes which could only be fully realized in an incarnate Son of God and Son of man. But it erred in over- straining the literal significance of particular passages and expressions. Each expression by itself may be capable of an interpretation short of the^highest. But the whole strain of pro- .538 MESSIANIC EXPECTATIONS phetic hope, and the combined effect of all the jiromises and intimations in the prophets, from first to last, are only capable of realization in the true Messiah. The further course of such prediction in Jewish literature is remarkable. In the apocryphal writings the highest pro- phetic and national ideals are comparatively in abeyance, and consequently the Messianic hope is but occasionally and partially put forward. Even in the account of the great national movement under the Maccabees it rarely appears. It would seem as though the hopes of the people were then too much ab- sorbed in the mere temporal triumph of the national cause ; and the very success of the Maccabees tended to produce the hardening of Messianic ideas which is too characteristic of the Jews in general in the time of our Lord. But in the pseudepigraphic writings, and in the mass of apocalyptic literature which arose shortly before our Lord's time and after it, the old Messianic hope revives with the greatest intensity. The disappointment which fol- lowed the Maccabaean period had perhaps a similar effect in this respect to the former trials of the nation. But there is an extraordinary contrast in the form in which the hope is ex- pressed. In the ancient prophets the office of the Messiah is sketched only in the grand outlines of righteousness, truth, justice, and love. They do not condescend to details, except in the few points (such as the descent from David and the birth at Bethlehem) which would assist in the recognition of the Messiah on His appearance. But in the pseudepi- graphic writings imagination is unrestrained in dreams and predictions of the future, and the higher characteristics of the conception are consequently lost. In our Lord's life and ministry the ancient prophetic vision is realized, and the kingdom of God is revealed as a kingdom of perfect righteousness under a divine and human King. [Prophecy.] [h.w.] Messianic expectations of the Jevrs. [Messiah ; Jesus Christ.] Messi'as, the Gk. form of Messiah (Jn.l. 4I.4-25)- Metals. The Hebrews were acquainted with nearly all the metals known to modern metallurgy, whether as the products of their own soil or the results of intercourse with foreigners. One of the earliest geographical definitions is that which describes the country of Havilah as the land which abounded in gold, and the gold of which was good (Gen.2. 11,12). According to Genesis, the first artist in metals was Tubal-cain, the son of Lamech, the forger or sharpener of every instrument of copper (A.V. brass) and iron (4.22). " Abram was very rich in cattle, in stiver, and in gold " (13. 2) ; silver being the medium of commerce, while gold existed in the shape of ornaments, during the patriarchal ages. Tin is first men- tioned among the spoils of the Midianites taken when Balaam was slain (Num. 31. 22), and lead is used to heighten the imagery of Moses' triumphal song (Ex.15. 10). Whether the ancient Hebrews were acquainted with steel, properly so railed, is uncertain ; the words so rendered in A.V. (2Sam.22.35 ; Job 20.24 ; Ps.l8.34 ; Je.i5.12) are in all other passages translated brass, and would be more METALS correctly copper or bronze. Commentators be- lieve the "northern iron" of Je.l5.i2 to have been iron hardened and tempered by some peculiar process, so as more nearly to corre- spond to what we call Steel ; and the " flaming torches" of Na.2.3 (see R.V.) are probably the flashing steel of the war-chariots which should come against Nineveh. The Hebrews must also have used the mixture of copper and tin known as bronze, and probably in all cases in which copper is mentioned as in any way manufactured, bronze is to be understood. Except iron, gold is the most widely diffused of all metals. Almost every country in the world has in its turn yielded a certain supply, but, though it was known at a very early period, and was procured with little difficulty, we have no indications of its occurrence in Palestine. The Hebrews obtained their prin- cipal supply from S. Arabia and the commerce of the Persian Gulf. It was probably brought in the form of ingots (Jos. 7.21 ; A.V. wedge, lit. tongue), and was rapidly converted into articles of ornament and use. The great abundance of gold in early times is indicated by its entering into the composition of every article of ornament and many of domestic use. Among the spoils of the Midianites taken by the Israelites when Balaam was slain were earrings and jewels to the amount of 16,750 shekels of gold (Num. 31. 48-54), equal to more than £30,000 of our present money, and 1,700 shekels of gold (worth more than £3,000) in "earrings" alone were taken by Gideon's army from the slaughtered Midianites (Judg. 8.26) ; though these values must be halved if the Bab. " light " shekel be intended. The numbers, though large, are not incredibly great, when we consider that the country of the Midianites was then perhaps rich in gold- streams since exhausted, and that like the Malays of the present day, and the Peru- vians of the time of Pizarro, the Midianites carried most of their wealth about them. But the amount of treasure accumulated by David from spoils taken in war is so enormous, that we are tempted to conclude the numbers exaggerated. Though gold was thus common, silver appears to have been the ordinary medium of commerce. The first com- mercial transaction of which we possess the details was the purchase of Ephron's field by Abraham for 400 shekels of silver (Cien.23.i6) ; slaves were bought with silver (17.12, E.V. money) ; silver was the money paid by Abime- lech as a compensation to Abraham (20. 16) ; Joseph was sold to the Ishmaclite merchants for 20 pieces of silver (37.28) ; and generally in O.T. the " money " of A.V. is literally silver. The first payment in gold is mentioned in iChr.21.25, where David buys the threshing- floor of Oman, or Araunah, the Jebusite, for 600 shekels of gold by weight. But in the parallel narrative of the transaction in 2Sam. 24.24 the price paid for the threshing-floor and oxen is 50 shekels of silver. With this one exception there is no mention in O.T. of gold as a medium of commerce ; tiie Heb. coinage may have been partly gold, but we have no proof of it. [Money ; Weu.hts, Coins.] Silver was brought into Palestine in the form of plates from Tarsuish, with gold and ivory METERUS (iK. 10.22; 2Chr.9.2i ; Je.lO.9). The accu- mulation of wealth in the reign of Solomon was so great that silver was but little esteemed ; " the king made silver to be in Jerusalem as stones " (iK. 10. 21, 27). With the treasures brought out of Egypt, not only the ornaments but the ordinary metal-work of the tabernacle were made. From a comparison of the amounts of gold and silver collected by David, it appears that the proportion was nearly i to 9. Brass, or more properly copper, was obtained in Sinai and to the N. of Palestine proper, of which it was hardly correct to say " a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills thou mayest dig copper" (Deut.8.9; Job 28.2; A.V. brass). It was so plentiful in the days of Solomon that the quantity employed in the temple was too great to be estimated (iK. 7. 47). Tin was well known, and the process of alloying copper with it was early discovered. [Copper.] Arms (2Sam.2i.16 ; Job 2O.24 ; Ps.l8.34) and armour (iSam.17.5,6,38) were made of bronze, which was capable of being so wrought as to admit of a keen and hard edge. The Egyptians employed this in cutting the hardest granite. The " iron mountain " in the trans-Jordanic region is described by Josephus, and iron-mines are still worked by the in- habitants of Kefr Huneh N. of the valley Zahardni. [Iron.] Tin and lead were both known at a very early period, though there is no distinct trace of them in Palestine. The former was among the spoils of the Midianites (Num. 31. 22), who might have obtained it in their intercourse with the Phoenician mer- chants [cf. Gen. 37. 25, 36), who themselves pro- cured it from Tarshish (Ezk.27.i2) and the tin countries of the West. Antimony (2 K. 9.30; Je. 4.30 ; A.V. painting), in the form of powder, was used by the Hebrew women, Like the kohl of the Arabs, for colouring their eyelids and eyebrows. Further information will be found in the articles upon the several metals, and the metallurgy of the Hebrews is discussed under Mines. Mete'pus. " The sons of Meterus " re- turned with Zerubbabel (iEsd.5.i7 only). Me'thegr-ammah', apparently a place which David took from the Philistines (2Sam. 8.1). In the parallel passage of iChr.l8.i, " Gath and her (daughter-)towns " is sub- stituted for Metheg ha-ammah. In the R.V. Ammah is taken as meaning " mother-city " or " metropolis " {cf. 2Sam.2O.19), and Metheg ha-ammah is " the bridle of the mother- city " — viz. of Gath, the chief town of the Philistines. With other points (ummah) the meaning would be " control of the people." The LXX. (Vat. MS.) renders the word d(pO}pi(TfxivT]V. [c.r.c] Methusael', son of Mehujael, in the line of Cain, and father of Lamech, i (Gen.4.i8). Methuselah', the longest-lived antedilu- vian [Patriarchs] ; son of Enoch in the line of Seth, and father of Lamech, 2 (Gen.5.2iff.). Meunim'. [Mehunim.] Mezahab', father of Matred and grand- father of Mehetabel, who was wife of Hadar or Hadad, the last-named king of Edom (Gen. 36. 39 ; iChr.1.50). His name is supposed to mean " waters of gold " ; more probably "covered with gold." MICAH 539 Miamin'. — 1. A layman of the sons of Parosh, who put away his foreign wife (Ezr. 10.25)-— 2. (Ne.12.5.) [MlJAMIN, 2.] Mlbhap'. " Mibhar the son of Haggeri " is the name of one of David's heroes in iChr.ll. 38. The parallel passage in 2Sam.23.36 reads " of Zobah, Bani the Gadite," which is pro- bably the true reading. See Driver, Text of Samuel, 284. Mibsatn'. — 1. A son of Ishmael(Gen.25.i3 ; iChr.1.29), not elsewhere mentioned. — 2. A Simeonite (iChr.4.25). Mibzap', a phylarch or " duke " of Edom (Gen. 36. 42 ; iChr.l.53). Micah'. — 1. (Judg.17,18.) This story was included in Judges to prove how idolatry and lawlessness prevailed when there was no king (17.6,18.6). The story refers to the generation after Joshua. Critics postulate two documents with inconsistent facts, but they are not agreed as to the analysis or as to the inconsistencies. Micah lived in Mt. Ephraim. He stole 1,100 shekels of silver from his mother. She cursed the thief and devoted the money, if restored, to Jehovah. To escape the curse, Micah con- fessed ; to escape from her vow, the mother besought him to retain the money. Micah, afraid of the curse, was afraid also of sacrilege, so the mother compromised with her conscience by giving a silversmith 200 shekels for an image. The result was a shrine at home. The money was not lost altogether, and the shrine no doubt was profitable. There was evidently only one idol, for the worship of Jehovah was intended ; in consequence " a graven image and a molten image " {pesel and massekhd) raise diiiiculties. The words may mean a molten image engraved, or a carved image with molten ornaments, massekhd in 18. 20 is misplaced. The idol led to a shrine. The shrine necessi- tated an ephod and teraphim. They in turn required a priest to use them. The ephod here cannot be an idol or the teraphim large. In 18.20 the Levite carries all. The ephod (like Aaron's) was probably a garment with a purse containing the teraphim, used, like the Urim and Thummim, for divining. Micah at first made his son priest, but afterwards secured a wandering Levite at a miserable pittance. The Levite was Jonathan, the grandson of Moses, and later Jews, out of respect for the lawgiver, inserted an " n " above the line and read Manasseh (18. 30). He belonged to Bethlehem, and was " of the family of Judah " (I7.7). These words are not sufficient to prove there was no tribe of Levi, or to overthrow the witness to the parentage of Moses. Levites were doubtless affiliated to the tribes with which they lived. Micah's pleasure and Dan's subsequent desire to secure his services prove that Levites had recognized religious functions. Micah disobeyed the second commandment, but was careful as to ritual propriety. He is typical of many superstitious men. When the Danites were driven from the Maritime Plain by Amorites (I.34), they sent five spies to find a suitable settlement for their surplus popula- tion. These spies passed Micah's house and recognized the Levite " by his voice," perhaps by his southern dialect. At their request he consulted his God and assured them of success. They found Laish, in a northern valley, pros- 540 MICAH perous and uiiprotcctcci by alliances. In con- sequence 600 armed Uaiiites with families and cattle marched from Mahaiieh-dan and came to Micah's house. Jonathan was held in con- verse at the gate while the spies robbed the shrine. Jonathan protested a little, but con- sulted his own interest and went with the Danites. Micah, discovering his loss, collected his neighbours and pursued. The Danites had sent on their impedimenta, and turned on him with threats. Micah was afraid, and returned home. The Danites marched to I.aish, sur- prised and burnt the town, and settled in the country, calling it Dan. The idol was set up, Jonathan and his sons became its priests, and the worship continued " all the time the house of God was in Shiloh," i.e. " until the captivity of the land," when the Philistines captured the ark. The narrative is vivid. The story is told throughout with grim humour. The author, by his presentation of the facts, renders com- ment on his part superfluous. Never was such an exposure of superstition. See Judges, op. cit. ; Day, Social Life of Heb. ; Robertson, Early Rel. of isr. — 2. (iChr.5.5.) Son of Shimei, a Reubenite. — 3. (iChr.9.15) = Michaiah, 2: — 4.(8.34,35.9.40,41; cf. 2Sam.9.i2.) The son of Merib-baal (Mephibosheth) and grandson of Jonathan. He lived in the house of Ziba. — 5. (iChr.23.20.) A Kohathite, son of Uzziel. — 6. (2Chr.34.20.) "Abdon, son of Micah," cf. 2K. 22.12; "Achbor, the son of Michaiah." —7. The prophet, vide ne.xt art. [h.m.s.] Micah', the writer of the sixth book of the minor prophets (third in LXX.), is called, to distinguish him from Micah (li.V. Micaiah) son of Imlah (iK.22..S), whose message he takes up {cf. Mi.1.2 with iK. 22.286), "the Morashthite " (Mi.l.i, R.V.) from the city of his birth in Judaea (I.14), wherein early times his grave was shown. He prophesied in the reigns of Jotham (according to Kautzsch 740- 736), .4haz (736-728), and Hezekiah (727-690), and was therefore a yoimger contemporary of Hosea(l.i) and Isaiah (l.i), with which last prophet he is often in touch (cf. Mi.l.io ff. with Is.lO.20ff., 2. 1 1 with Is.28.7. B.sff- with Is.29. off., 3.12 with ls.32.13f., 4. if. with Is.2.iff., 5.2ff. witli Is.7.i4,9.5ff. ; in several of which passages there is also a similarity of wording and word-play, especially noticeable in the Hebrew). Since l.fif. was written before 722, and 3.12 is placed by Je.26.i8 in Hezekiah's time, and since the whole book shows the hand of an artist in the relation of its parts, we may consider the book to have been com- pleted in its present form in the reign oi Hezekiah, before 722. Even 6.16 does not necessarily give us a later date than this {cf. 1.5,5. 1 iff., 2K.I6.3). That proclamations of salvation usually follow on threatenings of chastisement is no reasrm for alleging their spuriousness, since the threatening is not set on one side, but is presupposed in the very sub- stance of the ])romise itself. To understand aright the ])rophctical writings, we must bear in mind the twofold object of the projihet's mis- sion— to rebuke the careless and ungodly, and to encourage the weak-hearted and troubled. As in Is. 7-12 and in Hosea, so also in Micah a j>roniise is always found at the end of a jiassage which begins with the customary rhetorical MICAH " Hear." The following table will indicate this principle more plainly : Threatening. Promise, (i) 1.2-2.II. 2.12,13. (2) 3.1-12. 4-5. (3) 6.1-7.6. 7.7-20. This simple consideration forms also the most serviceable answer to the onslaughts of critical caprice, of which the name here is legion. Fol- lowing Stade's precedent, it is customary to regard the whole, or nearly the whole, of 4-7 as not genuine. In Marti's hands the genuine book shrinks to a little over a quarter of its original bulk. Volz distinguishes in 4—5 alone six stages of revision. The inconsistency fre- quently insisted upon, that Jerusalem in ch. 4 sometimes appears as conquered, sometimes as set free, disappears at once if we are allowed to regard the prophetic insight as speaking of events yet to take place after the Exile (see 2.i2f., 5.3-5. 7f-, 14 A.V. marg., 7.i3ff. ; Ho.2. 3ff. ; Ezk.SSf. ; Zech. 12-14) ; whereas to re- move the difficulty by a forced theory of interpolation is excluded by any reasonable view of the context. — Contents. Ch. 1. Jehovah appears in judgment on account of the guilt of Samaria and Jerusalem. Samaria is to become a waste. To Jerusalem draw near hostile hosts from N. and S., and their approach is delineated with great poetic power. Ch. 2 finds the reason of the chastise- ment, which has its climax in exile (1. 16, 2.4, 10) in the covetousness of all the higher ranks of society ; after the deepest misery, and not before the punishment, as the soothsayers pretend, follow the times of happiness, deliver- ance, enlargement, and victorious exodus. Vv. izi. presuppose the judgment, and do not give the words of the lying prophets ; ver. 11 is a parenthesis. Ch. 3-5. The leaders by cove- tousness, the false prophets by self-seeking predictions of health and wealth without judgment, the priests by venality and carnal security in administering their office, have greatly led the people astray and have brought about the overthrow. " Therefore for your sakes Zion shall be ploughed up for a field, Je- rusalem shall become a rubbish heap, and the temple hill as the forest high places." This verse (3.12) the princes of the land (Je.26.i6- iq) used to show that Jeremiah was not worthy of death simply because he prophesied evil, since Hezekiah had not considered that Micah should be so punished. But again, the con- clusion that Micah could not have therefore proclaimed any message of salvation is not justified, since such a message does not make void the tlireatening, but on the con- trary makes it surer. The jiromise of Mi. 4. iff., which is indirectly attached to 3.12, sets forth the religious significance of Zion, vv. 8-14 its outward fortunes. 5. iff. introduces, in corre- spondence with " the sovereignty of the early days " which 4.8 mentions, the tiiought of the personal ruler, born in Bethlehem of a virgin (clearly referring to Is.7.14) issuing from eternity, eijuipped with divine power and majesty; and 5.6-14 shows the people of God of the future greatly blessed, and yet fearing for the peoples of the world, and at the same time without a false reliance on outward MICAIAH Ceremonial or on the worship of idols. The well-known prophecy of the temple hill (4. iff.) meets us again in Is. 2. iff. Since from chrono- logical reasons Micah, with whom the passage fits the context much more closely than in Isaiah, could not have taken it from him, and since, moreover, interpolations in both pro- phets are excluded by the continuous con- sistency of their work, it follows that both have made use of an earlier common writing, with which also Joel (3.io ff.), Jeremiah (31. 6f.), and Zechariah (8.10,8.20 ff.) were acquainted, and after which Micah shaped the imagery of 8.12 (see the unique expression "mountain of the house" for the temple hill). That Babylon is named as the place of the Exile (4. 