|
Dye - The art of
dyeing is one of great antiquity, although no special mention is
made of it in the Old Testament. The Hebrews probably learned it
from the Egyptians (see Ex. 26:1; 28:5-8), who brought it to great
perfection. In New Testament times Thyatira was famed for its dyers
(Acts 16:14). (See
COLOUR.)
Eagle - (Herb.
nesher; properly the griffon vulture or great vulture, so called
from its tearing its prey with its beak), referred to for its
swiftness of flight (Deut. 28:49; 2 Sam. 1:23), its mounting high in
the air (Job 39:27), its strength (Ps. 103:5), its setting its nest
in high places (Jer. 49:16), and its power of vision (Job 39:27-30).
This "ravenous bird" is a symbol of those
nations whom God employs and sends forth to do a work of
destruction, sweeping away whatever is decaying and putrescent
(Matt. 24:28; Isa. 46:11; Ezek. 39:4; Deut. 28:49; Jer. 4:13;
48:40). It is said that the eagle sheds his feathers in the
beginning of spring, and with fresh plumage assumes the appearance
of youth. To this, allusion is made in Ps. 103:5 and Isa. 40:31.
God's care over his people is likened to that of the eagle in
training its young to fly (Ex. 19:4; Deut. 32:11, 12). An
interesting illustration is thus recorded by Sir Humphry Davy:, "I
once saw a very interesting sight above the crags of Ben Nevis. Two
parent eagles were teaching their offspring, two young birds, the
maneuvers of flight. They began by rising from the top of the
mountain in the eye of the sun. It was about mid-day, and bright for
the climate. They at first made small circles, and the young birds
imitated them. They paused on their wings, waiting till they had
made their flight, and then took a second and larger gyration,
always rising toward the sun, and enlarging their circle of flight
so as to make a gradually ascending spiral. The young ones still and
slowly followed, apparently flying better as they mounted; and they
continued this sublime exercise, always rising till they became mere
points in the air, and the young ones were lost, and afterwards
their parents, to our aching sight." (See Isa. 40:31.)
There have been observed in Palestine four
distinct species of eagles, (1) the golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos);
(2) the spotted eagle (Aquila naevia); (3) the common species, the
imperial eagle (Aquila heliaca); and (4) the Circaetos gallicus,
which preys on reptiles. The eagle was unclean by the Levitical law
(Lev. 11:13; Deut. 14:12).
Ear - used
frequently in a figurative sense (Ps. 34:15). To "uncover the ear"
is to show respect to a person (1 Sam. 20:2 marg.). To have the "ear
heavy", or to have "uncircumcised ears" (Isa. 6:10), is to be
inattentive and disobedient. To have the ear "bored" through with an
awl was a sign of perpetual servitude (Ex. 21:6).
Earing - an Old
English word (from the Latin aro, I plough), meaning "ploughing." It
is used in the Authorized Version in Gen. 45:6; Ex. 34:21; 1 Sam.
8:12; Deut. 21:4; Isa. 30:24; but the Revised Version has rendered
the original in these places by the ordinary word to plough or till.
Earnest - The
Spirit is the earnest of the believer's destined inheritance (2 Cor.
1:22; 5:5; Eph. 1:14). The word thus rendered is the same as that
rendered "pledge" in Gen. 38:17-20; "indeed, the Hebrew word has
simply passed into the Greek and Latin languages, probably through
commercial dealings with the Phoenicians, the great trading people
of ancient days. Originally it meant no more than a pledge; but in
common usage it came to denote that particular kind of pledge which
is a part of the full price of an article paid in advance; and as it
is joined with the figure of a seal when applied to the Spirit, it
seems to be used by Paul in this specific sense." The Spirit's
gracious presence and working in believers is a foretaste to them of
the blessedness of heaven. God is graciously pleased to give not
only pledges but foretastes of future blessedness.
Earrings -
rings properly for the ear (Gen. 35:4; Num. 31:50; Ezek. 16:12). In
Gen. 24:47 the word means a nose-jewel, and is so rendered in the
Revised Version. In Isa. 3:20 the Authorized Version has
"ear-rings," and the Revised Version "amulets," which more correctly
represents the original word (lehashim), which means incantations;
charms, thus remedies against enchantment, worn either suspended
from the neck or in the ears of females. Ear-rings were ornaments
used by both sexes (Ex. 32:2).
Earth - (1.) In
the sense of soil or ground, the translation of the word adamah'.
In Gen. 9:20 "husbandman" is literally "man of the ground or earth."