10) — and the word coheres to its context too closely to be abandoned — is not more remarkable than that Isaiah should name the annexation of Israel by Assyria (7.i7ff.) ; or that Zechariah (9.13) should know of the rising of the Greeks (lonians) amongst the world-powers hostile to the Hebrews or that Isaiah (89.6) should in the same way indicate Babylon as the land of the Exile, or Micah Bethlehem as the Messiah's birthplace. But 5. iff. is a real advance in the Messianic expectation, especially as stating that Christ comes from eternity; in other respects Micah agrees closely with the thoughts of Is.7.i4,9.5ff. Ch. 6, in a third part of the book, contains, with bolder expression, God's controversy with His people, and belongs to the purest regions of religious and ethical thought. God requires rectitude, love, and a humble walk ; where these are wanting, as in Israel, the greatest sacrifice avails nothing. 6.6ff., which was once used as a principal lever in support of the view that the law is later than the prophets, is now relegated by Marti to the 5th cent. B.C., leaving the hypothesis of Wellhausen to take care of itself ! The first part of ch. 7 expatiates with a bitter cry upon the lack of goodness in the people, and the whole book ends (ver. 7ff.) with hopes of redemption and restoration, and, with a confession of sin indeed, but also with an unshaken confidence in God's forgiving grace and truth, with a word-play upon the prophet's name in ver. 18. Ver. 12 does not refer to the return from Exile, but to the entrance of the heathen into the kingdom of God (c/. 4. iff., 5. 6f., 7. 16,17). Thus Micah makes prominent throughout, in equal proportions, the holiness of God and the love of God. The language is powerful and bold, with frequent similes, es- pecially from the shepherd life (1.6-8,2.i2,4.3ff., 5.3,7.1,14), and ch. 6 is vividlv dramatic. Quo- tations in N.T. : 5.2 in Mt.2.'5ff., Jn.7.42; 7.6 in Mt.lO.35f., Mk. 13.12, Lu.i2.53 ; 7.20 in Lu.l.72f. Critical views : besides commen- taries and introductions, see Stade, Zeitschr- fiir die A.T. Wissenschaft, i. 161, iii. iff., who first started the criticism of Micah ; Volz (1897), Die vorexilische Jahve-prophetie und der Messias, pp. 63 ff. Positive views : Ryssel, 1887, Untersuchungen iiher die Text-gestalt und die Echtheit des Buches Micha. The present writer has thoroughly examined the most modern problems of the book in his Messian- ische ErwarUtng der Vorexilischen Propheten (1906), pp. 233-282. [w.M.] Micaiah '. There are 7 persons of this name MICHAEL 541 in O.T. besides Micah the Levite, to whom the name is twice given in the Heb. (Judg.l7.i,4), Micah and Micaiah both meaning, " Who is like Jehovah ? " In A.V., however, the name is given as Michaiah except in the case of the son of Imlah, a prophet of Samaria, who, in the last year of the reign of Ahab, predicted his de- feat and death. Three years after the great battle with Benhadad, Ahab proposed to Je- hoshaphat that they should jointly go up to battle against Ramoth-gilead. Jehoshaphat assented, but suggested that they should first " inquire at the word of Jehovah." Accord- ingly, Ahab assembled 400 prophets, who un- animously gave a favourable response ; and among them, Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah made horns of iron as a symbol, and announced that with those horns Ahab would push the Assyrians till he consumed them. Jehosha- phat was not satisfied, and asked if there was no other prophet of Jehovah at Samaria. Ahab replied that there was yet one — Micaiah the son of Imlah ; but added, " I hate him, for he does not prophesy good concerning me, but evil." Micaiah was, nevertheless, sent for ; and after a vain attempt to tamper with him, he first ex- pressed an ironical concurrence with the 400 prophets, and then openly foretold Ahab's de- feat and death. In opposition to the other prophets, he said that he had seen Jehovah sitting on His throne, with all the host of heaven standing by Him, and that Jehovah said. Who shall persuade Ahab to go up and fall at Ramoth-gilead? that a spirit came forth and said that he would be a lying spirit in the mouth of all the prophets. Irritated by this account of the vision, Zedekiah struck Micaiah on the cheek, and Ahab ordered Micaiah to be taken to prison, and fed on bread and water till his return to Samaria (iK. 22. 1-35 ; 2Chr.l8). Josephus adds several details, not all of which can be accepted (8 Ant. xiv. 5, xv. 4). Micha'. — 1. The son of Mephibosheth (2 Sam.9.i2)=MicAH, 4. — 2. A Levite, or family of Levites, who signed the covenant (Ne.lO. 11). — 3. Father of Mattaniah, a Gershonite Levite and descendant of Asaph (Ne. 11. 17, 22). [Michaiah, 2.] — 4. A Simeonite, whose son Ozias was one of the three governors of Bethulia in the time of Judith (Jth.6.15). Michael (" who is like God ? " ; cf. Mi- caiah ; cf. Assyr. mannu-ki-ilu-rabbu, " who is like the great God " ; cf. Mishael, "who is what God is ? "). It forms a claim on the part of the person who bears the name to protection by Him Who is supreme. It thus is suitably applied to the angel who represents and guards Israel {vide infra). — 1. An Asherite, father of Sethur (Num.13. 13). — 2. Son of Abihail, a Gadite dwelling in Bashan (iChr.5.13). — 3- Another Gadite, ancestor of Abihail (5.14). — 4. A Ger- shonite Levite, ancestor of Asaph (6.4o[25]). — 5. One of the five sons of Izrahiah of the tribe of Issachar (7.3). — 6. A Benjamite of the sons of Beriah (8.16). — 7- One of the captains of the " thousands " of Manasseh who joined David at Ziklag (12. 20). — 8. Father, or ancestor of Omri, 4, of the tribe of Issachar (27. 18). — 9- A son of Jehoshaphat, murdered by his elder brother Jehoram (2Chr.21.2,4). — lO- Father or ancestor of Zebadiah of the sons of Shepha- tiah {Ezr.8.8; iEsd.8.34).'^ll. The "prince " 542 MICHAH or patron-angel of Israel (Dan. 10. 13,21,12.1). [Angel.] Not named in the Apocrypha, but often in the Pseudepigrapha. Slav. Enoch xxii. 6, Michael, as " the chief captain," brings Enoch before the Lord. Eth. Enoch xx. 5, " set over the best part of mankind over the people " {i.e. Israel) ; xl. 9, " the merciful and long-suffering"; xl. 2, one of the four presences; in XX. 5, one of the six "holy angels who watch." Asc. Isa. iii. 16, " the chief of the holy angels " with Gabriel at Christ's sepulchre ; ix. 23 (Slav, ver.), "the great archangel." N.T. : (i) Ju.9, " the archangel " contended with the devil about the body of Moses. Cf. strife of the good Ahura-Mazda and the evil Angra Mainyu about a man's soul ; and the haggadah in Midrash Rabba on Deut.3i.14 for a similar strife between Samael and Michael for the soul of Moses. (2) Rev. 12. 7, Michael and his angels light with the Dragon (the wording of the symbolism rests ultimately on the myth of Merodach's fight with Tiamat). For Col.2.i8, seeAxGEL. Lueken, iU;c/jae/(i898); E. Boklen, Die Verwandtschaft d. jiidisch-christl. m. d. parsischen Eschat. (1902), pp. 50 ff. ; Charles, Assumption of Moses (1897), pp. 106-110 ; and Test. xii. Patriarchs (1908) on Levi v. 6, Dan. vi. 2, and Benj. vi. i. [a.l.w.] Michah' (iChr.24.24,25) = Micah, 5. Mlchaiah' (cf. Micaiah). — 1. Father of AcHBOR, 2 (2K. 22.12). [Micah, 6.] — 2. Son of Zaccur, a descendant of Asaph (Ne.i2.35) = Micah, 3, son of Zichri (iChr.9.i5):= Micha, 3, son of Zabdi (Ne.ll.17). — 3- One of the priests at the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem (12. 41). — 4. [Maachah, 3.] — 5. A prince whom jehoshaphat sent to teach the law of Jehovah in the cities of Judah (2Chr.l7.7). — 6. Son of Gemariah, I. After Baruch had read to the people Jeremiah's prophecies of imminent calamities, Michaiah reported them to all the princes assembled in king Jehoiakim's house ; whereupon the princes sent for Baruch to read the prophecies to them (Je.36.11-14). Michar.theyoungerof Saul's two daughters (iSam.14.49). The king had proposed to be- stow on David his elder daughter Merab ; but before the marriage could be arranged Michal fell in love with the young hero. Saul eagerly caught at this opportunity of exposing his rival to the risk of death. The dowry demanded for Michal was the slaughter of a hundred Philis- tines. David by a brilliant feat doubled the tale of victims and Michal became his wife (18. 17-28). Soon the strength of her affection was put to the proof. They seem to have been liv- ing at Gibeah. After one of Saul's attacks of frenzy, Michal learned that the house was being watched by the myrmidons of Saul, and that it was intended on the next morning to attack her husband as he left his door. She met strata- gem by stratagem, first lowering David out of the window and then arranging the bed as if still occupied by him : the Teraphim, or "image," was laid therein, its head envelo])ed with a "rug" (Heb. kebhir, occurs here only) of goat's hair [Pillow], the rest of the figure covered with the wide bcghedh or cloth. Saul's rage when his messengers discovered the deception was such that Michal in her fear fal)rif atcd a story that David had attempted to kill her (I9.11-17). This was tlie last time MIDIAN she saw her husband for many years ; and when the rupture between Saul and David had become open and incurable, Miclial was married to another man, Phalti or Phaltiel of Gallim (iSam.25.44 ; 2Sam.3.i5). After the death of her father and brothers at Gilboa, Michal and her new husband appear to have gone with the rest of the family of Saul to the E. side of Jordan, whence David recovered her. [PiiALTi.] Fourteen years at least had elapsed since David and she had parted, but his love for his absent wife had clearly undergone no change. The meeting took place at Hebron. Subsequently, on the day of David's greatest triumph, when he brought the ark of Jehovah from its temporary resting-place to its home in the newly acquired city, Michal watched the procession from her window, and the "danc- ing " of her husband before the ark seemed to her undignified ; " she despised him in her heart." The king was received by his wife with a bitter taunt. David justified himself and separated from her (2Sam.6.20-2 3). Her name appears but once again (21.8) as the mother of five of the grandchildren of Saul ; but Merab should doubtless be substituted for Michal here. Miche'as (2Esd.l.39) = the prophet Micah. Michtnas', a variation, probably a later form, of MiciiMASii (Ezr.2.27 ; Ne.7.31). Michmash', a town noticed in connexion with the Philistine war of Saul and Jonathan (iSam.13,14). Now Miikhmds, 7 miles N. of Jerusalem, on the N. edge of the great Wddy Suweinit.. [BozEZ.] It first appears, with Bethel and Gibeah, as one of the chief points of Saul's position at the outbreak of the war (i Sam. 13. 2). It is mentioned by Isaiah (10. 28) as lying N. of the " passage " or gorge. After the Captivity the men of the place returned, 122 in number (Ezr.2.27; Ne.7.31). About 153 e.g. Machmas became the residence of Jonathan the Hasmoiiaean (iMac.9.73). In the time of Euse- biusand Jerome (Ono was/icon, "Machmas") it was " a large village shown in the confines of Aelia [Jerusalem], keeping its old name, 9 [Roman] miles distant thence, near the town Rainah " (now er Ram). [c.r.c] Michmethah' (Jos. 17. 7). " .'Vnd the border of Mauasseh was from 'dshcr ham- tnikhm'thdth, which is in front of Shechem." [Ashek.] The Heb. words may perhaps be rendered " the going forth of the open place," and the reference appears to be to the Mukhnah plain, or " camping ground," E. and S.E. of Shechem, included in Ephraim, while Gerizim lav in Manasseh. [Shechem.] [c.r.c] Michpi', ancestor of Elah, 4 (iChr.9.8). Michtam. [Psalms, Titles of.] MIddin', a city of Judah (Jos.l5.6i), one of tlie six specified as situated in the district of " the midbhdr " (A.V. wilderness). The site is unknown. [c.r.c] Mldian' (midhydn), Midianltes [mid- hydnim, MaSiavirai, ^\aStr]^>atol), naiiu- of a son of Abraham and Keturah (Gen. 25- 2) and of a tribe descended from him. Tiic Midian- ltes first appear as a tribe in (;cn.37.25,28, where they are closely associated in trading with their kinsmen the Ishmaelites ; their terri- tory extended along the eastern coast of tlie gulf of '.A(ial)a, and was coterminous MIDWIFE with Edom to the N. . From the fact that in Judg.l0.i2 the Heb. \MSD {md'on) is rendered " Midian " by the LXX., the Meonim {m<^'6ntm) elsewhere mentioned seem to have been ulti- mately identified with the Midianites. If so, the latter must have settled in their territory, as the word vid'on is the Magan of very ancient Akkadian texts. It denoted the Sinaitic Peninsula and the country S. of it, from which diorite and other articles were brought to Babylonia in very early times. The name survives in that of the port of Maknah, near which great ruins still exist. Classical writers knew the Meonim as Mineans, and recent ex- plorations show that the latter formed a king- dom of great antiquity. In Moses' youth the Midianites proper — -who may have in some degree become intermingled with the earlier inhabitants — appear to have been governed by priests, though later in his life we find kings mentioned. In this respect they resemble many other tribes of ancient Arabia, for in the S. of that peninsula, as in Assyria and in the S. of Babylonia, the rulers were priests before they became priest-ldngs, and finally lay monarchs. In Sheba we find, in like manner, that the earliest rulers were priests (called Maqdrib), and only later assumed the royal title. The name of Moses' Midianite father- in-law, Jethro, was a not uncommon one in both Northern and Southern Arabia, as we learn from inscriptions. The Midianites finally became, probably through trade, one of the most powerful tribes in Arabia. We find heir elders uniting with those of Moab in aviting Balaam to visit Balak (Num.22.4,7). The Midianites joined with the Moabites in tempting Israel to sin (Num.25), and in conse- quence suffered a great overthrow (Num.31). They were among the cruellest of the oppres- sors of Israel in the times of the Judges, but were defeated by Gideon (Judg.6,7,8), and their power broken. In each instance we find them ruled over by a number of kings, and in Gideon's time in alliance with the Amalekites. Their overthrow at Gideon's hands became proverbial among the Israelites, and is re- peatedly referred to as an instance of a crush- ing defeat (Ps.83.9 ; Is.9.4, 10.26) and a divinely wrought deliverance of God's people. Sayce, Higher Crit. and the Mon.; Hommel, Alt- israelitische Ueberlieferung; Hilprecht,ii%^Z. in Bible Lands ; and for other views, see Arabia, Madian, Maonites, in this Diet, [w.st.c.t.] Mid^vife. [Family, D. iv. (6); Puah, 3.] Migrdal-el', one of the fortified towns of Naphtali (Jos. 19. 38 only); the name means " tower of El, or God." It is noticed between Iron {Ydriin) and Horem (Hdrah), being probably the present village Mujeidil, 6 miles N.W. of Harah. [c.R.cl Migdar-gad' (Jos. 15. 37), a town in the lowlands of Judah, mentioned with Mizpeh {^dfieh) and Lachish (Te/Z el Hesy). It appears to be the ruin Mejdeleh, 5 miles S. of Beit Jibrin. This is 6 miles S.S.W. of Mizpeh, 3, and 10 miles E. of Laehish. It is an ancient ruin, with caves, cisterns, and Heb. rock-cut tombs ; evidently an important town {Surv. W. Pal. iii. p. 284). [c.R.c] Mig-dol', the proper name of two different places on the E. portion of Egypt, both in the MlLETtJS 543 isthmus of Suez. The word means originally a watch-tower. — 1. Migdol occurs in the account of the Exodus (Ex. 14.2 ; Num.33.7). The camp of the Israelites is said to be before Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea. It is evidently the place which is mentioned in the papyri with its Semitic name of Maktar, or Maktal, of Seti I., and which the Sinaitic Bedouin had to pass when they came to graze their cattle in the pas- tures of Pithom. We locate it on the hill which the French engineers called the Serapeum, a little N. of the Bitter Lakes. Darius erected there a Persian stele. [Red Sea, Passage of.] — 2. The N. boundary of Egypt, correspond- ing to Syene in the S. (Ezk.29.io,30.6 marg.). The same place is spoken of by Jeremiah (44.i) as being inhabited by Jews. It is the Magdolon of the Itinerary of Antonine, 12 miles S. of Pelusium. It was a fortress in that region, afterwards superseded by Pelusium, and was the first city reached by travellers from Palestine to Egypt. As it was the nearest to their country, it was natural that J ews should settle there, and that the name of Migdol should come first in the threats of the prophets against Egypt. [e.e.] MigTon' {precipice), a place near Gi- beah (iSam.14.2), where a pomegranate tree grew. Here the Assyrians crossed the Mich- mash Valley (Is.lO.28). Probably the cliffs E. of Jeb'a are meant. [Gibeah, 2.] [c.r.c] Mijamin'. — 1. The chief of the sixth of the 24 courses of priests established by David ( iChr. 24.9). — 2. A family of priests who signed the covenant (Ne.lO.7) ; probably descendants of i ; identical with Miamin (I2.5) and probably with Miniamin (I2.17). Mikloth'. — 1. Son of Jehiel by his wife Maachah, and father of Shimeah or Shimeam (iChr.8.32,9.37,38).— 2. The "ruler" (ndgidh) of the second division of David's army (27.4). Mikneiah', a Levite of the second rank, gatekeeper of the ark ; appointed by David to play in the temple-band " with harps upon Sheminith " (iChr.l5. 18,21). Milalai', a musician at the dedication of the walls of Jerusalem (Ne.i2.36); probably a Gershonite Levite of the sons of Asaph. Milcah'. — 1. Daughter of Haran, sister of Lot, grandmother of Rebekah, and wife of her own uncle Nahor, Abraham's brother, to whom she bare eight children (Gen.ll.29,22.20, 23,24.15,24,47). — 2. The fourth daughter of Zelophehad (Num.26.33,27.i,36.ii ; Jos. 17. 3). Milcom'. [MoLECH.] Mile. [Weights and Measures.] Miletus (Ac.20.15,17), less correctly called MiLETUM in 2Tim.4.20. In the context of Ac.20.i6 we have the geographical relations of Miletus brought out as distinctly as if it were St. Luke's purpose to state them. In the first place it lay on the coast to the S. of Ephesus. Next, it was a day's sail from Trogyllium (ver. 15). Moreover, to those who are sailing from the N., it is in the direct line for Cos. All these details correspond with the geographical facts of the case. The site of Miletus has now- receded 10 miles from the coast, and even in the apostle's time it must have lost its strictly maritime position. The passage in 2Tim.4.20 presents a very serious difficulty to the theory that there was only one Roman imprisonment. 544 MILK Miletus was far more famous five cents, before St. Paul's day than ever afterwards. lu^early times it was the most flourishing city of the Ionian Greeks. In the natural order of events, it was absorbed in the Persian empire. After a brief period of spirited independence, it received a blow from which it never recovered, in the siege conducted by Alexander, when on his Eastern campaign. But it held, even through the Roman period, the rank of a second-rate trading town, and Strabo mentions its four harbours. At this time it was politically in the province of Asia, though Caria was the old ethnological name of the district in which it was situated. Milk. In the East milk is not restricted to the use of the young, though naturally the characteristic food of childhood both from its simple and nutritive qualities (iPe.2.2), and particularly as contrasted with meat (iCor. 3.2 ; Heb.5.12) ; but is regarded as substantial food, adapted alike to all ages and classes. Not only the milk of cows, but of sheep (Deut.32. 14), camels (Gen. 82.15), and goats (Pr.27.27) was used, sometimes {hdldbli) in its natural and sometimes in a sour coagulated state (hem'd). In A.V. the latter is rendered "butter"; but undoubtedly in every case (e.\cept perhaps Pr.3O.33) the term refers to curdled milk, well known in Eastern countries under the name of leben. The refreshing draught which Jael offered " in a lordly dish " to Sisera (Judg.5.25) was leben. It is still offered in hospitality to the passing stranger, exactly as of old in Abraham's tent (Gen. 18. 