Altars were to be built of earth (Ex. 20:24). Naaman asked for two
mules' burden of earth (2 Kings 5:17), under the superstitious
notion that Jehovah, like the gods of the heathen, could be
acceptably worshipped only on his own soil.
(2). As the rendering of 'erets, it
means the whole world (Gen. 1:2); the land as opposed to the sea
(1:10). Erets also denotes a country (21:32); a plot of
ground (23:15); the ground on which a man stands (33:3); the
inhabitants of the earth (6:1; 11:1); all the world except Israel (2
Chr. 13:9). In the New Testament "the earth" denotes the land of
Judea (Matt. 23:35); also things carnal in contrast with things
heavenly (John 3:31; Col. 3:1, 2).
Earthquake -
mentioned among the extraordinary phenomena of Palestine (Ps. 18:7;
comp. Hab. 3:6; Nah. 1:5; Isa. 5:25).
The first earthquake in Palestine of which we
have any record happened in the reign of Ahab (1 Kings 19:11, 12).
Another took place in the days of Uzziah, King of Judah (Zech.
14:5). The most memorable earthquake taking place in New Testament
times happened at the crucifixion of our Lord (Matt. 27:54). An
earthquake at Philippi shook the prison in which Paul and Silas were
imprisoned (Act 16:26).
It is used figuratively as a token of the
presence of the Lord (Judg. 5:4; 2 Sam. 22:8; Ps. 77:18; 97:4;
104:32).
East - (1.) The
orient (mizrah); the rising of the sun. Thus "the east country" is
the country lying to the east of Syria, the Elymais (Zech. 8:7).
(2). Properly what is in front of one, or a
country that is before or in front of another; the rendering of the
word kedem. In pointing out the quarters, a Hebrew always
looked with his face toward the east. The word kedem is used
when the four quarters of the world are described (Gen. 13:14;
28:14); and mizrah when the east only is distinguished from
the west (Josh. 11:3; Ps. 50:1; 103:12, etc.). In Gen. 25:6
"eastward" is literally "unto the land of kedem;" i.e., the lands
lying east of Palestine, namely, Arabia, Mesopotamia, etc.
East, Children of
the - the Arabs as a whole, known as the Nabateans or Kedarenes,
nomad tribes (Judg. 6:3,33; 7:12; 8:10).
Easter -
originally a Saxon word (Eostre), denoting a goddess of the Saxons,
in honour of whom sacrifices were offered about the time of the
Passover. Hence the name came to be given to the festival of the
Resurrection of Christ, which occured at the time of the Passover.
In the early English versions this word was frequently used as the
translation of the Greek pascha (the Passover). When the Authorized
Version (1611) was formed, the word "passover" was used in all
passages in which this word pascha occurred, except in Act 12:4. In
the Revised Version the proper word, "passover," is always used.
East gate - (Jer.
19:2), properly the Potter's gate, the gate which led to the
potter's field, in the valley of Hinnom.
East sea -
(Joel 2:20; Ezek. 47:18), the Dead Sea, which lay on the east side
of the Holy Land. The Mediterranean, which lay on the west, was
hence called the "great sea for the west border" (Num. 34:6).
East wind - the
wind coming from the east (Job 27:21; Isa. 27:8, etc.). Blight
caused by this wind, "thin ears" (Gen. 41:6); the withered "gourd"
(Jonah 4: 8). It was the cause and also the emblem of evil (Ezek.
17:10; 19:12; Hos. 13:15). In Palestine this wind blows from a
burning desert, and hence is destitute of moisture necessary for
vegetation.
Eating - The
ancient Hebrews would not eat with the Egyptians (Gen. 43:32). In
the time of our Lord they would not eat with Samaritans (John 4:9),
and were astonished that he ate with publicans and sinners (Matt.
9:11). The Hebrews originally sat at table, but afterwards adopted
the Persian and Chaldean practice of reclining (Luke 7:36-50). Their
principal meal was at noon (Gen. 43:16; 1 Kings 20:16; Ruth 2:14;
Luke 14:12). The word "eat" is used metaphorically in Jer. 15:16;
Ezek. 3:1; Rev. 10:9. In John 6:53-58, "eating and drinking" means
believing in Christ. Women were never present as guests at meals
(q.v.).
Ebal - stony.
(1.) A mountain 3,076 feet above the level of the sea, and 1,200
feet above the level of the valley, on the north side of which stood
the city of Shechem (q.v.). On this mountain six of the tribes
(Deut. 27:12,13) were appointed to take their stand and respond
according to a prescribed form to the imprecations uttered in the
valley, where the law was read by the Levites (11:29; 29:4, 13).
This mountain was also the site of the first great altar erected to
Jehovah (Deut. 27:5-8; Josh. 8:30-35). After this the name of Ebal
does not again occur in Jewish history. (See
GERIZIM.)
(2.) A descendant of Eber (1 Chr. 1:22),
called also Obal (Gen. 10:28).
(3.) A descendant of Seir the Horite (Gen.
36:23).
Ebed - slave, the
father of Gaal, in whom the men of Shechem "put confidence" in their
conspiracy against Abimelech (Judg. 9:26, 26, 30, 31).
Ebed-melech - a
servant of the king; probably an official title, an Ethiopian, "one
of the eunuchs which was in the king's house;" i.e., in the palace
of Zedekiah, king of Judah. He interceded with the king in
Jeremiah's behalf, and was the means of saving him from death by
famine (Jer. 38:7-13: comp. 39:15-18).
Eben-ezer -
stone of help, the memorial stone set up by Samuel to commemorate
the divine assistance to Israel in their great battle against the
Philistines, whom they totally routed (1 Sam. 7:7-12) at Aphek, in
the neighbourhood of Mizpeh, in Benjamin, near the western entrance
of the pass of Beth-horon. On this very battle-field, twenty years
before, the Philistines routed the Israelites, "and slew of the army
in the field about four thousand men" (4:1,2; here, and at 5:1,
called "Eben-ezer" by anticipation). In this extremity the
Israelites fetched the ark out of Shiloh and carried it into their
camp. The Philistines a second time immediately attacked them, and
smote them with a very great slaughter, "for there fell of Israel
thirty thousand footmen. And the ark of God was taken" (1 Sam.
4:10). And now in the same place the Philistines are vanquished, and
the memorial stone is erected by Samuel (q.v.). The spot where the
stone was erected was somewhere "between Mizpeh and Shen." Some have
identified it with the modern Beit Iksa, a conspicuous and prominent
position, apparently answering all the necessary conditions; others
with Dier Aban, 3 miles east of 'Ain Shems.
Eber - beyond.
(1.). The third post-duluvian patriach after Shem (Gen. 10:24;
11:14). He is regarded as the founder of the Hebrew race (10:21;
Num. 24:24). In Luke 3:35 he is called Heber.
(2.) One of the seven heads of the families
of the Gadites (1 Chr. 5:13).
(3.) The oldest of the three sons of Elpaal
the Benjamite (8:12).
(4.) One of the heads of the familes of
Benjamites in Jerusalem (22).
(5.) The head of the priestly family of Amok
in the time of Zerubbabel (Neh. 12:20).
Ebony - a
black, hard wood, brought by the merchants from India to Tyre (Ezek.
27:15). It is the heart-wood, brought by Diospyros ebenus, which
grows in Ceylon and Southern India.
Ebronah -
passage, one of the stations of the Israelites in their wanderings
(Num. 33:34, 35). It was near Ezion-geber.
Ecbatana -
(Ezra 6:2 marg.). (See
ACHMETHA.)
Ecclesiastes - the
Greek rendering of the Hebrew Koheleth, which means
"Preacher." The old and traditional view of the authorship of this
book attributes it to Solomon. This view can be satisfactorily
maintained, though others date it from the Captivity. The writer
represents himself implicitly as Solomon (1:12). It has been
appropriately styled The Confession of King Solomon. "The writer is
a man who has sinned in giving way to selfishness and sensuality,
who has paid the penalty of that sin in satiety and weariness of
life, but who has through all this been under the discipline of a
divine education, and has learned from it the lesson which God meant
to teach him." "The writer concludes by pointing out that the secret
of a true life is that a man should consecrate the vigour of his
youth to God." The key-note of the book is sounded in ch. 1:2,
"Vanity of vanities! saith the Preacher,
Vanity of vanities! all is vanity!"
i.e., all man's efforts to find happiness
apart from God are without result.
Eclipse - of
the sun alluded to in Amos 8:9; Micah 3:6; Zech. 14:6; Joel 2:10.
Eclipses were regarded as tokens of God's anger (Joel 3:15; Job
9:7). The darkness at the crucifixion has been ascribed to an
eclipse (Matt. 27:45); but on the other hand it is argued that the
great intensity of darkness caused by an eclipse never lasts for
more than six minutes, and this darkness lasted for three hours.
Moreover, at the time of the Passover the moon was full, and
therefore there could not be an eclipse of the sun, which is caused
by an interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth.