8). Mill. The hand-mills (rchayim) of the an- cient Hebrews differed but little from those still in use in the East. These consist of two circu- MILL lar stones, about 18 to 24 in. in diameter, the lower of which is fi.xed, and has its upper sur- face slightly convex, fitting into a correspond- ing concavity in the upper stone. The latter, called by the Hebrews rekhebh, and by the Arabs rekkab, " rider," has a hole in it, through which the grain passes, immediately above a pivot or shaft, which rises from the centre of the lower stone, and about which the upper stone is turned by means of an upright handle fixed near the edge. It is worked by women, some- times singly and sometimes two together, facing each other. The one whose right hand is disengaged throws in the grain as occasion re- quires through the hole in the upper stone. The N.T. reference (Mt.24.4i) is true to life, for women only grind. The labour is very hard, and the task of grinding was in conse- quence performed only by the lowest servants (Ex. 11. 5) and captives (Judg.l6.21 ; JobSl. 10 ; Is. 47. 1,2 ; Lam.5.13). So essential were millstones for daily domestic use, that they were forbidden to be taken in pledge (Dent. 24. 6), lest a family might be deprived of the means of preparing their food. The hand-mills of the i ancient Egyptians were of the same character : as those of their descendants, and like them t were worked by women. Specimens have also 1 been found, by excavation in Palestine itself, which are of great antiquity. .-Vncient oil mills also are found, with cylindrical rolling stones : (like a cheese in shape), which were turned in a stone trough by an ass or an ox. These presses are noticed in the Mishna (Shebiith 1 viii. 6). A nxillstone of this kind is alluded to in Mt.l8. 6. W'ith the movable upper millstone of the hand-mill the woman of Thebez broke I .-Vbimelech's skull (Judg.9.53). [c.r.c] . KfAN WiiMAN MILLENNIUM Millennium. [Coming, Second.] Millet (Heb. dohan, Arab, dokhn), the Paniciim miliaceuni, or Sorghum vulgare. It is probable that both were used by the ancient Hebrews and Egyptians, and the Heb. dohan may denote either of these species. The latter is however called dhurah in Arab. (Tristram, Nat. Hist, of Bible, p. 470). Mention of millet occurs only in Ezk.4.9. It is still grown in Palestine. [c.r.c] Millo', a place connected with the defences of ancient Jerusalem, previous to its capture by king David (aSam.S.g), " And David built round about from Millo and inward " (i Chr.11.8). Solomon also built Millo as part of the great work carried out by his levy (1K.9.15, 24,11.27). King Hezekiah strengthened Millo in the city of David, on the approach of the Assjnrians (2Chr.32.5). Millo is now conjec- tured to be an archaic Jebusite word borrowed by the Israelites, but the Targums derive it from a Heb. word meaning " a filling up." There is nothing to show what Millo really was, but the inference from the various allusions is that it was a mound, keep, or citadel. This is evidently the view of the LXX., as they render it in every case (except 2Chr.32.5) as 77 ixKpa, a word which they employ nowhere else in O.T. Now, ij&Kpa means "the citadel," and this is the word used throughout the books of Maccabees and by Josephus for the fortress overlooking the temple. The position of Millo is discussed under Jerusalem. [c.w.] Millo', The house of (Beth-Millo).--l. (Judg.9.6,20.) The name of a family or clan mentioned with Shechem. — 2. The place where Joash was slain by his servants in Jerusalem (2K. 12.20). [Millo ; Silla.] [c.w.] Mines, Mining*. " Surely there is a source for the silver, and a place for the gold which they refine. Iron is taken out of the i soil, and stone man melts [for] copper. He j hath put an end to darkness, and to all per- fection [i.e. most thoroughly] he searcheth the | stone of thick darkness and of the shadow of death. He hath sunk a shaft far from the sojourner ; they that are forgotten of the foot hang [stray], away from man they flit to and fro. [As for] the earth, from her cometh forth bread, yet her nethermost parts are up- turned as [by) fire. The place of sapphire [are] her stones, and dust of gold is his. A track which the bird of prey hath not known, nor the eye of the falcon glared upon ; which the sons of pride [i.e. wild beasts] have not trodden, nor the roaring lion gone over ; in the flint man hath thrust his hand, he hath overturned mountains from the root ; in the rocks he hath cleft channels, and every rare thing hath his eye seen : the streams hath he bound that they weep not, and that which is hid he bringeth forth to light" (Job 28.i-ii;. Such is the highly poetical description given by the author of the book of Job of the operations of mining as known in his day, the only record of the kind which we inherit from the ancient Heb- rews. It may be fairly inferred from the description that a distinction is made between gold obtained in the manner indicated, and that which is found in the natural state in the alluvial soil, among the debris washed down by the torrents. This appears to be implied in MINES, MINING 545 the expression " the gold they refine," which presupposes a process by which the pure gold is separated from any natural alloy of silver or copper, or may refer to extracting it from veins of quartz. Silver also is associated with gold in almost every allusion to refining. In the above-quoted passage of Job, so far as can be made out amid the obscurities with which it is beset, the natmral order of mining operations is observed. The poet might have had before him the copper-mines of the Sina- itic Peninsula. In Wady el-Magharah, " the Valley of the Cave," are still traces of the Egyptian colony of miners who settled there for the purpose of extracting copper from the sandstone rocks, and left their hieroglyphic inscriptions upon the face of the cUff. The ancient furnaces are still to be seen, and on the coast of the Red Sea are found the piers and wharves whence the miners shipped their metal in the harbour of Abu Zelimeh. The copper-mines of Phaeno in Idumaea, according to Jerome, were between Zoar and Petra ; in the persecution of Diocletian the Christians were condemned to work them. The gold- mines of Egypt in the Bishari Desert, the principal station of which was Eshuranib, about three days' joiurney beyond Wddy A llaga, were discovered by M. Linant and Mr. Bonomi. Ruins of the miners' huts still re- main as at Surabit el-Khadim. According to the account given 'by Diodorus Siculus (iii. 12- 14), the mines were worked by gangs of con- victs and captives in fetters, who were kept day and night to their task by soldiers. The work was superintended by an engineer, who selected the stone to be worked. The harder rock was split by means of fire, but the softer was broken up with picks and chisels. The miners were quite naked, their bodies being painted according to the colour of the rock they were working ; and in order to see in the dark passages of the mine, they carried lamps upon their heads. The stone as it fell was carried off by boys ; it was then pounded in stone mortars with iron pestles by those who were over 30 years of age till it was reduced to the size of a lentil. The women and old men afterwards ground it in mills to a fine powder. The final process of separating the gold from the pounded stone was entrusted to the en- gineers who superintended the work. They spread this powder upon a broad, slightly inclined table, and rubbed it gently with the hand, pouring water upon it from time to time so as to carry away all the earthy matter, leaving the heavier particles upon the board. This was repeated several times ; at first with the hand and afterwards with fine sponges gently pressed upon the earthy substance, till nothing but the gold was left. It was then collected by other workmen, and placed in earthen crucibles with a mixture of lead and salt in certain proportions, together with a httle tin and some barley bran. The crucibles were covered and carefully closed with clay, and in this condition baked in a furnace for five days and nights without intermission. Of the three methods employed for refining gold and silver — (i) by exposing the fused metal to a current of air ; (2) by keeping the alloy in a state of fusion and throwing nitre upon it ; and 35 646 MINES, MINING (3) by mixing the alloy with lead, exposing the whole to fusion upon a vessel of bone-ashes or earth, and blowing upon it with bellows or other blast — the third appears most nearly to coincide with the description of Diodorus. To this, known as the cupelling process, there seems to be a reference in Ps.t2.6, Je. 6. 28-30, Ezk. 22. 18-22. Silver-mines are mentioned by Diodorus (i. 33), with those of gold, iron, and copper, in the island of Meroe, in the Nile. But the chief supply of silver in the ancient world appears to have been brought from Spain. The mines there were celebrated (iMac.8.3). Mt. Orospeda, from which the Guadalquivir, the ancient Baltes, takes its rise, was formerly called, from its silver-mines, " the silver mountain " (Strabo, iii. p. 148), but the largest silver-mines in Spain were near Carthago Nova. The process of separating silver from lead is abridged by Strabo from Polybius. The lumps of ore were first pounded, and then sifted through sieves into water. The sediment was again pounded, and again filtered, and after this process had been re- peated five times the water was drawn off, the remainder of the ore melted, the lead poured away and the silver left pure. The metal workers of Tarshish must have pos- sessed the art of hammering silver into sheets (Jc.10.9). VVe have no means of knowing whether the gold of Ophir was obtained from mines or from the washing of gold-streams. Its great abundance seems to indicate that the larger part of the gold which came into the hands of the Phoenicians and Hebrews was obtained from streams. As gold is seldom if ever found entirely free from silver, the quantity of the latter varying from 2 per cent, to 30 per cent., it has been supposed that the ancient metallurgists were acquainted with some means of parting them. To some such process it has been imagined that Pr.17.3, "The fuiinR-pot is for silver, and the furnace for gold," and 27.21 refer. A strong proof of the acquaintance possessed by the ancient Heb- rews with the manipulation of metals by the 7)rocess known in modern times as calcination is found by some in the destruction of the golden calf by Moses. " And he took the calf which they had made, and burnt it in fire, and ground it to powder, and strawed it upon the water, and made the children of Israel drink " (Ex. 32.20). But this appears to have arisen from a desire to find too much in the text. The main object of the destruction of the calf was U) prove its worthlessncss and to throw con- tempt upon idolatry, and this might have been done without any refined chemical process like that referred to. How far the ancient Hebrews were acquainted with the processes at present in use for extracting copper from the ore it is impossible to assert, as there are no references in Scripture to anything of the kind except in Job (I.e.), but it was known to the Egyptians not a few centuries before the Exodus. Some means of toughening the metal so as to render it fit for manufacture must have been known to the Hebrews as to other ancient nations. The Egyptians evidently possessed the art of working bronze in great perfection at a very early time, and much of the knowledge of metals which the Israelites had must have MINISTER been acquired during their residence among them. Of tin, apparently, there is no trace in Palestine. That the Phoenicians obtained their supplies from the mines of Spain and Cornwall there can be no doubt. The lead- mines of Jebel er Rusas, near the coast of the Red Sea, about half-way between Berenice and Kosseir, may have supplied the Hebrews with that metal, of which there were no mines in their own country, or it may have been ob- tained from the rocks near Sinai. Iron ore is obtained on the southern base of the Lebanon hills, and the mines are still worked there, though in a very simple, rude manner, like that of the ancient Samothracians : of the method employed by the Egyptians and Hebrews we have no certain information. It may have been similar to that in use throughout India from very early times, which is thus described by Dr. Ure : " The furnace or bloomery in which the ore is smelted is from 4 to 5 ft. high ; it is somewhat pear-shaped, being about 5 ft. wide at bottom and i ft. at top. It is built entirely of clay. . . . There is an opening in front about a foot or more in height, which is built up with clay at the com- mencement and broken down at the end of each smelting operation. The bellows are usually made of goat's skin. . . . The bamboo nozzles of the bellows are inserted into tubes of clay, which pass into the furnace. . . . The furnace is filled with charcoal, and a lighted coal being introduced before the nozzles, the mass in the interior is soon kindled. As soon as this is accomplished, a small portion of the ore, previously moistened with water to pre- vent it from running through the charcoal, but without any flux whatever, is laid on the top of the coals and covered with charcoal to fill up the furnace. In this manner ore and fuel are supplied, and the bellows are urged for three or four hours. When the process is stopped and the temporary wall in front broken down, the bloom is removed with a pair of tongs from the bottom of the furnace." It has seemed neces- sary to give this account of a very ancient method of iron-smelting, because, from the difficulties which attend it, and the intense heat which is required to separate the metal from the ore, it has been asserted that the allusions to iron and iron manufacture in O.T. are anachronisms. That, however, is not so [Iron], and it might well have been known to the Hebrews, who may have acquired their knowledge by working as slaves in the iron- furnaces of Egypt (c/. Deut.4.2o). Ming'led people. In tlu- lleb. of Je.25. 20,50.37 and Ezk. 30. 5 wo nuct with 'crebh (the same as 'crehh rendered Mi.xkh Mi'I-titude). The same Heb. consonants dilTcrently i)ointed would mean "Arabia" (1K.IO.15; 2(."hr.9.i4). The vcri) root in the Hitlq^afl voice means to "mingle [with the heathen] " (Ezr.9.2 ; Ps. IO6.5). [F.J.F.-J.] Mlns^led seed. [Agriculture.] Miniamin'. — 1. .\ I.ovitc in the reign of Hezekiah (::( lir.31.is).— 2. (\e.l2.i7)- [MiJA- MiN.2.1 — 3- Oneof the tninipctcr-iiricstsat the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem (I2.41). Minister, (i) In O. T. the wi.rd usu.illv re- presents w^v/idr«/A, the Piel i)artici|>leof.'i/tara//». m'shdrith is used for Joshua, as the servant of MINNt Moses (Ex.24.13, 33.11 ; Num.11. 28 ; Jos.l.i) ; Samuel, as ministering to the Lord (iSam.2. ii, 18,3.1) ; the servant of Amnon (2Sam.i3.17, 18) ; Abishag the Shunammite, as ministering to David (iK. 1.15) ; the officers of high rank of Solomon's court (IO.5); the servant of Elisha (2K. 4.43, 6. 15) ; those who ministered in the tabernacle (iChr.6.32[i7]) ; the Levites and priests (2Chr.l6.4;Ezr.8. 17; Ne.l0.36,39[37,4o]; Is.61.6 ; Je.33.2i,22 ; Ezk.44.ii, 19,45.4,5, 46. 24 ; Jl. 1.9, 13, 2. 17) ; the ministers of the Lord, apparently angels (Ps.l03.2i,104.4), etc. The other parts of the verb are used in like senses. In Ezr.7.24 the word translated " ministers " in A.V. and " servants " in R.V. is pdl'he, the participle (plur. masc. constr.) of the Aramaic verb plah, which usually means to serve, or pay reverence to the deity. In 2Sam.8.i8 and iK.4.5 the word translated " chief ruler " and " principal officer " in A.V. and " priest " in R.V. (marg. " chief minister ") is kohen, the ordinary word for priest. (2) In N.T. there are three distinct words, each sometimes translated " minister " : Xeirovpy'^s, dicLKOvos, vTTTjpfT-qs. AeiTovpyos is used of an officer of the State regarded as the servant of God, in Ro.13.6 ; St. Paul, as the minister of Christ in his priestly work of sacrifice in the offering of the Gentiles, in 15. 16 ; Epaphroditus, as ministering to the needs of St. Paul, in Ph. 2. 25 ; the angels, as the minis- ters of God, in Heb.l.7; and of Christ, as the Minister of the heavenly sanctuary, in 8.2. AiaKovos is used frequently in the general sense of servant, e.g. Mt. 20.26 ; sometimes in the special sense of a " deacon " or " deaconess " [Deacon ; Deaconess], and frequently in the senseof a minister of Christ, or of God, without the office being defined, as of St. Paul and Apollos, in.iCor.3.5 ; Tychicus (Eph.6.21 ; Col. 4.7) ; Epaphras (C0I.I.7) ; and St. Timothy (iTh.3.2). In Ro.15.8 and Gal.2.i7 diaKovos is used of Christ. 'Ttttj/s^tt;? is used frequently for a servant, e.g. Mt.26.58 ; for the ministers of the word (Lu.l.2) ; the minister, or attendant in the Jewish synagogue (Lu.4.2o) ; St. Mark, as the minister or attendant on St. Paul and Barnabas (Ac.13.5) ; St. Paul, as a minister of Christ (Ac.26.i6 : iCor.4.i). [Church.] Bevan in Smith, D.B. ii. 371, 372 ; Cheyne in Encycl. Bibl. iii. 3099, 3100 ; Hastings and Massie in Hastings, D.B. iii. 376-378. [d.s.] Minni', a country mentioned in con- nexion with Ararat and Ashchenaz (Je.5i.27). [Armenia.] The Minni were a people speaking a Mongolic language and living W. of lake Van. They are noticed in 15th cent. B.C. in one of the Amarna letters (Berlin 27), and were probably the Men, a people of the E. near Assyria, according to the tablet of nations at Edfou. [c.r.c] Minnith', apparently the south limit of Jephthah's pursuit of the Ammonites, who claimed Moab (Judg.ll.33). It is perhaps the place whence wheat was sent by Israel to Tyre (Ezk.27.17). The ruins of Minyeh, above the spring of the same name, 13 miles S.W. of Heshbon, probably represent Minnith (Siirv. E. Pal. pp. 10-13). [c.r.c] Minstpel. The Heb. menaggen in 2K.3.15 properly signifies a player upon a stringed in- strument like the Harp, or kinnor, on which MIRACLES 547 David played before Saul (iSam.l6.i6,18.io, 19.9), and which the harlots of the great cities used to attract notice (Is.23.i6). Elisha, con- sulted bv Jehoram as to the issue of the war with Moab, at first indignantly refuses to an- swer, and is only induced to do so by the pre- sence of Jehoshaphat. He calls for a harper, apparentlv a camp follower ; " and it came to pass, as the harper harped, that the hand of Jehovah was on him." Other instances of the same divine influence or impulse connected with music are seen in the case of Saul and the young prophets in iSam.lO.5, 6,10,11. The reason of Elisha's appeal is thus explained by Keil, who has been followed by later commen- tators : " Elisha calls for a minstrel, in order to gather in his thoughts by the soft tones of music from the impression of the outer world and by repressing the life of self and of the world to be transferred into the state of inter- nal vision, by which his spirit would be pre- pared to receive the divine revelation." This, in effect, is the view also of Josephus, and of Maimonides in a passage which embodies the opinion of the Jews of the Middle Ages. The " minstrels " in Mt.9.23 were flute-players, employed as professional mourners (cf. Ec. 12. -i ; 2Chr.35.25 ; Je.9.17-20). Mint occurs only in Mt.23.23 and Lu.ll. 42, as one of those herbs, the tithe of which the Jews were scrupulously exact in paying. All the old versions understand rjbvoffixou as some species of mint (Mentha). It was used by Gks. and Romans as a carminative in medicine and as a condiment in cookery. The horse mint (M. svlvestris) is common in Syria, and found in the gardens at Aleppo (Russell). This, M. sativa, and M. arvensis were perhaps all known to the ancients. The mints belong to the large natural order Labiatae. [Hyssop.] Miphkad, The gate. [Jerusalem.] Miracles, (i) Definition. The word " mir- acle " is used with a twofold significance: (a) in the scientific sense, as a portent (ripas), an abnormal event, not explicable by known natural laws ; (b) in the religions sense, as a sign {(xri/j.e'iov), an event suggesting the presence and direct action of God. It is obvious that with every advance in our knowledge of natu- ral laws the sphere of miracle in the scientific sense is proportionately narrowed. What has once seemed miraculous is brought within the domain of science and seen to be possibly unusual, but not therefore supernatural, e.g. a comet or an earthquake is a miracle to the South Sea islander, but to us, with a wider knowledge and a more complete experience, they can be scientifically explained and thus cease to be miracles. This is possibly the case with some of the Biblical miracles, e.g. the dividing of the Red Sea. [Red Sea, Passage of.] And parallels to some of the Gospel miracles may be found in modern cases of " faith healing." Thus, at the display of the " Holy Coat " at Treves, in 1891, eleven such miracles, including the cure of paralysis of the arm, lupus, rheu- matic gout, and blindness due to brain fever, were performed, the cures being effected, ac- cording to the testimony of physicians who were present, without the application of any ordinarv phvsical remedies. It is possible that manv others which, in the light of our.present 548 MIRACLES knowledge, we cannot understand, will be ex- plained in the future, though it is probable that there will always remain an inexplicable ele- ment. But it is important to notice that when an event ceases to be a miracle in the scientific sense it does not necessarily cease to be a miracle in the religious sense. For in this sense of the word, it is the significance, and not the mere strangeness, of the event which con- stitutes it a miracle. The event is still a miracle, in the religious sense, even if it be explained as the result of a combination of natural causes, provided it carries with it the conviction that in this particular case natural forces are being directed to a given end and for a definite purpose by God Himself. Thus the dividing of the Red Sea is none the less a miracle in the religious sense if in view of its significant occurrence and its results it suggests a special Providence guiding and controlling natural forces at this great crisis in Jewish history. So, too, Christ's miracles of healing. They are still miracles in the reli- gious sense, because theyfulfilledthe purpose of miracle by marking Him out to the men of His own age as the Agent and Representative of God and served as credentials of His divine mission. And the religious is the only vital sense. If Matthew Arnold had turned his pen into a pen-wiper, it would have been a miracle in the scientific sense, but not in the religious sense, for we should not see in it the hand of God, and, as it would have no religious significance for us, it could have no value as merely scientifically inexplicable. We define a miracle, then, as a " special providence " — an act suggesting either in itseit, in its results, or in the person who performs it, the direct action of God, revealing His will and His pur- pose towards mankind, whether or not it can be fitted into the known course of nature. (2) Possibility. There is no just ground for deny- ing the a priori possibility of miracle, either in the scientific or religious sense. No conceiv- able event, however extraordinary — no event, that is, which is not contrary to the laws of thought and therefore inconceivable, e.g. that A should be the same as not A — is impos- sible. This has, of course, been denied. Hume asserted that miracles were impossible because they were contrary to experience. " Nothing," he says, " is esteemed a miracle if it ever happens in the common course of nature. . . . There must therefore be an uniform experience against every miraculous event, otherwise the event would not merit that appellation. And as an uniform experience amounts to a proof, there is here a direct and full proof against the existence of any miracle." Huxley, however, exposed the " naked absurdity " of this argu- ment, " if by the term miracle we mean only ' extremely wonderful events.' " For if what- ever is contrary to present experience is con- trary to the laws of nature and therefore im- possible, no new fact can ever be proved. New facts are constantly discovered and are not dis- believed because they arc contrary to previous experience — e.g. the Rontgen rays. A " uni- form experience " had shown and had there- fore, according to Hume, conclusively proved that it was not possible to photograph the bones through the flesh. Nor is it legitimate, MIRACLES except on a materialistic hypothesis, to say that miracles, viewed as " acts of God," are impossible. " Once admit a God," says Mill, " and the production by His direct volition of an effect which in any case owed its origin to His creative Will is no longer a purely arbitrary hypothesis to account for the fact, but must be reckoned with as a serious possibility." It can scarcely be maintained that He Who created life was literally unable to bring back to life one who was dead. " Denying the possibility of miracles," says Huxley, " seems to me quite as unjustifiable as speculative atheism." (3) Credibility. Granted that miracles are possible, it follows that, viewed simply as " wonderful events," they are subjects of testimony, i.e. that their occurrence can be proved if adequate evidence in their support is produced. This conclusion seems obvious, but it also has been denied. Hume maintained that even if a miracle happened its occurrence could not be proved. " No testimony," he says, "is suflS- cient to establish a miracle, unless the testi- mony be of such a kind that its falsehood would be more miraculous than the fact which it endeavours to establish." This argument is sometimes found in a somewhat specious form. If, it is contended, a man in whose veracity you have the utmost confidence were solemnly to assure you that he saw one of the lions in Trafalgar Square come down from its pedestal and drink water from the fountain, you would nf)t believe that the event occurred, and if fifty such witnesses were to support his testimony you would still be unconvinced : no evidence, therefore, can prove the occurrence of a miracle. But a fallacy underlies the argument. It is based upon an assumption which never has been and never could be verified — viz. that a large number of honest and independent wit- nesses can be found to testify to a plain matter of fact which has never occurred — and the answer is simple. Either the event occurred, or it did not : if it occurred, such evidence would prove it ; if it did not, such evidence could not exist. It is, of course, perfectly legitimate to argue that the evidence, in the case of a particular miracle, is not adequate, and that it is more probable that the witnesses were mistaken than that the event occurred. But a sweeping generalization to the effect that this must always be the case is not legitimate, nor is it legitimate to argue, as Matthew Arnold practically does, that the probability of the witnesses being deceived is so great that it is simply waste of time to examine their evidence. It is undoubtedly true that many of the mir- acles recorded by the ecclesiastical historians and by secular writers are fabulous, but this does not jirove that " miracles do not happen," and that tiierefore the evidence in favour of any particular miracle is in no case worth considering. It is highly illogical to argue that because some documents which we do not trust record miracles we do not believe there- fore any document, however reliable on other grounds, is to be regarded as luitrustworthy simply because it records miracles. If, then, it is admitted that miracles, viewed simply as " wonderful events," are possible, the question of their occurrence is one of evidence. Each alleged miracle must be examined independ- MIRACLES ently, and the character and amount of evi- dence in its support considered. To accept or reject all alike on a priori grounds is unscien- tific : each must be tested by the ordinary canons of historical criticism, and however extraordinary it may be, it must be accepted as historical if it satisfies, or rejected if it does not satisfy, the conditions of that test. But though miracles, in the scientific sense, are subjects of testimony ; in the religious sense, as " acts of God," they are not. Our belief in their occurrence will ultimately be determined by our presuppositions. The fact itself may be established by the production of adequate evidence, but its divine character, its super- natural cause, cannot, in the nature of things, be so demonstrated. " The evidence," says Huxley, " may prove that the event occurred : it cannot prove that it was the effect of a par- ticular volition of the Deity : it may be so, but how is the assertion to be tested ? If it is said that the event exceeds the power of natural causes, what can justify such a saying ? The day-fly has better grounds for calling a thunder- storm supernatural than has man, with his infinitesimal power of duration, to say that the most astonishing event that can be imagined is beyond the scope of natural causes." That is, unless we claim for ourselves an absolute know- ledge of the working of natural laws, it is im- possible, on purely scientific grounds, to argue that any event, merely because it is inexplic- able, must be, in a special sense, an act of God. The unique event must have had a special cause, or combination of causes, and among other possible causes we may include a special act of the divine volition, but whether or not we ascribe it to such a cause, depends ultimately upon the views we already hold as to the Being of God and His relation to the Universe ; i.e. our ultimate judgment will be determined by our metaphysical and theological presuppo- sitions, and not by our scientific investigation of the evidence. " No testimony," it has been said, " can reach to the supernatural ; testi- mony can only prove an extraordinary and perhaps inexplicable occurrence or pheno- menon ; that it is due to a supernatural cause " (or, we would add, that it is not due to a supernatural cause) " is entirely dependent upon the previous belief andassumptions of the parties." Thus, while the historical character of an alleged miracle must and can only be determined by historical criticism, once its oc- currence is established, our belief or disbelief in its divine character, its spiritual significance, must and can only rest upon our theological presuppositions. Two important conclusions follow : {a) The man of science who refuses to accept a miracle as an " act of God " cannot claim that his view is more scientific than that of the theologian who accepts it as such, for in each case the conclusions are based upon presuppositions which it does not fall within the sphere of science to criticize. Science deals only with phenomena and proximate causes, which in reality are not causes at all, only means or instruments, and it has nothing to do with ultimate causes, which belong to the sphere of metaphysics. (6) It also follows that the Biblical miracles, however well attested ttiey may be, cannot be regarded as proofs MIRACLES 549 either of the existence of God or of the divine character of the Christian revelation, because our acceptance of them as miracles, i.e. acts of God, is dependent not upon the evidence pro- duced in their support as historical events, but upon our previous belief in God and in Chris- tianity. We do not believe in Christ because we believe in the miracles, but we believe in the miracles because we first believe in Christ. The Christian who already believes in the Incarnation will find no difficulty in accepting the N.T. miracles as acts of God, provided the evidence in their support will justify their ac- ceptance as historical events ; but the un- believer, though in view of the evidence he might accept them as historical, would not, because they were inexplicable, therefore attribute them to a spiritual cause in which he did not previously believe, or be convinced by them of the divine character of the Christian re- velation which he had previously denied. This is the view of N.T. : " spiritual things must be spiritually discerned : neither will they be persuaded if one rise from the dead." But though miracles cannot be regarded as proofs to an unbeliever, they are of some evidential value to the believer as providing corrobora- tive if not demonstrative evidence. (4) The Christian Presuppositions, {a) Relation of God to the universe. The Christian conception of God holds a middle point between Deism and Pantheism, neither of which, any more than materialism, really admits of miracles as special acts of God. The Deist regards God as entirely transcendent, altogether outside the world. The universe is viewed as a machine, automatic and self-regulating, made and set in motion by God and then left to do its own work. A miracle, then, is an interference with the laws of nature — as though God were suddenly to stop the machine, or set it working in a new way — and, on the deistic theory, is inconsistent with a belief in His omnipotence and omni- science, and attributes arbitrary if not irra- tional action to Him. The Pantheist regards God as entirely immanent in and co-existent with the universe. For him, also, the universe is a mechanism ; but while the Deist thinks of God as simply watching the working of His machine, the Pantheist thinks of Him as iden- tical with the machine itself, and therefore as incapable of guiding or controlling it. The divine activity is limited to the order of nature, and cannot manifest itself independently of that order. Consequently, so far as miracles are concerned. Pantheism stands on precisely the same level as materialism ; it is only " materialism grown sentimental." But for the Christian, God is both transcendent and immanent. Self-existent behind and beyond the universe. He yet sustains and dwells within it ; though manifested in the order of nature. He is not limited by it. His relation to the universe has been compared to that of spirit to matter in the human personality. The comparison must not be unduly pressed, but may serve to illustrate the Christian concep- tion of the universe as an organism in which the divine mind is ever at work, as the human mind in the human body. As every action of ours owes its origin and its execution to the human will, acting through the material 550 MIRACLES organism, so in the iinivorse every movement and every result is ultimately to be traced back to the operation of the Divine Will. What we term the laws of nature are (iod's laws, and the force behind them is His will. It is thus as much an act of God when the trees put forth their leaves in spring, as when the water was turned into wine at Cana of Galilee, the only difference being tliat in the case of the miracle God is departing from the customary method of His action as revealed in nature. Science, the sphere of which is the observation of pheno- mena, shows lis that God's method is one of law and order, of evolution, gradual and almost insensible, by fixed and unchanging laws, by which His purpose is gradually realized ; that there are no arbitrary interferences with these laws, and that, though He is ever at work. His hand is rarely i)rominently and unmistakably thrust before our eyes. Thus we speak of the uniformity of nature, which simply means that God acts in a uniform way. " The uniformity of nature is the will of God choosing to produce phenomena, and to produce them in a certain order." We could scarcely expect, and cer- taiidy not desire, that it should be otherwise. H (iod did not act by uniform and ascertain- able laws, we could have no real knowledge of nature, and the progress of civilization, in so far as it is due to man's knowledge of nature, is solely dependent upon this uni- formity, i.e. upon what we may term a volun- tary self-limitation on the part of Ciod. This is where the difficulty of miracles lies. There must always be an improbability attaching to those phenomena which in the light of our present knowledge seem to imply that God is deviating from His normal course of action as revealed in nature, unless exceptional circum- stances seem to demand this exceptional action. But, granted an adequate motive, the difficulty in great part disappears. Uniformity is not the only criterion f)f rational action, and there is no reason why we should deny to God what we allow to man. "To be tied to the normal and habitual when something exceptional is needed is to be mechanical, and not rational. It is the highest order of rational action, as we know it in the world, which is our best image of God's action, and not mere mechanical uni- formity. Thus the more fully we recf)gnize in God tlie sui>remely free personality acting in the world, the more ready we shall be to accept the evidence for exceptional or abnormal action on (iod's i>art, when the situation de- mands it " (Gore, A'hecy of the death of .-Miab, Isaiah's pn)]>hecy of the deliverance of Jeru- salem from Sennacherib. Such incidents arc miracles in the religious, if not the scientific sense of the word, and pro\ide the i)rophet with his credentials. But there is more than this. The O.T. makes it clear that the history of the Jews cannot be explained unless we allow for special and relocated interventions of Providence in the great crises of national life. How far the details of the stories may be pressed is uncertain ; how far more than " a providential focussing of natur.il processes upon a particular point and for a porticulv MIRACLES end" (Sanday) is implied, is not clear; but that the Jews were right in seeing the hand of God guiding and controlling the destiny of the na- tion, is indubitable. And if the hand of God can be seen in the historyof the Jewish Church, much more is this true of the history of the Christian Church. The spread of Christianity in the ist cent, is in the truest sense of the word " miraculous," even though it may to some extent be explained by the exceptional condition of the Greco-Roman world, (b) In dealing with the N.T. miracles we are on more certain ground, for here the evidence is fre- quently first-hand and always of considerable historical value. The genuineness of most of the Pauline epistles is universally admitted, and, this granted, it is quite clear that St. Paul believed he possessed, and was believed by others to possess, miraculous powers. We will take one illustration only — from aCorinthians. St. Paul's defence of his apostolic authority in this epistle largely rests upon an appeal to the miracles he had performed during his visits to Corinth. " Truly the signs of an apostle were wrought among you in all patience, by signs, and wonders, and mighty works" (2C0r.i2.12). There must have been many among those to whom the epistle was addressed who remem- bered the incidents connected with St. Paul's visits, and, had there been no miracles, they could have contradicted his statement and so have invalidated his argument. This passage, too, illustrating the fact that miracles were regarded as " the credentials of an apostle," shows that from the very first the performance of miracles by the apostles was accepted as a " notorious and unquestioned fact." This conclusion is confirmed by the Acts, written by St. Luke, the companion of St. Paul. The per- formance of miracles is assumed throughout, and some of those recorded must have taken place in St. Luke's presence. Modern criticism has vindicated the honesty and general trust- worthiness of St. Luke, and it is therefore quite certain that he believed that the apostles worked miracles. In the case of the Gospels, even when the evidence is not first-hand, the narratives are ultimately based upon the re- ports of eye-witnesses, and the miraculous element cannot be eliminated from them ; their proved early date will not allow our regarding the miracle narratives as simply the legendary additions of a later age. Moreover we find, in the earliest apostolic preaching, constant appeal to the miracles of Christ as a proof of His divine commission {e.g. Ac. 2. 