Ed - witness, a
word not found in the original Hebrew, nor in the LXX. and Vulgate,
but added by the translators in the Authorized Version, also in the
Revised Version, of Josh. 22:34. The words are literally rendered:
"And the children of Reuben and the children of Gad named the altar.
It is a witness between us that Jehovah is God." This great altar
stood probably on the east side of the Jordan, in the land of
Gilead, "over against the land of Canaan." After the division of the
Promised Land, the tribes of Reuben and Gad and the half-tribe of
Manasseh, on returning to their own settlements on the east of
Jordan (Josh. 22:1-6), erected a great altar, which they affirmed,
in answer to the challenge of the other tribes, was not for
sacrifice, but only as a witness ('Ed) or testimony to future
generations that they still retained the same interest in the nation
as the other tribes.
Edar - tower of
the flock, a tower between Bethlehem and Hebron, near which Jacob
first halted after leaving Bethlehem (Gen. 35:21). In Micah 4:8 the
word is rendered "tower of the flock" (marg., "Edar"), and is used
as a designation of Bethlehem, which figuratively represents the
royal line of David as sprung from Bethlehem.
Eden - delight.
(1.) The garden in which our first parents dewlt (Gen. 2:8-17). No
geographical question has been so much discussed as that bearing on
its site. It has been placed in Armenia, in the region west of the
Caspian Sea, in Media, near Damascus, in Palestine, in Southern
Arabia, and in Babylonia. The site must undoubtedly be sought for
somewhere along the course of the great streams the Tigris and the
Euphrates of Western Asia, in "the land of Shinar" or Babylonia. The
region from about lat. 33 degrees 30' to lat. 31 degrees, which is a
very rich and fertile tract, has been by the most competent
authorities agreed on as the probable site of Eden. "It is a region
where streams abound, where they divide and re-unite, where alone in
the Mesopotamian tract can be found the phenomenon of a single river
parting into four arms, each of which is or has been a river of
consequence."
Among almost all nations there are traditions
of the primitive innocence of our race in the garden of Eden. This
was the "golden age" to which the Greeks looked back. Men then lived
a "life free from care, and without labour and sorrow. Old age was
unknown; the body never lost its vigour; existence was a perpetual
feast without a taint of evil. The earth brought forth spontaneously
all things that were good in profuse abundance."
(2.) One of the markets whence the merchants
of Tyre obtained richly embroidered stuffs (Ezek. 27:23); the same,
probably, as that mentioned in 2 Kings 19:12, and Isa. 37:12, as the
name of a region conquered by the Assyrians.
(3.) Son of Joah, and one of the Levites who
assisted in reforming the public worship of the sanctuary in the
time of Hezekiah (2 Chr. 29:12).
Eder - flock.
(1.) A city in the south of Judah, on the border of Idumea (Josh.
15:21).
(2.) The second of the three sons of Mushi,
of the family of Merari, appointed to the Levitical office (1 Chr.
23:23; 24:30).
Edom - (1.) The
name of Esau (q.v.), Gen. 25:30, "Feed me, I pray thee, with that
same red pottage [Heb. haadom, haadom, i.e., 'the red pottage, the
red pottage'] ...Therefore was his name called Edom", i.e., Red.
(2.) Idumea (Isa. 34:5, 6; Ezek. 35:15). "The
field of Edom" (Gen. 32:3), "the land of Edom" (Gen. 36:16), was
mountainous (Obad. 1:8, 9, 19, 21). It was called the land, or "the
mountain of Seir," the rough hills on the east side of the Arabah.
It extended from the head of the Gulf of Akabah, the Elanitic gulf,
to the foot of the Dead Sea (1 Kings 9:26), and contained, among
other cities, the rock-hewn Sela (q.v.), generally known by the
Greek name Petra (2 Kings 14:7). It is a wild and rugged region,
traversed by fruitful valleys. Its old capital was Bozrah (Isa.
63:1). The early inhabitants of the land were Horites. They were
destroyed by the Edomites (Deut. 2:12), between whom and the kings
of Israel and Judah there was frequent war (2 Kings 8:20; 2 Chr.
28:17).
At the time of the Exodus they churlishly
refused permission to the Israelites to pass through their land
(Num. 20:14-21), and ever afterwards maintained an attitude of
hostility toward them. They were conquered by David (2 Sam. 8:14;
comp. 1 Kings 9:26), and afterwards by Amaziah (2 Chr. 25:11, 12).