22). In view of the evidence it is undeniable that events which were believed to be miracles took place and played an important part in the development of Christianity. Nothing in his- tory is more certain than that the apostles believed that Christ rose from the dead ; yet it is difi&cult to see how this belief could have originated had it not been for the empty tomb ; visions alone will not explain it. Nor, indeed, can we see how, apart from miracle, Jesus would ever have been accepted as Messiah, so little did His life correspond to the current Messianic expectations. And, that in all ages men have been led to]accept Christ as Lord and God because of a belief in His miracles, is simply a matter of history. In view of these MIRIAM 551 facts it is difficult for the Christian not to believe that the purpose which these miracles actually fulfilled was the purpose which was assigned to them in the divine economy. (6) Conclusion. The conclusion to which we have come is briefly this : (i) Events which were believed to be miracles undoubtedly hap- pened. (2) These events served the purpose of miracle, for they revealed the will of God and provided credentials for His appointed messen- gers. That is, the occurrence of miracles, in the religious sense, is amply proved. And we need go no farther. It is the business of the man of science, not of the theologian, to ask how the events happened, whether, that is, they are also miracles in the scientific sense. Some of them, it would seem, can be fitted into the course of nature and scientifically explained. Possibly, if we allow for slight inaccuracies in tlie details of the stories, others also, as we under- stand more of the laws of nature, may be thus explained, but if we attribute to the Synoptic Gospels that historical value which modern criticism justifies, it would appear that there must always remain an inexplicable element ; and even if all the miracles were explained, this would not materially affect the Christian posi- tion. It would simply mean that God, by His complete knowledge and control of natural laws, is able to reveal Himself and fulfil His purpose in the universe, without interference with those laws ; that He controls nature by obeying her laws, which are His own laws. It would vindicate Augustine's definition — " Portentum fit non contra naturam sed contra quamest nota natura" (DeCivit. xxi. 8) — and show us that God so controls the laws He Him- self has made that through them He may in each age speak to men as they are most capable of hearing Him. Primitive man demanded miracle, and he received miracle — or, at any rate, what he believed to be miracle, and what served the purpose of miracle, probably Tepara {wonders), certainly arj/uieia {signs). Bruce, M iraculous Element in the Gospels ; Trench, Notes on Miracles ; Mozley and Tem- ple, Bampton Led. ; Gore, Bampton Led. and New Theology and the Old Religion ; Sanday, Life of Christ in Recent Research ; Illingworth, Divine Immanence ; Westcott, Gospel of the Resurrection ; Matthew Arnold, God and the Bible and Lit. and Dogma ; Swete, Camb. Theol. Essays ; Mill, Essays on Religion. [r.b.] Mipiam'. It is noteworthy that this name (like Aaron and Phinehas — -cf. also Moses) has no recognized Heb. etymology. It has been thought to be an Egyptian name; per- haps = mcri-am, " the beloved of the home." — 1. The sister of Aaron and Moses, and probably the eldest of the three. She first appears as watching her infant brother's cradle in the Nile, and suggesting her mother as a nurse (Ex.2.4ff.). In Num.12, i she is placed before Aaron ; and in Mi. 6. 4 reckoned as one of the three deliverers. She is called " the pro- phetess, the sister of Aaron," and she led the choir of women in the song of thanksgiving after the passage of the Red Sea (Ex.l5.2o,2i). At Hazeroth Miriam took the lead, with Aaron, in the complaint against Moses for his marriage with a Cushite. " Hath Jehovah indeed spoken only by Moses ? Hath He not spoken 552 MIRMA also by us ? " A stern rebuke was adminis- tered in front of the sacred tent to both offen- ders, but the chief punishment fell on Miriam, who " became leprous, white as snow." How great was her position, and how heavy the blow, is implied in the cry of anguish which goes up from both her brothers ; and it is no less evident in the silent grief of the nation (Num.l2.i-i6). According to Josephus(3 Ant. ii. 4), shcwasthe wifeof HuK, and grandmother of Bazaleel. She died towards the close of the wanderings at Kadesh, and was buried there (20. i). It is of interest to note that in her name {^\apld^x, LXX. and N.T.), as well as in her prophetic gift and her care for the saviour of Israel, she is a type of the Virgin Mary. — 2. A man (or woman) in the genealogy of Judah in iChr.4.17. [h.c.b.] Mirma', a Benjamite, " chief of the fath- ers," son of Shaharaim by Hodesh (iChr.8.10). Mippop. Two words, mar\i (Ex. 38. 8) and r'i (Job 37.18), are rendered "looking glass" in A. v., but from the context evidently denote a mirror of polished metal. The Hebrew women on coming out of Egypt probably brought with them mirrors like those used by the Egyptians, made of a mixed metal, chiefly copper, and, says Sir G. Wilkinson {Anc. Eg. iii. 384), "suscep- tible of a lustre, which has even been partially revived at the present day, ia some of those EGYPTIAN MIRR Mr. Sail's collection.) discovered at Thebes, though buried in the earth for many centuries. The mirror itself was nearly round, inserted into a handle of wood, stone, or metal, whose form varied ac- cording to the taste of the owm^r." Tlic metal, being liable to rust and tarnish, required to be constantly kept bright (Wis. 7. 26 ; Ivcclus. 12.11). This was done by means of pounded pumice-stone, rubbed on with a sponge which was generally suspended from the mirror. The obscure image produced by a tarnished or im- perfect mirror appears to be alluded to in iCor. 18.12. The gilyonim (Is. 3. 23), rendered " glasses " in A.V.. after the Vulg. specula, were hand-mirrors used by women. MITHREDATH Mis'ael. — 1. (iEsd.9.44) = Mishael, 2. — 2. (Song 3 Chil. 66) = Mishael, 3. Misgra^b', a place in Moab named with Nebo and Kiriathaim in the denunciation of Jeremiah (48. i). It appears to be mentioned also in Is. 25. 12, though there rendered in A.V. "high fort." The site is unknown, [c.r.c] Mishael'. — 1. One of the sons of Uzziel, the uncle of Aaron and Moses (Ex. 6. 22). When Nadab and Abihu were struck dead for offering strange fire, Mishael and his brother Elzaphan, at the command of Moses, removed their bodies " in their coats " from the sanctuary, and buried them without the camp (Lev. id. 4, 5). — 2. One of those who stood at Ezra's left hand when he read the law to the people (Ne.8.4). — 3. One of Daniel's 3 com- panions in captivity, and of the blood-royal of Judah (Dan. 1.6, 7, II, 19, 2.17)- — 4. [Mishal.] IVIishar (Jos.2i.30), Misheal' (Jos. 19.26 ; R.V. Mishal), a town of Asher. It is probably theMashalaof thelist of ThothmesIII. (No. 39) in i6th cent. e.g. There is a valley called M'aisleh, 8 miles N.E. of Accho, which may represent a corruption of this name, [c.r.c] Misham', a Benjamite, son of Elphaal (iChr.8.12). Mish'ma. — 1. A son of Ishmael and brother of MiBSAM, I (Gen. 25.14 ; iChr.l.30). The Masamani of Ptolemy may represent the tribe of Mishma. — 2. A Simeonite (iChr.4.25). Mishmannah'.a Gadite warrior who joined David at Ziklag (iChr.l2.io).- Mish'paites, The, the fourth of the four " families of Kirjath-jearim," i.e. colonies proceeding therefrom and founding Zorah and Eshtaol (iChr.2.53). Mlspe reth, one of those who returned with Zerubbabel from Babylon (Ne.7.7). Mispephoth'-maim' {the smelting places by the waters; Jos.11.8,13.6), near Zidon. Probably the same as Zarephath, the N.T. Sarepta {Siirafend). [c.r.c] Mite \\iirTbv), a copper coin, the least valuable of any that existed in Palestine (Mk. 12.41-44 ; Lu.2i.1-4), two of which were equal to a Farthing (Ko^pavT-r}s). Some very small Jewish copper coins have been found, among them one belonging to Herod I., one to Agrippa II. (bearing the inscription xa^'^'oCs : see Madden, Coins of the Jews. pp. in. 146), and several pieces belonging to the time of Christ, which were issued by the different procurators. There is some justification for the belief that one or other of these coins re- presents the mite, for they were of extremely small value, the xaX^'oPs, which there is reason to believe = the XcirTbv, being ^,; of a denarius {i.e. about Vli of q'ld.). As a rule, these coins of such small worth bear no inscription of value, but the xaXfof's is an exception, [w.o.e.o.] Mithcah', the name of an unknown desert encampment of the Israelites, meaning, perhaps, "place of sweetness" (Num.33. 28,29). Mith'nlte, The, the designation in iChr.ll. 43 of Joshaphat, one of David's guard. The LXX. has Hethanitc or Matthanite. [r.b.g.] MIth'pedath, or Mlthpidatos. — 1. The treasurer of Cyrus, king of Persia (Ezr.1.8 ; i Esd.2.ii). — 2. One of the Persian officers at Samaria who persuaded Artaxerxes to hinder MITRE the rebuilding of the temple (Ezr.4.7 ; iEsd.2. 16). Mitre. [Crown ; High-priest.] Mityle'ne, the chief town of Lesbos, situated on the E. coast of the island. St. Paul stopped for the night between Assos and Chios at Mitylene (Ac.2O.14, 15).. It may be gathered from the circumstances of this voyage that the wind was blowing from the N. W. ; and in the harbour or in the roadstead of Mitylene the ship would be sheltered from that wind. The town itself was celebrated in Roman times for the beauty of its buildings. In St. Paul's day it had the privileges of a free city. It is one of the few cities of the Aegean which have continued without intermission to flourish till the present day. It has given its name to the whole island, and is itself now called sometimes Castro, sometimes Mitylen. Mixed mappiag-es. The code of Deutero- nomy, while it allows marriage with foreign women captured in war (Deut.20.14,21.10-14), forbids marriage with the women of the Can- aanite peoples under other circumstances (Deut.7.3 ; Jos. 23. 12). The motive of the prohibition is stated in Deut.7.4 (see also Ex. 34. 1 5). Marriage with the heathen would lead to idolatry. It would appear from Judg.3.5ff. that mixed marriages with the Canaanite peoples occiurred largely in the period of the Judges, and that idolatrous practices in fact followed. The prohibition of Deut. covers only the Canaanites, and the marriages of Israelitish men with Moabite and Ammonite women, or again with Edomites and Egyptians, were not only practised but justified. After the return from the Captivity it appears that there had been much marrying with foreign women, presumably of the nations who had been brought into the Holy Land by the Assyrian and Chaldean conquerors, and these are de- scribed under a sort of formula as " the Canaan- ites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Jebusites, the Ammonites, the Moabites, the Egyptians, and the Amorites " (Ezr.9.i). Separation was called for in the case of all these marriages, and the closing chapters of Ezra narrate a striking act of repudiation. Particular instances of mixed marriages may be noticed. Ruth, the Moabitess, finds aplace in the line of David and of Christ (Ru.4.2i ; Mt.l.g). David married a daughter of the king of the Geshurites (zSam. 3.3). Solomon married a daughter of Pharaoh, and also princesses of Moab and Ammon (iK. ll.i). Ahab married Jezebel, a Phoenician (1K.I6.31). For Christian regulations as to marriages with non-Christians certain passages in N.T. are cited. Such marriages may be con- templated by St. Paul in 2Cor.6.i4, " Be not unequally yoked together with unbelievers," where erepo^vyovvTes seems to mean " yoked with the wrong yoke-fellow." The permission to widows to marry again " only in the Lord " (fj-dvov iv Kvplqi, iCor.7.39) has been very gener- ally understood to be equivalent to " only with a Christian." In Church history the marriage of baptized persons with the unbaptized came to be barred. In iCor.7. 12-16, St. Paul con- siders the case of the converted partner in a marriage entered into before conversion. If the unconverted partner is " well content to abide " {(Tvvevdoi^el qlK(iy), the Christian part- MIZPAH 553 ner is counselled to maintain the union. " If the unbelieving depart (xcopt'j'erai), let him de- part (xwptfeVi^w). A brother or a sister is not under bondage {dedouXurai.) in such cases " (iCor.7.15). Much here depends on the meaning of each of the two words deSouXwrai and x'^P'-i^<^6o:. The " bondage " would seem to apply not merely to living together, but to the vinculum of marriage. In that case the brother or the sister who is " not bound " is free to marry again. The verb xt^P'Tecr^at is translated in E.V. by depart, and in Vulg. by disccdere (Quod si infidelis discedit, discedat). But the Gk. commentators do not confine the word to the meaning of departure. St. Chrysos- tom comments : " But what does that mean ? Et 5e 6 airiaros x^P'-^^Tai. For instance, if he command thee to sacrifice, and to commtmicate with him in impiety by reason of the marriage, or to retire, it is better that the marriage rather than that piety should be torn asunder." Here the meaning of x'^pi-^^'^So-i- is taken as to cause to separate. If, then, the unbelieving partner give adequate cause for separation, it would appear that the believing partner is permitted to marry again. And in Christian history this concession, often spoken of as the Pauline privilege (privilegium Paulinum), has been commonly allowed. Selden, De Jure Naturali et Gentium, juxta Disciplinam Ebraeorum (1640); Watkins, Holy Matrimony (1895). [o.d.w.] Mixed multitude. When the Israelites went up out of Egypt they were accompanied by amixed multitude (Heb. 'erebh, LXX. e-n-ifj-iKTos, Ex. 12. 38). This is in accordance with the tradition given by Manetho, that the Exodus of the Israelites was joined by some Egyptians. In Num.11. 4 we are led to infer both in A.V., and strangely enough in R.V. also, that this non-Israelite element was the cause of a mur- muring against Moses. The Heb., however, has a totally different word, which Tyndale, true to the spirit of the i6th cent., renders "the rascall people." The same word occurs in Ne.13.3, when all the " mixed multitude " were separated from the true Jews, when the people had heard the law about the ad- mission of Ammonites and Moabites to the congregation. [f-J-f.-J-] Mizap', Hill (Ps.42.6). The word means " small," and is so rendered by the LXX. The verse (see R.V.) in Heb. may read : " I will remember Thee from the land of Jordan and Hermons, from the little hill," representing the lowest, highest, and inter- mediate regions of Palestine. [c.r.c] Mizpah', or Mizpeh' {place of view), a name applying to sites on heights, or to a " watch-tower." — 1. Mizpah of Gilead (Gen. 31.49 ; Judg.lO.17,11.11,29,34), a town by the Galeed, or " heap of witness," erected by Jacob and Laban. It was the home of Jeph- thah, where his daughter was sacrificed. It is perhaps the same as Ramath-mizpeh (height of the view), near Betonim (the Biifein district), towards N. border of Gad. Judas Maccabaeus, in 164 b.c. " turned aside " to Maspha (iMac.5.35) from Bosora (ver. 28), and proceeded thence to Casphon. The re- quirements are met by the position of the vil- lage of Suf, about 6 miles N, of Gerasa, and 30 554 MIZPAH miles W. of Bostra, standing on the Gilead plateau. It is remarkable that numerous rude dolmens, apparently representing ancient altars, occur in the vicinity.— 2. Mi/.veu of MoAH {iSaiii.22.3), au uukuDwu royal city to which l)avid sent his parents for safety. — 3. MizPEii OF JuDAii (Jos. 15. 38), a town in the S.W. lowlands. It is probably connected with the valley of Zephathah (2Chr.l4. 10), and mav thus be placed at Sdfwh, a ruin ai miles N.1'2. of Mareshah, and ou the N. side of the broad valley loading up to Hebron. — 4. The Land of Mizpeh (Jos. 11. 3) is described as " under Hermon " ; and the Valley of Mizpeh (11.8) was E. of Zidon. The term biq'a, used for the latter, means a broad valley like the Buqd'ah, or valley of the Orontes. The region intended appears to be the high land N.W. of Hermon. — 5. Mizpeh of Ben- jamin was an early centre of assembly for the Hebrews. It is mentioned (Jos. 18. 26) with Beekoth and Chephirah, near C.ibeon and Ramah. At Mizpeh of Benjamin Israel ga- thered to attack Gibeah, and arc said to have " gone up," and to have gathered " unto the Lord," and to have " sworn " there the oath against Benjamin. It was apparently near BiniiKi. (JiRlg.20.1,3,21.1,5,8) ; and here also, in Samuel's time, prayer was offered by the assembly, and libations poured out (iSam.7. 4-16), while Samuel offered a burnt -offering. Here also he judged Israel annually (ver. 16), and here Saul was made king, when the will of Jehovah was declared by the casting of lots (10.17,20-25). It would seem, therefore, that the tabernacle was removed to Mizpeh, after the loss of the ark, and the consequent aban- donment of Shiloh. Hence there is reason to suppose that Nob was close to this town. King Asa of Judah (iK.15.22 ; 2Chr.l6.6) re- built Mizpeh with stones from Kamaii, when he built (iEHA close to Ramah on its V.. After the destruction of Jerusalem, in 588 B.C., Mizpeh was made the centre of government by the Babylonians (2K. 25. 23, 23 ; Je.41), and it was apparently the centre of a district in Nehemiah's time (Ne. 3. 7, 15, 19). Here Gedc- liah, the Babylonian nominee, was murdered by Ishmael, who slew also the Samaritans, whom he buried in " the pit " made by king Asa (Je.41. 7, 9). Hosea (5.i) regards worship at .Mizpah as a " snare " ; but, when the temple was again desecrated in 168 b.c, Judas Mac- cabaeus (iMac.3.46) assembled Israel "at Masjiha over against Jerusalem: forinMaspha was the place where they prayed aforetime in Israel." All these requirements are met by the high hill called Tell en Nasbch (mound of the erected stone), which — since Mizpeh is a word not found in Arab. — may be a eorru|>- tion of the old name. This hill rises 2,790 ft. above sea-level, and coumiands a fine view, though Jerusalem (7 miles to S.) is not seen. It is 3 miles N.IC. of Gibeon, 3 miles N.W. of (iibeali ((icba), 3 miles S.W. of Bethel, i mile S. of Beeroth, and about 3 miles E. of Che- phirah. On the S. side is the ruin 'A((dra, with cisterns, ancient rock-cut tombs, and two n-s(;rvoirs, tlie largest being rock-hewn, and measuring 78 ft. by 37 ft. This may be king Asa's " pit " (Surv. W. Pal. iii. p. 82). [c.R.c] MOAB raizpap' (Ezr.2.2), properly Mispar as R.V. ; = MiSPERETH. Mizpeh. [Mizpah.] Mizra'iin hrst occurs in O.T. in Gen. 10.6, " Tlie sons nf Ham; Cush, and Mizraim, and IMiut, and Canaan." .Again (Gen. 10. 13,1.)), " Mizraim begat Ludim, and Anamim, and Lehabim, and Naphtuhim, and Pathrusim, and Casluhim, (out of whom came Philistim,) and Caphtorim." The Vulg. gives " Mes- raim genuit Ludim, et Anamim," etc. In Gen. 10. 12, however, where the Heb. has mirrayim, the Vulg. translates " descenditque Abram in Aegyptum," and in the same pas- sage Mizraim becomes in A.V. Egypt, which use is afterwards always followed. Thus the name Egypt becomes the usual equivalent for the Heb. mifrayim. The origin of the name is exceedingly obscure. It has been thought that the use oi the two words mdfor and mifrayini, the latter being presumed to express the dual, refers to the two districts of Upper and Lower Egypt, which are divisions of extreme antiquity. Vet this ex])lanation fails if, as is now vigorously asserted, Mizraim is not a dual, ntdror has been variously interpreted to mean " a fort," " a mound," " a bulwark," or, as is also suggested, " distress." There is no great helpfulness in these derivations. Pro- bably a nearer suggestion may be Misr, as in the cuneiform texts. Misr, translated " red earth," or " dark-colourect earth," may give the clue as corresponding to the old word kem or kim, indicating darkness of colour. Hero- dotus and Plutarch connect the w-ord with the dark-coloured appearance of the alluvial soil, which stood out in contrast to the lighter- coloured sandy red land of the desert. Another poetic name for Egypt is " the land of Ham " (Ps.105.23,27). It has been alleged that the word kem or kim cannot bo connected witii the name Ham. Yet, on the other hand, it is advanced that the chief priapic Egyptian deity was named Menu, or sometimes Khem. This Khem might correspond to the progenitor < if the Hamite races. Certainly the tlistinctive features of the worship of Menu or Khem approximated tc) what is recorded in Gen. 9. 20-24. Mizraim indicates a land whence great hordes of migrants went forth to ]icople other regions ((len. 10.13,1.}), even as Ham, the de- scendant of Noah, was the founder of the four nationsof which the Mizraites were one. [a. 11. p. | Mizzah'. a "duke "of Edom ; son of Kenel. and descended from both Esau and Ishmael (Gen. 36. 13. 17 : iChr.l.37). Mna'son, described as " an early dis- ciple " (.Ac. 21. 16), ))(>ssibly implying that his conversion dated from Pentecust. St. Paul lodged with him when visiting Jerusalem for the last time. Mnason, like Barnabas, was a native of Cyprus. [a.c.d.] Moab. 'iliough this name, given to theson of Lot's .id.st d.ui^htcr, the progenitor of the Moabites, is often sui)|iose(i to mean "that which comes from a father " (in allusion to Gen.19.37), no such statement occurs in the passage cited. As a geographical term m6'dl>h appears to mean a " wide tract," which applies to the general char.acter of the region. Moab extended N. and S. from Jaazer to the brook Zered, a distance of about 55 miles. On the MOAB W. it was bounded by the whole length of the Dead Sea, and by the lower Jordan as far N. as NiMRAH. On the E. it merged into the Syrian desert of Midian ; but the old trade route, 30 miles E. of Jordan, may be regarded as the boundary. The area was thus about 1,600 square miles, divided into N. and S. districts by the Arnon River, 25 miles S. of Jaazer. At the time of the Heb. conquest the Moabites had been driven into the S. district, the better lands N. of the Arnon having been conquered by the Amorites (Num. 21. 13). Moab con- tained four natural regions, which bear dis- tinct names in O.T. The Jordan Valley near the Dead Sea — with a width of 5 miles — con- stituted the 'drdbhoth of Moab [Arabah], ren- dered " plains " in A.V. (Num.22.i,26.3,63,31. 12,33.48,49,50,35.1,36.13 ; Deut.34.i,8 ; Jos. 13.32), these being at a level of 1,000 ft. or more below the Mediterranean. E. of the Dead Scathe steep slopes and precipices rise to a hilly plateau 2,500 feet higher than the lake, and 5 miles broad, answering to the similar step called the Jeshimon on W. of the Dead Sea. This desert region is perhaps described by the peculiar term " mount of the valley " (hdr hd'emeq) in Jos. 13. 19. Above this again the mountain spurs run out from the plateau above them, which has an average level 1,500 ft. higher, or 2,700 ft. above the Mediterranean. This plateau is the " field [sddhi] of Moab " (Gen. 36. 35), rendered also " country " in A.V. (Num. 21. 20 ; Ru.l.i,2,6,22,2.'6,4.3 ; iChr.8.8), the word occurring also generally of pasture land. [Field.] This region is moreover described as the mishor, or " plateau," of Medeba (Deut.3.io ; Jos. 13. 9, 16,17). The fourth re- gion was the " wilderness of Moab " (midhbdr), including the barren lands between the Arnon and the brook Zered, through which Israel passedtoreachthe Jordan Valley (Deut.2.8,i8). The lower slopes — as in Gilead — are composed of Nubian sandstone (Green-sand period), above which lies a hard limestone ; while the plateau consists of soft pervious Eocene lime- stone. Hence the springs all issue on the W. slopes, some 500 ft. below the plateau, which has no water on the surface. It is, however, fit for the growth of corn ; and in spring it is covered with grass, supporting large herds of camels, and a few goats. The hillsides are very bare and rocky, with scattered bushes of the white broom (Heb. rothem, Arab, retm), the " juniper " of the A.V. The streams at Heshbon, Baal-meon, and Callirrhoe (Zerqa- Md'ain) are perennial, and flow with the Arnon and Zered brooks into the Jordan and the Dead Sea. Though now inhabited by nomads, the ruins show that Moab had a settled population down to c. 700 A.D., and remains of wine-presses at Shebam prove the culture of the vine. The palm still grows in the gorges near the Dead Sea (especially in the Zf^-^a-Mi'flZM ravine). The lion is no longer found (see Is.lS.g), but the wild ass and the ostrich, known to Job, still range in the desert to the E., with the addax and the bubale antelopes — the latter called the Baqarel Wahsh, or "wild cow," by the Arabs — thev mav represent the Pygarg and the ^''d, or Wild Bull, of the O.T. (See Tristram, Nat. Hist. Qf Bible, pp. S7. 136.) — Jnhfibitctnts. The MOAB 555 original inhabitants, called Emims (supposed to mean "frightful," Deut.2. 11), were succeeded by the desceudants of Lot, who were cousins of the Hebrews, a relationship fully acknowledged down to David's time. Hebrews and Moabites intermarried at times (Ru.l.4 ; 2Chr.24.26), though the law forbade the adoption of a Moabite into the congregation of Israel, even in the tenth generation (Dent. 23. 3), or, as under- stood in later times, "for ever " (Ne.l3.i). By the time of Nehemiah, however, the Moabite population was mingled with both Jewish and Nabathean elements. Solomon had married Moabite wives (iK.ll.i), and many of the Hebrews who fled to Moab after 588 B.C. (Je. 40. 11) had also married there (Ezr.9.i ; Ne.l3. 23), to the horror of their stricter brethren. The language of Moab in 9th cent. b.c. is known to us, from the Moabite Stone, to have been a dialect closely akin to Heb., but with some Aram, affinities. [Semitic Languages.] It probably, however — like the Canaanite — in- cluded a few old words borrowed from the Akkadian ; for 'Astar, the name of a deity on the Moabite Stone, is the Akkadian Istar {light-maker) for the moon. The word Ariel {2Sam.23.20 ; iChr.ll. 22), for a champion (A.V. lion-like), seems to be peculiarly Moabite, and occurs on the Moabite Stone with the same meaning ; yet it has no evident Semitic derivation, but might be the Akkadian Ar-el, a "fierce" or "brave" man. Sub- stantially, however, Moabite was a language of the Heb. group, and hence we find no mention of any difficulty in understanding one another as between Hebrews and Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, or even Amorites. — History. Moab is mentioned in 60 chapters of O.T. and Moab- ites in 10 chapters, yet the historic episodes are few. The defeat of Midian, on the plateau of Moab, by Hadad, kingof Edom, is the event first mentioned, but it probably occurred after Joshua's time (Gen.36.35). In 15th cent. B.C. the Hebrews found king Balak ruling Midian and Moab, between Edom and the Amorites ; and after the defeat of the latter, Israel descended to the 'drdbhoth of Moab before attacking Gilead, and before the Reubenites had decided to retain the mishor, N. of the Arnon, as a fine pasture region. Under this king, the Moabites and Midianites were organ- ized under " princes," or " chiefs " {sdrim, Num.22.8,23.6,17), and elders (22.7)- Israel respected the actual possessions of Moab, but finally took possession of the N. district, con- quered by SiHON the Amorite perhaps only a few years before the Heb. invasion. [Damas- cus.] King Balak, however, when the Amo- rites were destroyed, and Israel had passed on, seems to have claimed the old N. province even as far as Nebo, though O.T. confines his rights to the region round Ar (A.V. a city, Num. 22.36 : see Deut.2.9), between Arnon and Zered : for, with Balaam, he looked down on the Heb. tents from the heights to the S.E. (Num.22. 41, 23. 14,28). Moabite idolatry cor- rupted the Hebrews, through the influence of Moabite and Midianite women, even under Moses (Num.25. 1,6) ; but the extermination of the Midianites followed (31), and then the colonization of Moab by Reuben (32.37,38) from Arnon to Jaazer (Jos,13.i5-25). The 55G MOAB Moabites remained enemies of Israel hereafter, and about a century later Eglon, king of Moab, ruled even in Jericho for i8 years (Judg.S.ia- 30), by aid of the kindred Ammonites and Amalekites. A later king of Moab (probably S. of Arnon) was friendly to David (iSam.22. 3,4), perhaps on account of his ancestress Ruth the Moabitess (Ru.4.21,22) ; but in later years David smote Moab, which became tributary (2Sain.8.2,i2). Ahab (and Omri his father, according to the Moabite Stone) ruled Moab, exacting tribute of sheep, but king Mesha rebelled successfully after Ahab's death (2K. 1.1,3.4,5), for the attack on Kiu-haraseth from the S., by the kings of Judah, Israel, and Edom, failed (3.6-27), though the towns of Moab were destroyed. Perhaps, even before Ahab's death, the Moabites and Ammonites attacked Judah from the S.E., and were de- feated near Tekoa (2Chr.2O.1-25). Moabite " bands " continued to raid W. of Jordan yet later (2 K. 13. 20), and aided the Babylonians against Jerusalem (24.2). At some early period, perhaps in David's time, men of Chozkba dominated Moab (iChr.4.22), and Benjamites spread over the sadM, or plateau (8.8). David's triumph is recorded in the Psalms (60.8,108.9), but the confederacy of the population of Moab, which seems to have been nomadic, with Assyria (88.5-8), probably dated after 734 b.c, when the Heb. tribes E. of Jor- dan were carried captive by Tiglath-pileser III. (2K.I5.29 ; iChr.5.26). Isaiah, a few years later (15. 1-9), speaks of the " fate " of Moab, then subjected by Assyria, and mentions six- teen places, many of which are noticed on the Moabite Stone a cent, and a half earlier. The ruin of the country was lamented at its shrines by Moabites, who shaved head and beard as a sign of woe (w. 2,3). They fled again over Arnon (16. 2), and the "pride" of Moab (a name which might itself be rendered " proud") was abased (ver. 6). Jeremiah, who speaks of a " king " of .Moab as late as 609 b.c. (Je.27.3), predicts that the Moabites will drink the cup of wrath with others (25.21 ; see 9.26). He appears to paraphrase not only the older prophecy of Isaiah (J e. 48. 1-44 ; cf. Is. 15, 16), but even — with a new application — the old Amorite song (J e. 48.45,46 ; Num. 21. 28, 29) ; predicting a restora- tion of Moabite captives (Je.48.47), which C>TUS may have allowed. Ezekicl (25. 8-11) predicts troubles for the hated Moabites, who had said that " Judah is like any other nation." Daniel (11. 41) speaks of Antiochus Epiphanes in Moab. The older prophets (.•\m.2.i,2 ; Mi. 6. 5 ; Zeph.2.8,9) refer to its past history. Ezra refers to a " governor " of Moab (pehah ; 2.6,8.4 ; Ne.3.11), using a word of official signification among the I3abylonians (pehu). In later times the name of Moab occurs only in Judith (I.12), the population being included in the Nabathean kingdom. [Nebaiotii.1 In Ro- man times, and under the early Khalifs of Damascus (whose buildings at Rabbath- Ammon, and at Mashita — the " vviut(;r-house " — in Mf)ab itself, remain in ruins), tlie jilateau of Moab still supported a considerable settled population. [Heshuon ; Medeba.] In the Middle Ages the region was mainly pastoral, and after tiic i^tli cent, was entirely given over to i4vadin(j Arabs fr()iu the Hejaz, fresh tribes MOAB having arrived thence only a few centuries ago.— Monumental Notices. The earliest Moab- ite monumental record is that of king Mesha [Dibon], written perhaps after Ahab's death, but silent as to the troubles that followed. He relates (c. 888 B.C.) that he succeeded his father Chemosh-melek, who ruled for 30 years, when Omri seized Medeba, which Ahab held for half his reign — " for Chemosh was wroth with the land." Mesha recovered it, and built up Baal- MEo^f and Kirjathaim. He took Ataroth, which " men of Gad " held " from of old " {cf. Num. 32.34), and which the "king of Israel " had built up. He slaughtered the in- habitants " in the sight of Chemosh and Moab, and took thence the champion [ard] Dodah, and dragged him before Chemosh in Kerioth." He took captive the "people of the plain" {saron), and slew 7,000 persons in the town of Nebo — " sacrificed to Chemosh." Here also he carried off the " champions [ardli] of Jehovah, and dragged them before Chemosh." He took Jahaz from Israel, and annexed it to Dibon. He fortified Qirhah [Cities], and made scarps there, " as a defence against Israel." He rebuilt Aroer, and the " ascent at Arnon," with Bamoth-baal, " which was ruined " (no doubt by Israel), and Bosor. Finally, he " went down " and fought at Horo- NAiM. This single monument thus includes the names of 12 places in Moab noticed in O.T., and the succession of the names shows a gra- dual spread of Moabite power from Dibon northwards. Within two cents., however, Moab was subjected (in 734 b.c.) by Tiglath-pileser III. of Assyria, and became the base of opera- tions against Edom and Arabia. In 727 b.c. the same conqueror mentions Solomon of Moab (Salamanu) as a tributary. Sennacherib speaks of Qos-nadbi (otherwise read Kamus- nadbi), king of Moab, as a tributary, and Esar- haddon of Muzuri of Moab. The Moabites remained faithful to Assj-ria under Assur- bani-pal ; and Kamus-halta, king of Moab, de- feated Animuladin, king of Kedar (c. 640 b.c), and sent him as a prisoner in chains to Nineveh, after the repulse of the Arab attack on Damas- cus. [Arabia.] Naturally, therefore, Moab joined the enemies of Judah under Nebuchad- nezzar (2K.24.2). The later monuments — Gk., Rom., and Nabathean — are noticed under the names of towns, but are of small im- portance. Nabathean texts occur at Betii- GAMUL and elsewhere, and Christian remains especially at Medeba. — Religion. The Moab- ites are called " the people of Chemosh " (Num. 21. 29 ; Jc.48.46), a deity whose name has no recognized Semitic derivation, though occurring on the Moabite Stone. In Ass>t. texts it is sjielt Kam-us, which as an Akkadian word would mean " Lord of Conquest." The Moabites also worshipped Baal-peor, a licen- tious deity ; and a third deity ('Astar) is coupled with Chemosh, in the title *Astar- Chemosh, on the Moabite Stone. Whether female (like 'Ashtoreth), or male (like the Arab 'Atlitar), this deity also was of .\kkadian origin. The three may have formed a triad — father, mother, and son — as in other pantheons ; but Chemosh was the chief Elohim of Moab^Judg. 10.6 ; I K. 11. 7.33 ; 2 K. 23.13 ; Je.48.7.i3)- The barbarous ri^e, comuioi^ to earl^ Semitic races, MOADIAH of sacrificing the firstborn son in times of trouble, was also practised in Moab (2K.3.27). Mesha's account agrees in making Ciiemosh the chief god, and in recording extensive slaughterings of women and children, as well as of men, in his honour. — Antiquities. In addition to the monuments already noticed, Moab is remarkable for the number of rude stone structmres which occur on the hill slopes, and in the vicinity of the Jordan Valley (as described in detail, Surv. E. Pal. pp. 11, 98- 100, 125-133, 159-171, 184-190, 198-203, 226, 227, 229-236, 255-274, 277). They include dolmens, like those of Britain, varying from little monuments a few inches high to others under which a man may stand. Of these as many as 150 are found on a single hill slope. They are accompanied by standing stones, and stone circles varying from 20 ft. to 200 ft. in diameter. The most remarkable case is the circle of el Mareighdt {Surv. p. 187), 12 miles S. of Heshbon, where three rude pillars (6 ft. high) stand on a knoll, in a circle 300 ft. in diameter. There can be no doubt that these stones were sacred, like those still erected by Indian hill tribes in circles. This circle has also a dolmen altar on N.W. ; and the Moab dolmens are often marked on the capstone with cup-hollows, and channels for libations. This monument may explain the allusion to a place called 'Eglath-shelishiyah (R.V. Is.15.5 ; Je. 48.34), noticed with Zoar and Horonaim. The A.V. follows the LXX. in rendering the words " a heifer of three years," which makes no sense at all. Probably it means " the round place of the triad," or a circle with three erect stones representing three deities [Gezer] ; for the passages refer to Moabite worship. Such a circle occurs at el Mareighdt, and a small one, 22 ft. in diameter, with fallen cen- tral stones, was found not far from Zoar, at Tell el Matdb'a (Surv. E. Pal. p. 233). [c.r.c] Moadiah' (Ne.i2.17) = Maadiah. Moehmup', Brook (Jth.7.i8), near Chusi (Kuzah) and Ekrebel ('Aqrabeh). This is apparently the great valley Wddy el Htiinr, which rises N. of 'Aqrabeh, and runs into the Jordan. [c.r.c] Modin' (MwSeiV, Mw5eet>, Mw5aei», the home of the Hasmonaean family, where the great revolt of 168 b.c. began, and where Mattathias, father of Judas Maccabaeus, was buried (iMac.2. 1,15,23,70), and afterwards Judas himself (9.19) and his brother Jonathan (13. 25-30) ; over whom Simon — the second of the five brethren — built a monument of hewn stone, raised above the surface, with seven p^Tramids for the father, mother, and five sons. It had " designs " on great sUlai, representing " panoplies " and " ships," the monument being visible from the sea. Thus the adorn- ment did not break the law against the repre- sentation of living beings. Simon camped at Modin when — after 140 b.c— he was about to meet the Gks. " in the plain," near Cedron (Qatrah) — see 16.4,5,9 ; 2Mac.i3.14. Josephus repeats this account 12 Ant. vi. i, 2, xi. 2, 13 Ant. vi. 6). Eusebius and Jerome (Onomasti- con), in 4th cent, a.d., place " Modeim " near Lydda. The Mishna speaks of Modi'aim (Pesakhim ix. 2) as a long distance from Jeru- salem, which is explained (Tal. Bab. Pesakh. MOLECS 557 3 6) to mean 15 miles ; while from another pas- sage (Hagigah iii. 5) it appears that Modi'aith was near the borders of Judaea and Samaria. The true site (Guerin) is the village el Midieh, on a hill spur 17 miles from Jerusalem, 6 miles E. of Lydda. The sea is visible from this site, which is 15 miles N.E. of Qatrah. S. of the village is a high conical mound (er Rds), with cisterns and rock-cut tombs (Surv. W. Pal. ii. pp. 297, 298, 341-352). On a hill to W. there are Christian tombs, and remains of atesselated pavement with a cross on it. The mound may cover the monument of Simon ; and Jerome states that the " tombs of the Maccabees " were visible in his time. They were, however, shown later at quite another site, 7 miles S., near Latron, which is not " near Lydda," as the Onomasticon states ; and even at Soba (Bel- mont), only 6 miles W. of Jerusalem, in 13th cent. A.D. [c.r.c] Mo'eth. In iEsd.8.63, " Moeththe son of Sabban " takes the place of " Noadiah the son of Binnui" (Ezr.8.33). Moladah' ( = birthplace ; Jos. 15. 26, 19. 2 ; iChr.4.28 ; Ne.11.26), a town of Judah in the far S. It was given up to Simeon, and abandoned, with other towns, by that tribe in David's time, but re-inhabited by men of Judah after the Captivity. The site is un- known, for the Malatha of the Onomasticon (Tell el Milh) appears to have been really the " city of salt." [Salt.] [cr.c] Mole. Two words are thus translated, (i) tinshemeth, which occurs in the list of unclean birds in Lev. 11. 18, Deut.l4.i6 (A.V. swan), and in Lev. 11. 30 (A.V. mole). There seems considerable probability that tinshemeth refers to the Chameleon. (2) h^'phor peroth, rendered " moles " by the A.V. in Is. 2. 