But they regained again their independence, and in later years,
during the decline of the Jewish kingdom (2 Kings 16:6; R.V. marg.,
"Edomites"), made war against Israel. They took part with the
Chaldeans when Nebuchadnezzar captured Jerusalem, and afterwards
they invaded and held possession of the south of Palestine as far as
Hebron. At length, however, Edom fell under the growing Chaldean
power (Jer. 27:3, 6).
There are many prophecies concerning Edom (Isa.
34:5, 6; Jer. 49:7-18; Ezek. 25:13; 35:1-15; Joel 3:19; Amos 1:11;
Obad.; Mal. 1:3, 4) which have been remarkably fulfilled. The
present desolate condition of that land is a standing testimony to
the inspiration of these prophecies. After an existence as a people
for above seventeen hundred years, they have utterly disappeared,
and their language even is forgotten for ever. In Petra, "where
kings kept their court, and where nobles assembled, there no man
dwells; it is given by lot to birds, and beasts, and reptiles."
The Edomites were Semites, closely related in
blood and in language to the Israelites. They dispossessed the
Horites of Mount Seir; though it is clear, from Gen. 36, that they
afterwards intermarried with the conquered population. Edomite
tribes settled also in the south of Judah, like the Kenizzites (Gen.
36:11), to whom Caleb and Othniel belonged (Josh. 15:17). The
southern part of Edom was known as Teman.
Edrei - mighty;
strength. (1.) One of the chief towns of the kingdom of Bashan
(Josh. 12:4, 5). Here Og was defeated by the Israelites, and the
strength of the Amorites broken (Num. 21:33-35). It subsequently
belonged to Manasseh, for a short time apparently, and afterwards
became the abode of banditti and outlaws (Josh. 13:31). It has been
identified with the modern Edr'a, which stands on a rocky promontory
on the south-west edge of the Lejah (the Argob of the Hebrews, and
Trachonitis of the Greeks). The ruins of Edr'a are the most
extensive in the Hauran. They are 3 miles in circumference. A number
of the ancient houses still remain; the walls, roofs, and doors
being all of stone. The wild region of which Edrei was the capital
is thus described in its modern aspect: "Elevated about 20 feet
above the plain, it is a labyrinth of clefts and crevasses in the
rock, formed by volcanic action; and owing to its impenetrable
condition, it has become a refuge for outlaws and turbulent
characters, who make it a sort of Cave of Adullam...It is, in fact,
an impregnable natural fortress, about 20 miles in length and 15 in
breadth" (Porter's Syria, etc.). Beneath this wonderful city there
is also a subterranean city, hollowed out probably as a refuge for
the population of the upper city in times of danger. (See
BASHAN.)
(2.) A town of Naphtali (Josh. 19:37).
Effectual call -
See
CALL.
Effectual prayer -
occurs in Authorized Version, James 5:16. The Revised Version
renders appropriately: "The supplication of a righteous man availeth
much in its working", i.e., "it moves the hand of Him who moves the
world."
Egg - (Heb.
beytsah, "whiteness"). Eggs deserted (Isa. 10:14), of a bird (Deut.
22:6), an ostrich (Job 39:14), the cockatrice (Isa. 59:5). In Luke
11:12, an egg is contrasted with a scorpion, which is said to be
very like an egg in its appearance, so much so as to be with
difficulty at times distinguished from it. In Job 6:6 ("the white of
an egg") the word for egg (hallamuth') occurs nowhere else. It has
been translated "purslain" (R.V. marg.), and the whole phrase "purslain-broth",
i.e., broth made of that herb, proverbial for its insipidity; and
hence an insipid discourse. Job applies this expression to the
speech of Eliphaz as being insipid and dull. But the common
rendering, "the white of an egg", may be satisfactorily maintained.
Eglah - a
heifer, one of David's wives, and mother of Ithream (2 Sam. 3:5; 1
Chr. 3:3). According to a Jewish tradition she was Michal.
Eglaim - two
ponds, (Isa. 15:8), probably En-eglaim of Ezek. 47:10.
Eglon - the
bullock; place of heifers. (1.) Chieftain or king of one of the
Moabite tribes (Judg. 3:12-14). Having entered into an alliance with
Ammon and Amalek, he overran the trans-Jordanic region, and then
crossing the Jordan, seized on Jericho, the "city of palm trees,"
which had been by this time rebuilt, but not as a fortress. He made
this city his capital, and kept Israel in subjection for eighteen
years. The people at length "cried unto the Lord" in their distress,
and he "raised them up a deliverer" in Ehud (q.v.), the son of Gera,
a Benjamite.