20. Although this word clearly indicates some kind of burrowing creature, nothing definite can be predicated as to its nature. Apparently true moles (Talpa) are absent from Syria and Palestine ; and even if such were present, they do not haunt ruins, which were the resorts of the animal referred to. It has accordingly been suggested that one of the species of mole-rats, a group typified by Spalax typhlus of E. Europe and Egypt, may be the animal intended. These mole- rats, which are members of the rodent order, and are stated to burrow at times under rubbish heaps, are blind, grey animals of the size of a rat, with curiously flattened heads and rudimentary tails. [Weasel.] [r.l.] Mo'lech. This deity is the same (cf. iK.11.7 with ver. 5) as Milcom, Malcam, and the MoXox of the LXX. (once erroneously so spelled in A.V. in Am.5.26, and hence in Ac.7. 43). m6lekh\v\.\ieb. has always the article pre- fixed, and should be read hammelekh, literally " the king." The change of the vowels into those of bosheth (shame; cf. iChr.8.34 with 2Sam.4.4, Meribbaal == Mephibosheth) is due to Jewish objection to pronounce idol-names (cf. Ex. 23. 13b). Molech is the Malku (king) of the Assyr. texts. A tablet (K. 2100) in the British Museum states that Malku was, among the Shuhites on the banks of the Euphrates in Syria, identified with Ram- manu (Rimmon), god of the atmosphere, and hence of the storm. Though Malku occurs as 558 MOLI an element in Babylonian personal names c. 2000 B.C. his worshippers seem even then to be of Canaanite or Syrian descent, and a Canaanite king Uru-Maiik is mentioned by Naram-Sin, 3800 B.C. His worship is there- fore very ancient in Palestine, where he probablv represented the sun, as he certainly did in Babylonia, where he is the 2nd member of the triad Samas, Malik, Bunene, the latter becoming his consort there. The god Molech was the chief deity of Ammon, as Chemosh was of Moab. The form Milcom (milkom) is the wordtnelekh with the mimmation, this termina- tion (properly -um, as in Assyr.) marking the nominatival form in the older language, Just as -dm in yomdm does the old accusative. " Malcam " (malkdm) in Je.49.i,3, Am.l.15, Zeph.1.5, though the rendering " their king " is supported by the Targum and Qimhi (Kimchi), is a mistake for Milcom, as Kashi perceived, the misspelling being occasioned by misunderstanding the sense, though compari- son with iK.11.33 and 2K.23.13 makes the latter clear. It was Milconi's and not " their king's " crown that weighed a talent (aSam. 12.30 ; iChr.20.2). Molech is first mentioned in Lev. 18. 2 1, where the Israelites are warned not to imitate the Canaanite practice of burn- ing their children as offerings to him. Aben Ezra says that children were passed "over " the fire, and that some survived and others died ; Rashi that they passed between two burning piles of wood. That they were actuallv ft"/""/ is clear from Deut.i2.31, Ps.l06.37.3«. Je.7.31, 19.5 ; and this became customary among the Israelite idolaters after Solomon's time. ToPHET was especially noted for this terrible rite. Similar scenes marked the cuUus of Chemosh in Moab and Baal at T>Te and elsewhere. Qimhi's detailed description of the idol and worship of Molech at Tophet (comm. on 2 K. 23. 10) is unreliable. It is probable that the children were placed in the fire as a way of offering them to the Sun-god (Molech), fire being his most natural emblem. The offering was propitiatory, as human sacrifices seem everywhere to have been. But these and other "abominations" necessitated the extermina- tion of the Canaanites (Deut.i2.31), and afterwards the captivity of Israel and Judah. Ravvlinson's Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia; Pinches's O.T. in Light of Hist. Records of Ass. and Bab. ; Sayce's Kel. of Anc. Egypt and Babvlnnia, and his Hibbert Lectures : Hommel's Dieallisraelitische VberUeferung; Swete's ed. of the LXX.; G. Hoffmann in Zeitschrift fiir alttest. Wissenschatl, vol. iii. ; Targum, Qimhi, and Rashi in Miqrdoth Gedoloth. [w.st.c.t.] Mo'li (iEsd.8.4/) = Mahli, i. Molid', son of Abishur by his wife Abihail, and descendant of Jerahmeel (iChr.2.29). Moloch ("Tabernacle of your Moloch" in Am. 5. 26) is a mistranslation of the Heb. words sikkuth malkkhem, rightly rendered " Siccuth your King" in the R.V. [Rempiian.] The form Mf)loch instea 1 "'f the usual Molech is borrowed from the LXX. ^\o\6x in this passage and in .^0.7.43 only. [w.st.c.t.] Mom'dis (il':sd.9.34) = Maadai. Money. I. Uncoined Money. Ancient nations that were without a coinage weighed the precious metals, a practice represented on MONEY the Egyptian monuments, where we see that gold and silver were kept in the form of rings. The gold rings found in Celtic countries have been held to have had the same use. We have no certain record of the use of ring- money or other uncoined money in antiquity excepting among the Egyptians. There is no distinct mention of coined money in the books of O.T. before the return from Babylon. Abimelech gave Abraham " a thousand [pieces] of silver " (Gen. 20. 16). [Piece of Silver.] For Gen. 23. 3, 9, 16, 33. 18, 19, see Weights. Throughout the history of J oseph we constantly find money used in preference to barter (Gen. 43.21,47.13-16). At the time of the Exodus money seems to have been still weighed (Ex. 30.13). Here the shekel is evidently a weight, of which the standard examples were probably kept by the priests. Balances and weights were carried in a bag (Deut. 25. 13-16 ; Pr.l6. II; Is. 46. 6). Throughout the Law money is spoken of as in ordinary use ; but only silver money, gold being mentioned as valuable, but not clearly as used in the same manner. We find no evidence in the Bible of the use of coined money by the Jews before the time of Ezra. — II. Coined Money, (i) The Antiquity of Coined Money. Respecting the origin of coinage there are two accounts seemingly at variance : some saying that Phidon king of Argos first struck money, and according to Ephorus, in Aegina (Strabo, viii. 6); while Herodotus (i. 94) ascribes its invention to the Lydlans. The former statement probably refers to the origin of the coinage of European Greece, the latter to that of Asiatic Greece. On the whole, it seems reasonable to carry up Gk. coinage to the 8th cent. B.C. (2) Coined Money fnentioncd in the Bible. The earliest mention of coins in the Bible refers to Persian money. In Ezr.2.69,8.27 and Ne.7. 70-72 cur- rent gold coins are spoken of under the name dark'mdnim, which only occurs in the plur., and appears to correspond to the Daric. The .\p()crypha contains the earliest distinct allusion to the coining of Jewish money, where we read (iMac.15.6) that Antiochus VII. granted to Simon permission to coin money with his own stamp. This was in the fourth year of Simon's pontificate (139 B.C.). The average weight of the coined shekel is about 220 grs. troy. The Shekel corresponds almost exactly to the tetradrachm or didrachm of the earlier Phoenician talent in use under Persian rule, and, after Alexander's time, at Tyre, Sidon, and Berytus, as well as in Egypt. It is repre- sented in the LXX. by didrachm. The fabric of the earliest Jewish silver coins is so different from that of any t)ther ancient money, that it is extremely unsafe to base any argument on it alone, as the cases of otiier special classes, e.g. the ancient money of Cyjirus, have shown. Some have been disposed to consider that it proves that these coins can- not be later than the time of Nehemiah, others will not admit it to be later than .Mexander's time, while some still hold that it is not too iixchaic for the Maccabean period. Tin" inscriptions of these coins, and all the other Heb. inscriptions of Jewish coins, are in the old character of Israel. Their nature would indicate a period of Jewish freedom from PLATE XXII Persian Gold Daric (iCbr.29.7, etc.R.V.). Jerusalem Silver Shekel. Silver Half Shekel. Silver Tetradrachm of Antioch; = "Piece of Money" {Stater. iMt.24.2 7). Silver Denarius ("Penny"; Mt.20.2) of Tiberius. Copper Assarion (Mt.lO.29; Lu.12.6). Copper ' Farthing" (Mk.i2.42) of» Pontius Pilate. Coin of Titus, commemorating the Capture of Jerusalem. p. 558] MONEY. (Brit. Mus.) MONEY Gk. influence, and the use of an era dating from its commencement. The old explanation of the meaning of the types of the shekels and half-shekels, that they represent the pot of manna and Aaron's rod that budded, seems remarkably consistent with the inscriptions and with what we should expect. Cavedoni has suggested that the one type is simply a vase of the temple, and the other a lily, arguing that the pot of manna had a cover, which this vase has not. The copper coins form an important guide in judging of the age of the silver, as they undoubtedly belong to the same age. We thus find that : (i) The shekels, half -shekels, and corresponding copper coins, may be on the evidence of fabric and inscriptions of any age from Alexander's time until the earlier period of the Maccabees, (ii) They must belong to a time when Gk. influ- ence was excluded, (iii) They date from an era of Jewish independence. M. de Saulcy, struck by the ancient appearance of the silver coins, and disregarding the difference in style of the copper, has conjectured that the whole class was struck at some early period of prosperity, such as the pontificate of Jaddua, and he supposes them to have been first issued when Alexander granted great privileges to the Jews ; but there are many difficulties in the way of this supposition. The basis we have laid down is in entire accordance with the old theory, that this class of coins was issued by Simon the Hasmonaean (Maccabee). The small copper coins have for the main part of their reverse- type a Gk. symbol, the united cornua copiae, and they therefore distinctly belong to a period of Gk. influence. Is it possible that Judas Maccabaeus, the restorer of the Jewish worship, and the sworn enemy of all heathen customs, could have struck money with a type derived from the heathen ? The use of such a type seems rather to point to the time when prosperity had corrupted the ruling family, and Gk. usages were once more powerful. This period may be considered to commence in the rule of John Hyrcanus. Thus M. de Saulcy's attributions before John Hyrcanus seem extremely doubtful. On these and other grounds we maintain Bayer's opinion that the Jewish coinage begins with Simon, we ascribe the coins of Jonathan the high- priest to Alexander Jannaeus, and propose the following arrangement of the known money of the princes of the period under consideration : John Hyrcanus, 135-106 B.C. — Copper coins, with Heb. inscription, " John the high-priest " ; on some a Gk. A, marking alliance with Antiochus VII., Sidetes. — Judas-Aristobulus and Antigonus, 106-105 B.C. (probable attribution) — Copper coins with Heb. inscription, "Judah the high [?] priest." — Alexander Jannaeus, 105-78 B.C. First coinage : copper coins with bilingual in- scriptions— Gk., "Alexander the king" ; Heb., " Jonathan the king." Second coinage : copper coins with Heb. inscription, " Jonathan the high-priest " ; and copper coins with Gk. inscription, "Alexander the king." (The as- signing of these latter two to the same ruler is confirmed by the occiurrence of Heb. coins of " Judah the high-priest," and Gk. ones of " Judas the king," which there is good reason MONEY-CHANGERS 559 to attribute to one and the same person.) — Alexandra, 78-69 b.c. The coin assigned to Alexandra by M. de Saulcy may be of this sovereign, but those of Alexander Jannaeus are so frequently blundered that we are not certain that it was not struck by him. — Hyrcanus II., 69-66 B.C. (no coins). Aristo- bulus II., 66-63 B.C. (no coins). Hyrcanus restored, 63-57 b.c. (no coins). Oligarchy, 57-47 B.C. (no coins). Aristobulus II. and Alexander II., 49 B.C. (no coins). Hyrcanus again, 47-40 b.c. (no coins). Antigonus, 40-37 B.C. — Copper coins with bilingual inscriptions. It is not necessary to describe in detail the money of the time commencing with the reign of Herod and closing under Hadrian. The money of Herod is abundant, but of inferior interest to the earlier coinage, from its generally having a thoroughly Gk. character. It is of copper only, and seems to be of three denominations, the smallest being apparently a piece of 18 grs., the next larger its double, and the largest its triple, as M. de Saulcy has ingeniously suggested. The smallest is the commonest, and appears to be the farthing of N.T. The money of Herod Archelaus, and of the similar coinage of the Gk. Imperial class, of Roman rulers with Gk. inscriptions, present no remarkable peculiarities. There are several passages in the Gospels which throw light upon the coinage of the time. When the twelve were sent forth, our Lord thus commanded them, " Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses" (lit. girdles), Mt.lO 9. In the parallel passage in St. Mark (6.8), copper alone is mentioned for money, the Palestinian currency being mainly of this metal, although silver was coined by some cities of Phoenicia and Syria, and gold and silver Roman money was also in use. St. Luke, however, uses the term " money " (8.3), which may be accounted for by his less Hebraistic style. The coins mentioned by the Evangelists are the follow- ing : First, of silver : the stater is spoken of in the account of the miracle of the tribute- money. The receivers of didrachms demanded the tribute, but St. Peter found in the fish a stater, which he paid for our Lord and himself (Mt. 17. 24-27). This stater was therefore a tetradrachm, and it is very noteworthy that at this period almost the only Gk. Imperial silver coin in the E. was a tetradrachm, the didrachm being probably unknown, or very little coined. The didrachm is mentioned as a money of account in the passage above cited, as the equivalent of the Heb. shekel. The denarius, or Roman penny, as well as the Gk. drachm, then of about the same weight, are spoken of as current coins (Mt. 22. 15-21 ; Lu. 20. 19-25). Of copper coins the farthing and its half, the mite, are'spoken of, and these probably formed the chief native currency. The proper Jewish series closes with the money of the famous Bar-cochab, who headed the revolt in the time of Hadrian. His most important coins are shekels ; but for the oppo- site view, see Weights, Coins. Money-changers. There are 3 names in N.T. for the money-changer: KfptxaTiarqs (Jn. 2.14), KoWv^KXTrji (Mt.2i.12; Mk.ll.15; Jn.2. i5),TpaTre^iTr]s (Mt.25.27). Their interest from 560 MONTHS the N.T. point of view is that they exchanged money of all kinds into that which was lawful for the temple. Every adult Jew (male) had to pay annually the half-shekel or didrachm for the maintenance of the temple services ; it was the money-changer who exchanged other coin for the half-shekel. Jews came from all parts of the civilized world to Jerusalem, so that there was, at the time of the feasts especially, a constant demand for the half-shekel. The practice of the money-changers sitting in the Court of the Gentiles — i.e. within the temple precincts — had gradually grown up, and the disputes in- cidental to changing money must have been most unseemly there ; besides, the temptation to be dishonest, with which the money-changer was constantly confronted, was evidently not always resisted (Mt.2i.13, etc.). [w.o.e.o.] Months. The Heb. words rendered "month" are (i) hodhesh = new moon, and (2) yerah, of doubtful etymology (Aram, yrah, " new moon "). The Heb. month, like that of the Babylonians and other ancients [Year], was lunar, and commenced in the evening with the appearingof the new moon. Since the moon passes through all her phases in 29 days, 12 hours, 793 parts (i.e. of an hour of 1,080 parts), the month was either 29 or 30 days. In the flood story 150 days are equal to five months (Gen. 7. II, 24, 8. 4), and the 30 days of mourning (Deut.34.8) are said to be a month (21. 13). The Egyptian month was 30 days. The Heb. months are designated by numbers and names. — I. Numbers. This was the earlier method of identifying the months, the month of the Exodus being taken as the first and the others reckoned from it (Ex.1 2.2 ; cf. Deut.l8.i ; also Gen. 7. 11, 8. 4, 5, 13, 14, where the months are counted as parts of the year of Noah's life). The same system was the pre- valent one during the Exilic period (Je.39.i ; Ezk.40.i ; Hag.l.i ; Zech.l.i,7,7.i).— II. Names, (i) Only four of the ancient (Canaan- ite) names have been handed down, (a) Abib (post-l-^xilic Nisan), the month of " ripening ears " (Ex. 13.4, 23.15,34.18 ; Deut.lB.i). (b) Zif (post-Iix. lyyar), month of " flowers," the " second month " (iK.B.i). (c) Ethanim (post- Ex. Tishri); 8.2, the month of "perennial streams,"the "seventh month" (Lev.23.34). It occurs in a Phoenician inscription from Cyprus, 4th cent. B.C. {d) Bui (post-l^x. Marchesvan), month of " produce," the " eighth month " (iK.6.38). This occurs on the Eshmunazar tablet (Corl^. Inscrif^. Sem. i. 3), in aninscription from Cyprus (ib. i. 10), and in one from Idalium {ib. i. 90). (2) Babylonian names. According to a statement in the Jerusalem Talmud (Rosh hu'ih-ShaHah i. 2), the names current in post-ExiUc times were borrowed from the Babylonians. There is no reason to doubt this assertion, as there are no traces of these names before the Exile. Only seven of the twelve names occur in O.T. — viz. the ist, 3rd, 6th, 9th, loth, nth, andi2th. (a) Nisan (Abib, Ex. 13.4); Nc.2.i ; Bab. Nisannu. The ist ecclesiastical and 7th civil month. The As- syrian sacred year also commenced at the vernal equinox (Nisan corresponds approx. to March 21-April 20). (ft) lyyar (Zif, 1K.6.1). Not in O.T. ; occurs in the Targ. (aChr.SO. MOON 2); Sab. Atru, from a root meaning "to bd bright," or another " to send forth " (flowers), thus answering to the Heb. ziv (April-May), (c) Sivan (the "third month," Ex. 19.i) ; Esth. 8.9; Bab. Sinianu (May-June), (rf) Tammuz (the " fourth month," Je.39.2). Not in O.T. ; in Taan. iv. 5. Bab. Duzu and Du-mu-zi. Cf. Ezk.8.14, where Tammuz is the god Adonis (June-July), (e) Ab (" fifth month," Je.1.3). Not in O.T. ; Pesach.iv.s. Bab. .^6i< (July- Aug.). (/) Elul ("sixth month," Hag.l.i); Ne.6.15. Bab. t//!/KcAenGesc/j/c/irtifted that it was impossible to overcome them ; and notwithstanding Clod's coniniand, communicated by Moses, that they should at once advance and take possession of the coun- try, the ten cowardly-minded spies stirred up a rebellion and provided captains to return to the land of Egypt. For this rebellion, the ten spies were punished by deatli " before the Lord," Joshua and Caleb, who had encouraged the people to go forward, alone being excepted. The people were punished by being com- manded at once to march backward into the wilderness, in which they had to wander for 37 or 38- years longer. A full list of the wander- ings of the children of Israel is given in Num. 33. Only a few'of those places have been dis- covered. [Exodus, Tue.J The rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram (16) probably took place shortly after the people returned into the wilderness. The head of the rebellion was a first cousin of Moses. The object of Korah was to obtain admission into the rank of the priesthood, which, by God's commands, was occupied exclusively by Aaron and his sons. This second rebellion in Moses' own family was put an end to by a fire which destroyed Korah and his followers, and by a sudden earthquake, in which the other rebels were swallowed up alive. God's will was then decisively made known by the trial of the twelve rods. No other incidents are recorded until near the expiry of the 40 years. Another wonderful miracle, resulting a second time in an outburst of water from the rock at Meribah, is narrated in 2O.1-13. and on that occasion Moses and Aaron failed to honour (iod in the eyes of the people. Tlie people had to journey from Kadesh, and to compass the whole land of Edom, because the king of that country and his people refused to let them pass quietly through it (2O.14-21). Aaron died shortly after on mount Hor, and Eleazar suc- ceeded to the priesthood. The king of Arad fought against Israel, but was this time de- feated and he and his cities were utterly de- stroyed. The episode of " the fiery serpents " and the serpent of brass (21. 