(2.) A city in Judah, near Lachish (Josh.
15:39). It was destroyed by Joshua (10:5, 6). It has been identified
with Tell Nejileh, 6 miles south of Tell Hesy or Ajlan, north-west
of Lachish. (See
LACHISH.)
Egypt - the land of
the Nile and the pyramids, the oldest kingdom of which we have any
record, holds a place of great significance in Scripture.
The Egyptians belonged to the white race, and
their original home is still a matter of dispute. Many scholars
believe that it was in Southern Arabia, and recent excavations have
shown that the valley of the Nile was originally inhabited by a
low-class population, perhaps belonging to the Nigritian stock,
before the Egyptians of history entered it. The ancient Egyptian
language, of which the latest form is Coptic, is distantly connected
with the Semitic family of speech.
Egypt consists geographically of two halves,
the northern being the Delta, and the southern Upper Egypt, between
Cairo and the First Cataract. In the Old Testament, Northern or
Lower Egypt is called Mazor, "the fortified land" (Isa. 19:6; 37:
25, where the A.V. mistranslates "defence" and "besieged places");
while Southern or Upper Egypt is Pathros, the Egyptian Pa-to-Res, or
"the land of the south" (Isa. 11:11). But the whole country is
generally mentioned under the dual name of Mizraim, "the two Mazors."
The civilization of Egypt goes back to a very
remote antiquity. The two kingdoms of the north and south were
united by Menes, the founder of the first historical dynasty of
kings. The first six dynasties constitute what is known as the Old
Empire, which had its capital at Memphis, south of Cairo, called in
the Old Testament Moph (Hos. 9:6) and Noph. The native name was
Mennofer, "the good place."
The Pyramids were tombs of the monarchs of
the Old Empire, those of Gizeh being erected in the time of the
Fourth Dynasty. After the fall of the Old Empire came a period of
decline and obscurity. This was followed by the Middle Empire, the
most powerful dynasty of which was the Twelfth. The Fayyum was
rescued for agriculture by the kings of the Twelfth Dynasty; and two
obelisks were erected in front of the temple of the sun-god at On or
Heliopolis (near Cairo), one of which is still standing. The capital
of the Middle Empire was Thebes, in Upper Egypt.
The Middle Empire was overthrown by the
invasion of the Hyksos, or shepherd princes from Asia, who ruled
over Egypt, more especially in the north, for several centuries, and
of whom there were three dynasties of kings. They had their capital
at Zoan or Tanis (now San), in the north-eastern part of the Delta.
It was in the time of the Hyksos that Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph
entered Egypt. The Hyksos were finally expelled about B.C. 1600, by
the hereditary princes of Thebes, who founded the Eighteenth
Dynasty, and carried the war into Asia. Canaan and Syria were
subdued, as well as Cyprus, and the boundaries of the Egyptian
Empire were fixed at the Euphrates. The Soudan, which had been
conquered by the kings of the Twelfth Dynasty, was again annexed to
Egypt, and the eldest son of the Pharaoh took the title of "Prince
of Cush."
One of the later kings of the dynasty,
Amenophis IV., or Khu-n-Aten, endeavoured to supplant the ancient
state religion of Egypt by a new faith derived from Asia, which was
a sort of pantheistic monotheism, the one supreme god being adored
under the image of the solar disk. The attempt led to religious and
civil war, and the Pharaoh retreated from Thebes to Central Egypt,
where he built a new capital, on the site of the present Tell-el-Amarna.
The cuneiform tablets that have been found there represent his
foreign correspondence (about B.C. 1400). He surrounded himself with
officials and courtiers of Asiatic, and more especially Canaanitish,
extraction; but the native party succeeded eventually in
overthrowing the government, the capital of Khu-n-Aten was
destroyed, and the foreigners were driven out of the country, those
that remained being reduced to serfdom.
The national triumph was marked by the rise
of the Nineteenth Dynasty, in the founder of which, Rameses I., we
must see the "new king, who knew not Joseph." His grandson, Rameses
II., reigned sixty-seven years (B.C. 1348-1281), and was an
indefatigable builder. As Pithom, excavated by Dr. Naville in 1883,
was one of the cities he built, he must have been the Pharaoh of the
Oppression. The Pharaoh of the Exodus may have been one of his
immediate successors, whose reigns were short. Under them Egypt lost
its empire in Asia, and was itself attacked by barbarians from Libya
and the north.
The Nineteenth Dynasty soon afterwards came
to an end; Egypt was distracted by civil war; and for a short time a
Canaanite, Arisu, ruled over it.
Then came the Twentieth Dynasty, the second
Pharaoh of which, Rameses III., restored the power of his country.
In one of his campaigns he overran the southern part of Palestine,
where the Israelites had not yet settled. They must at the time have
been still in the wilderness. But it was during the reign of Rameses
III. that Egypt finally lost Gaza and the adjoining cities, which
were seized by the Pulista, or Philistines.
After Rameses III., Egypt fell into decay.
Solomon married the daughter of one of the last kings of the
Twenty-first Dynasty, which was overthrown by Shishak I., the
general of the Libyan mercenaries, who founded the Twenty-second
Dynasty (1 Kings 11:40; 14:25, 26). A list of the places he captured
in Palestine is engraved on the outside of the south wall of the
temple of Karnak.
In the time of Hezekiah, Egypt was conquered
by Ethiopians from the Soudan, who constituted the Twenty-fifth
Dynasty. The third of them was Tirhakah (2 Kings 19:9). In B.C. 674
it was conquered by the Assyrians, who divided it into twenty
satrapies, and Tirhakah was driven back to his ancestral dominions.
Fourteen years later it successfully revolted under Psammetichus I.
of Sais, the founder of the Twenty-sixth Dynasty. Among his
successors were Necho (2 Kings 23:29) and Hophra, or Apries (Jer.
37:5, 7, 11). The dynasty came to an end in B.C. 525, when the
country was subjugated by Cambyses. Soon afterwards it was organized
into a Persian satrapy.
The title of Pharaoh, given to the Egyptian
kings, is the Egyptian Per-aa, or "Great House," which may be
compared to that of "Sublime Porte." It is found in very early
Egyptian texts.
The Egyptian religion was a strange mixture
of pantheism and animal worship, the gods being adored in the form
of animals. While the educated classes resolved their manifold
deities into manifestations of one omnipresent and omnipotent divine
power, the lower classes regarded the animals as incarnations of the
gods.
Under the Old Empire, Ptah, the Creator, the
god of Memphis, was at the head of the Pantheon; afterwards Amon,
the god of Thebes, took his place. Amon, like most of the other
gods, was identified with Ra, the sun-god of Heliopolis.
The Egyptians believed in a resurrection and
future life, as well as in a state of rewards and punishments
dependent on our conduct in this world. The judge of the dead was
Osiris, who had been slain by Set, the representative of evil, and
afterwards restored to life. His death was avenged by his son Horus,
whom the Egyptians invoked as their "Redeemer." Osiris and Horus,
along with Isis, formed a trinity, who were regarded as representing
the sun-god under different forms.
Even in the time of Abraham, Egypt was a
flourishing and settled monarchy. Its oldest capital, within the
historic period, was Memphis, the ruins of which may still be seen
near the Pyramids and the Sphinx. When the Old Empire of Menes came
to an end, the seat of empire was shifted to Thebes, some 300 miles
farther up the Nile. A short time after that, the Delta was
conquered by the Hyksos, or shepherd kings, who fixed their capital
at Zoan, the Greek Tanis, now San, on the Tanic arm of the Nile. All
this occurred before the time of the new king "which knew not
Joseph" (Ex. 1:8). In later times Egypt was conquered by the
Persians (B.C. 525), and by the Greeks under Alexander the Great
(B.C. 332), after whom the Ptolemies ruled the country for three
centuries. Subsequently it was for a time a province of the Roman
Empire; and at last, in A.D. 1517, it fell into the hands of the
Turks, of whose empire it still forms nominally a part. Abraham and
Sarah went to Egypt in the time of the shepherd kings. The exile of
Joseph and the migration of Jacob to "the land of Goshen" occurred
about 200 years later. On the death of Solomon, Shishak, king of
Egypt, invaded Palestine (1 Kings 14:25). He left a list of the
cities he conquered.
A number of remarkable clay tablets,
discovered at Tell-el-Amarna in Upper Egypt, are the most important
historical records ever found in connection with the Bible. They
most fully confirm the historical statements of the Book of Joshua,
and prove the antiquity of civilization in Syria and Palestine. As
the clay in different parts of Palestine differs, it has been found
possible by the clay alone to decide where the tablets come from
when the name of the writer is lost. The inscriptions are cuneiform,
and in the Aramaic language, resembling Assyrian. The writers are
Phoenicians, Amorites, and Philistines, but in no instance Hittites,
though Hittites are mentioned. The tablets consist of official
dispatches and letters, dating from B.C. 1480, addressed to the two
Pharaohs, Amenophis III. and IV., the last of this dynasty, from the
kings and governors of Phoenicia and Palestine. There occur the
names of three kings killed by Joshua, Adoni-zedec, king of
Jerusalem, Japhia, king of Lachish (Josh. 10:3), and Jabin, king of
Hazor (11:1); also the Hebrews (Abiri) are said to have come from
the desert.