4-9), the digging of wells (21. 1 5 -2 1 ), thecon(iuestofSihon( which he brought on himself) and that of Og the king of Bashan followed; and about this time happened the events concerning Balak and Balaam (22-24), and the efforts to entangle the Israelites in the sin of Peor (25), afterwards so severely avenged cm all the tempters (31 ). The children of Reuben and (iad with a ]3art of the tribe of Manasseh received their portion in the terri- tories on the E. of Jordan (32), under definite conditions ; and Moses appointed three cities of refuge E. of the Jordan, to which three otliers were afterwards added by J oshua. After several solemn addresses on the borders of the pro- mised land (which are recounted in the book 61 Deuteronomy), the work of the great deliverer, lawgiver, priest, and captain was finally accom- plished ; and as his transgression at the waters MOtTNT, MOUNTAIN of Meribah had precluded him from entering the land, (iod gave him a sight of that land from mount Ncbo in Moab before he died there in solitude. It has too often been taken for granted that it is distinctly stated in Dent. 34.6 tliat the Lord buried Moses. The Heb. verb certainly can bear such a signification, but as there is no emphatic pronoun in the sentence, it would just as naturally be translated as the indeterminate third pers. sing., signifying that " one buried him," equivalent to " and he was buried " (see Kautzsch-Gesenius, Heb. Gram., edited by A. E. Cowley, §1443). The strong statements by Canon Cook in tlie Speakfr's Comnii'nlary in favour of the popular idea can- not be justified. If tlie Lord had indeed buried Moses, some reference to that extraordinary fact might have been expected in some of the later passages of the sacred Scriptures, but none can be cited even from tlie long list of apocry- phal writings given by Professor Charles. We might even go further, and maintain that there is no reference in that literature to any dispute between Michael the archangel and Satan as regards " the body of Moses." The Asaump- tion of Moses, as far as it is in our hands, contains no sucii reference, wliich is entirely founded ujion the assertion of Origen. We may regard the passage in J ude as speaking of Israel as figuratively "the body of Moses," the O.T. Church having been described in Hebrews as "tlie house of Moses" (Heb. 3. 2-6). [r.n.u.w.] Mosol'lam (iEsd.9.14) = MEsm'LL.\M, 11. Mosoriamon (iEsd.8.44) = Meshullam, 10. Moth (Heb. 'ash). The Heb. word cer- tainly indicates in most cases some species of clothes-moth {Tinea). Reference to the de- structive habits of the clothes-moth is made injob4.i0.13.28; Ps.39.ii, etc. InJob27.i8. " He buildetli his house as a moth," tiie allusion may be to some of the leaf-rolling cater- pillars; unless it refers to tlie cases of tlic pupae of the clothes-moth. [Worm.] [r.l.] Mother, (i) Motherhood was most fer- ventlv desired and higlilv lionoured — I'.s- Gen. 30; I'Sam.l; Pr.31.2 ; Ps.113.9. For position, etc., see I"".\milv. (2) The king's mother was treated with exceptional honour, and usually had great influence — e.e.. iK. 2. 13-20; 2Chr. 22.2 f. Indeed, her position amounted almost to an office (Je.t3. 18, Heb. and E.V. ; cf. 29.2) from whicli she could be deposed (iK.15.i3 ; 2Chr.l5.i()). She had a technical title, n"in3, [MaACHAU, 3; (JUEEN.] [II.M.W.] ' ' Mount Ephpaim. [Ephkaim.] Mount Oilead. [Gilead, Mou.vt.] Mount, Mountain. In O.T. this word is used to represent llie following terms only of the original, (i) Heb. /w;-, witli its deriva- tive or kindred hi'irtir. (2) The .Aram, tor, in I)an.2.3.'5,45 ; the .Arab, (or for an isolated summit. In N.T. " mountain " is usually the Gk. «po5. The Heb. har, like the Eng. " mountain," is employed both for single eminences more or less isolatetl, such as Sinai, and for ranges, sucii as Lebanon. It is also applied to a mountainous country or district. The various eminences or mountain-districts to which it is applied in O.T. arc as follow : Aharim ; Amana ; of the Amalekites ; oh THE Amorites ; Ararat ; Baalah ; Baal- MOUNT, SEKMON ON Hermon ; Bashan ; Bethel ; Bether ; Carmel ; Ebal ; Ephraim ; Ephron ; Esau ; Gaash ; Gerizim ; Gilboa ; Gilead ; Halak ; Heres ; Hermon ; Hor (2) ; Horeb ; of Israel ; Jearim ;Judah ; Olivet, or of Olives ; Mizar; iVIoRiAH ; Naphtali ; Nebo ; Paran ; Pera- 7AM ; Samaria ; Seir ; Sephar ; Sinai ; Sion, SiRiON, or Shenir (three names for Hermon) ; Sharker ; Tabor ; Zalmon ; Zemaraim ; Zion. The Mount of the Valley was a district allotted to Reuben (Jos. 13. 19), being the lower plateau above the Dead Sea on E., but below the Moab plateau — a terrace of desert land. The following are, it is believed, all the words used of features in rela- tion to mountains or hills : (i) Head, rosh, Gen.8.5, Ex.19.20, Deut.34.i, 1K.I8.42 (A.V. "top"; Arab, rds, "headland" or "top"), (2) Ears, 'aznoth, Aznoth-tabor, Jos. 19. 34 : possibly in allusion to some projection of the mountain. (3) Shoulder, kdtheph, Deut.33. 12, Jos. 15. 8 and I8.16 (" side "). (4) Side, fadh, Assyr. sadu, Arab, sadeh, a " range" : used in reference to a mountain in iSam.23.26, 2Sam. 13.34. (5) Loins or Flanks, kislSth, Chisloth- tabor, Jos.l9.i2,i8. (6) Rib, ffZa' : once only, viz. of the mount of Olives, 2Sam.l6.13, and there translated "side." (7) Back, slfkhem : possibly the root of the name of the town Shechem, which may be derived from its situa- tion on a water-shed. (8) Thigh, yrekhd ■ applied to mount Ephraim, Judg.l9.i,i8, and to Lebanon. 2 K. 19. 23. Is. 37. 24 ; used also for the " sides " of a cave (iSam.24.3). (9) The word translated " covert " in iSam.25.2o is sether, from sdthar, " to hide," and probably refers to the thicket through which Abigail's path lay. [c.r.c] Mount, Sepmon on. [Sermon on the Mount.] Mountain of the Amopites (Deut.l.19, 20). The Amorites were a (Semitic) race of highlanders (Num. 13. 29), living in Lebanon, Gilead, and the Hebron mountains. The " mountain region [hdr] of the Amorites," in the passage cited, was apparently the plateau of Moab, which confronted the Hebrews at Kadesh-barnea, rather than the more distant Hebron mountains. [c.r.c] Moupning". The numerous expressions in Scripture for the various actions characteris- tic of mourning show in a great degree the nature of the Israelite customs in this respect. These customs appear to have been chiefly : (i) Beating the breast or other parts of the body. (2) Weeping and screaming in an excessive de- gree. (3) Wearing sad-coloured garments. (4) Songs of lamentation, (g) Funeral feasts. A marked feature of Oriental mourning is what may be called its studied publicity, and the careful observance of the prescribed ceremonies (Gen. 23.2 ; Job 1.20,2.8 ; Is.15.3, etc.). Among the particular forms observed were the follow- ing : (a) Rending the clothes (Gen. 37. 29, 34, 44.13, etc.). {b) Dressing in sackcloth (Gen. 37.34 ; 2Sam.3.3i,21.io, etc.). (c) Ashes, dust, or earth sprinkled on the person (2Sam.l3. 19,15.32, etc.). (d) Black or sad-coloured garments (2Sam.l4.2 ; Je.8.21, etc.). {e) Re- moval of ornaments or neglect of person (Dent. 21.12,13, etc.). (/) Shaving the head, plucking out the hair of the head or beard (Lev.l0.6_; MOURNING 565 2Sam.i9.24, etc.). (g) Laying bare some part of the body (Is.20. 2, 47.2, etc.). (h) Fasting or abstinence in meat and drink (2Sam. 1.12,3.35, 12.16,22, etc.). (i) On the same principle, temporary abstinence from sacrificial food (Lev.7.2o ; Deut.26.14). {k) Covering the " upper lip," i.e. the lower part of the face, and sometimes the head, in token of silence (Lev. 13.45 ; 2Sam.l5.30,19.4). (/) Cutting the flesh (Je.16.6,7,41.5). Beating the body (Ezk.21. 12 ; Je.3i.19). (w) Employment of hired persons to lament (Ec.12.5 ; Je.9.i7 ; Am. 5. r6 ; Mt.9.23). (n) Akin to this usage the custom that friends or passers-by join in the lamentations of bereaved or afflicted persons (Gen.50.3 ; Judg.11.40; Job 2.11,30.25, etc.). (o) The sitting or lying posture in silence indica- tive of grief (Gen. 23.3 ; Judg.2O.26, etc.). (p) Mourning feast and cup of consolation (Je.l6. 7,8). The period of mourning varied. Simi- lar practices are noticed in the Apocryphal books. In Jewish writings not Scriptural, these notices are in the main confirmed, and in some cases enlarged. Other points to be noted are : (a) The idolatrous " mourning for Tam- Muz " (Ezk.8.14) indicates identity of practice in certain cases among Hebrews and heathens ; as does the custom of offering food at graves (Ecclus.30.i8). (h) The high-priest and the Na- zarites are forbidden to go into mourning even for a father or mother (Lev. 21. 10, 11; Num. 6. 7). The inferior priests might mourn only for near relatives (Lev. 21. 1,2, 4). (c) The food eaten during mourning was regarded as impure (Deut.26.14; Je.16.5,7; Ezk.24.i7 ; Ho.9.4). Heathen writers refer to similar usages, which are in accordance with general Oriental cus- toms, both ancient and modern. D'Arvieux says Arab men are silent in grief, but the women scream, tear their hair, hands, and face, and throw earth or sand on their heads. The older women wear a blue veil and an old abba as mourning garments. They also sing the praises of the deceased. Niebuhr says both Mohammedans and Christians in Egypt hire wailing women, and wail at stated times. Burckhardt says the women of Atbara in Nubia shave their heads on the death of their nearest relatives — a custom prevalent also among several of the peasant tribes of Upper Egypt. He also mentions wailing women, and a man in distress besmearing his face with dirt and dust in token of grief. Lane, speaking of the modern Egyptians, says : " After death the women of the family raise cries of lamenta- tion called welweleh or wilwdl, uttering the most piercing shrieks, and calling upon the name of the deceased, ' Oh my master ! Oh my resource ! Oh my misfortune ! Oh my glory ! ' (see J e. 22. 1 8). The females of the neighbour- hood come to join with them in this conclama- tion : generally, also, the family send for two or more nedddbehs, or public wailing women. Each brings a tambourine, and beating them they exclaim, ' Alas for him ! ' The female relatives, domestics, and friends, with their hair dishevelled, and sometimes with rent clothes, beating their faces, cry in like manner, ' Alas for him ! ' These make no alteration in dress, but women, in some cases, dye their shirts, head-veils, and handkerchiefs of a dark- blue colour. They visit the tombs at stated 56G MOUSE pt'riods " (Moeo]ile. It was associated with o\-ery phase of life, private and jiublic. The parting guest was sped " with songs, with tabret, and with harp " (Gen. 31. 27) ; the householder enjoyed in his leisure hours the sound of the timbrel, the harp, and the organ (Job 21. 12); at the wine-press or in the vineyard work was lightened by songs, of which we have traces in the titles of some psalms and in Is.65.8. Of love songs we have a collection in Canticles, and there is at least one nuptial ode in Pss. Prominent mention is made of music in connexion with national victories (I'^x. 15.1, 20 ; Judg.5.2; iSam.18.6). It was cultivated by "the early prophets to ]iromote an access of insiiiration, or tTrli was also used for embalming (see J n. 19. 39, and Herod, ii. 86). Various conjectures have been made as to what mor really is (see Celsius, //(Vro6. i. 522), and what the countries of its origin are has been questioned. According ,to Herodotus (iii. 107), Dioscorides (i. 77), Theophrastus (ix. 4, § i), Diodorus Siculus (ii. 49), Strabo, Pliny, etc., the myrrh-producing tree grows in .Arabia. Forskal mentions two kinds (.Imyris kataf and .Amyris kafal) near Haes, in Arabia Felix. The myrrh-tree which Ehrenberg and Hemprich found in the borders of Arabia Felix, and Mr. Johnson in Abyssinia, is the Bahamodcndron myrrha, order Tercbinthaceae. "a low thorny ragged-looking tree, with bright trifoliate l?avc§. " It is probably the murr of Abu cl PLATE XXIV RAMS' HORNS. Of these examples, the lower one is an unique specimen, the property of George A. Cohen, Esq. The upper example belongs to the Great Synagogue. They are reproduced by kind permission of the owners. FLUTES. (Brit. Mus.) CYMBALS, (Brit. Mus p. 563] HORN. (Brit. Mus.) MYRTLE Fu(Jli, who says, " Murr is the Arabic name of a thorny tree like an acacia, from which flows a white liquid, which thickens and becomes a gmn." It is this tree which produces the myrrh of commerce ; it has a wood and bark NAAMAH 569 BALSAMODENDRON MYRRHA. which emit a strong odour. The gum which exudes from the bark is at first oily, but be- comes hard by exposure to the air. (2) lot (Gen. 37. 25, 43. II only), erroneously translated "myrrh" in A.V. (R.V. marg. ladanum, a rendering originally established by Celsius), is generally understood as the odorous resin which exudes from the branches of the Cistus creticus {ladanum, or labdanum). Clearly lot cannot signify " myrrh," which is not produced in Palestine, for Gen. {ll.c.) speaks of it as being exported from Gilead to Egypt. There are several species of Cistus, all be- lieved to yield the gum ladanum ; but that of Dioscorides is probably identical with the one found in Palestine, viz. the Cistus creticus (order Cistaceae, the Rock-rose family). The Heb. lot, Arab. Iddhan, Gk. \ridavov, Lat. and Eng. ladanum, are undoubtedly identical. Myrtle (Heb. hadas; Ne.8.15 ; Is.4i.19, 55.13 ; Zech.l.8,io,ii). All the old versions agree with A.V. in this identification, and the identical noun occurs in Arab, as the " myrtle." Modern Jews still adorn with myrtle the booths and sheds at the Feast of Tabernacles. Formerly (Ne.8.15), myrtles grew on the hills about Jerusalem. " On Olivet," says Dean Stanley, " nothing is now to be seen but the olive and the fig-tree." On some of the hills, however, near Jerusalem, Hasselquist observed the myrtle. Dr. Hooker says it is not uncommon in Samaria and Galilee. There are several species of the genus Myrtus, but the Myrtus communis (order Myr- taceae) is the only kind denoted by the Heb. hadas. It is too well known to need descrip- tion. The myrtle-tree is mentioned also in Sus.58 as the alternative hiding-place of the other elder ; the first one being the lentisk, or mastick. In the Geneva version the reading is, "prime tree " (privet ?), with " mirtle-tree" in marg. Pliny has an important chapter on the m\Ttle, of which he says there are eleven kinds. He states truly that it was a stranger in Europe, and introduced before his time. It is native in W. Asia and Palestine, [h.c.h.] My'sia. The exact limits of this N.W. district of Asia Minor are disputed, but it is mentioned only once in the N.T. (Ac.16.7,8), and that cursorily and in reference to a passing journey, and the term is evidently used in an ethnological, not a political sense. Hence the best description that can be given of Mysia at this time is that it was the region about the frontier of the provinces of Asia and Bithynia. Mystepy (lit. that which is kept closed or secret), a characteristic N.T. word adopted from contemporary Gk. usage, by which it was ap- plied to such sacred ceremonies of heathenism, as those at Eleusis, which were kept inviolably secret, and only revealed to the initiated. In N.T. use, especially in St. Paul's writings, it is applied to any important Christian truth which, while beyond or above the world's under- standing, is revealed by the Holy Spirit to the believer. It is indeed the new knowledge of the initiated rather than the ignorance of the out- sider which is the prominent thought in N.T. Thus our Lord speaks of " the mysteries of the kingdom" revealed to His disciples (Mt. 13.11, etc.). To St. Paul the whole Gospel dispensation is a "mystery" (R0.I6.25); while other typical mysteries are the calling of the Gentiles into the Church (Eph.3), the union of Christ with the believer (Col. 1. 27), the new life of holiness based on the In- carnation (iTim.3.i6). Answering to the Gospel mystery there is also a " mystery of iniquity" (cf. 2Th.2.7 with Rev.17.5). A later ecclesiastical use of the word, common from the 4th cent, onwards, is in reference to the Christian sacraments. The nearest N.T. parallel to this is perhaps iCor.4.i. Lightfoot, Epistle to the Colossians (note on Col. 1. 26) (7th ed. 1884); Suicer, Thesaurus, /xvcrTripLov ; Thayer- Grimm's Lexicon ; Cheetham, The Mysteries, Pagan and Christian. [a.r.w.] N Na'am, one of the sons of Caleb the son of Jephunneh (iChr.4.15). Naamah'. — 1. One of the four women whose names are preserved in the records of the world before the Flood. She was daughter of Lamech by his wife Zillah and sister to Tubal-cain (Gen.4.22). — 2. Mother of king Rehoboam (iK. 14.21, 31 ; 2Chr.i2.13). In each passage she is distinguished by the title "the [not "an," as A.V.] Ammonitess." She was therefore one of the foreign wives of Solo- mon (iK. 11. i ; Ne.13.23). IntheLXX. (iK. 12.24[14.3i]) she is described as " daughter of Ana [i.e. Hanun] the son of Nahash." Naamah', a town of J udah in the Shephelah (Jos. 15. 41). Now the village Nd'aneh, 6 miles S. of Lydda. [c.r.c] 570 NAAMAN Naaman'. — 1. One of the sons of Ben- jamin who came down to Egypt with Jacob. According to the LXX., he was the son of Bela (Gen.46.2i; cf. Nmn.26.38,40 ; iChr.8. 34). 2. A Syrian warrior, a remarkable in- cident in whose life is recorded in 2K.5, and referred to by our Lord in Lu.4.27. A Jewish tradition, preserved by Josephus (8 Ant. XV. 5), identifies him with the archer who '' drew' his bow at a venture," and struck Ahab with his mortal wound, and thus " gave deliverance to Svria." The expression is re- markable— "because that by him Jehovah had given deliverance to S\Tia." The explanation may be that Naaman, in delivering his country, had killed one who was the enemy of Jehovah not less than he was of Syria. Whatever the exploit referred to was, it had given Naaman a great position at the court of Benhadad. He was a commander-in-chief of the army, and was nearest to the person of the king, whom he accompanied officially, and supported, when he went to worship in the temple of Rimmon (ver. 18). He was afflicted with a leprosy of the white kind (ver. 27). which had hitherto defied cure. The circumstances of his visit to the prophet are related under Elisha. His request for two mules' burthen of earth is not easy to understand. The natural explanation is that, with a feeling akin to that which prompted the Pisan invaders to take away the earth of Aceldama for the Campo Santo at Pisa, the grateful convert to Jehovah wished to take awav some of the earth of His country w-herewith to form an altar. [Opuel, 3.] Naam'athite, the gentilic name of Job's friend Zophar (Job 2.ii,ll.i,20.i.42.9). The town whence it is derived is unknown. Pro- bably in or near Edom. [c.r.c] Na'amites, The, descendants of Naaman, grandson of Benjamin (Num. 26.40). Na'apah, second wife of Ashur, the " father of Tekoa" (iChr.4.5,6). Naapai', son of Ezbai ; one of David s mighty men (iChr.11.37)- [Paarai.] Naapan'(iChr.7.28),Naapath (J0S.I6.7), a town on E. border of Ephraim N. of Jericho. The name probably signifies " irrigation." Josephus (17 Ant. xiii. i) says that Archelaus, when building a palace at Jericho, diverted half the water which watered the village Neara to irrigate his palm-trees in the plain. Euse- bius makes Naarath " a little village of Jews 5 miles from Jericho." These notices apply to the ruin called el 'Aujeh, 5 miles N. of ancient Jericho. An aqueduct runs E., from 'Ain el 'Aujeh, for 5 miles to Khurbet el 'Aujeh et Tahtdni (ruin of the Lower 'Aujeh), and bends N., with several irrigation channels lead- ing out of it eastwards. There are still a few dwarf palms in the plain close by. [c.r.c] Naashon. [Nahshon.] Naasson', the (ik. form of the name Nahshon (Mt.l.4 ; Lu.3.32). Na'athus, one of the family of Addi who put away his foreign wife (iEsd.9.31 only). Nabal', a rich sheep-master, of the house of Caleb, dw