The principal prophecies of Scripture
regarding Egypt are these, Isa. 19; Jer. 43: 8-13; 44:30; 46; Ezek.
29-32; and it might be easily shown that they have all been
remarkably fulfilled. For example, the singular disappearance of
Noph (i.e., Memphis) is a fulfilment of Jer. 46:19, Ezek. 30:13.
Ehud - union.
(1.) A descendant of Benjamin (1 Chr. 7:10), his great-grandson.
(2.) The son of Gera, of the tribe of
Benjamin (Judg. 3:15). After the death of Othniel the people again
fell into idolatry, and Eglon, the king of Moab, uniting his bands
with those of the Ammonites and the Amalekites, crossed the Jordan
and took the city of Jericho, and for eighteen years held that whole
district in subjection, exacting from it an annual tribute. At
length Ehud, by a stratagem, put Eglon to death with a two-edged
dagger a cubit long, and routed the Moabites at the fords of the
Jordan, putting 10,000 of them to death. Thenceforward the land, at
least Benjamin, enjoyed rest "for fourscore years" (Judg. 3:12-30).
(See QUARRIES ¯T0003032 [2].) But in the south-west the Philistines
reduced the Israelites to great straits (Judg. 5:6). From this
oppression Shamgar was raised up to be their deliverer.
Ekron -
firm-rooted, the most northerly of the five towns belonging to the
lords of the Philistines, about 11 miles north of Gath. It was
assigned to Judah (Josh. 13:3), and afterwards to Dan (19:43), but
came again into the full possession of the Philistines (1 Sam.
5:10). It was the last place to which the Philistines carried the
ark before they sent it back to Israel (1 Sam. 5:10; 6:1-8). There
was here a noted sanctuary of Baal-zebub (2 Kings 1: 2, 3, 6, 16).
Now the small village Akir. It is mentioned on monuments in B.C.
702, when Sennacherib set free its king, imprisoned by Hezekiah in
Jerusalem, according to the Assyrian record.
Elah -
terebinth or oak. (1.) Valley of, where the Israelites were encamped
when David killed Goliath (1 Sam. 17:2, 19). It was near Shochoh of
Judah and Azekah (17:1). It is the modern Wady es-Sunt, i.e.,
"valley of the acacia." "The terebinths from which the valley of
Elah takes its name still cling to their ancient soil. On the west
side of the valley, near Shochoh, there is a very large and ancient
tree of this kind known as the 'terebinth of Wady Sur,' 55 feet in
height, its trunk 17 feet in circumference, and the breadth of its
shade no less than 75 feet. It marks the upper end of the Elah
valley, and forms a noted object, being one of the largest
terebinths in Palestine." Geikie's, The Holy Land, etc.
(2.) One of the Edomite chiefs or "dukes" of
Mount Seir (Gen. 36:41).
(3.) The second of the three sons of Caleb,
the son of Jephunneh (1 Chr. 4:15).
(4.) The son and successor of Baasha, king of
Israel (1 Kings 16:8-10). He was killed while drunk by Zimri, one of
the captains of his chariots, and was the last king of the line of
Baasha. Thus was fullfilled the prophecy of Jehu (6, 7, 11-14).
(5.) The father of Hoshea, the last king of
Israel (2 Kings 15:30; 17:1).
Elam -
highland, the son of Shem (Gen. 10:22), and the name of the country
inhabited by his descendants (14:1, 9; Isa. 11:11; 21:2, etc.) lying
to the east of Babylonia, and extending to the shore of the
Mediterranean, a distance in a direct line of about 1,000 miles. The
name Elam is an Assyrian word meaning "high."
"The inhabitants of Elam, or 'the Highlands,'
to the east of Babylon, were called Elamites. They were divided into
several branches, speaking different dialects of the same
agglutinative language. The race to which they belonged was
brachycephalic, or short-headed, like the pre-Semitic Sumerians of
Babylonia.
"The earliest Elamite kingdom seems to have
been that of Anzan, the exact site of which is uncertain; but in the
time of Abraham, Shushan or Susa appears to have already become the
capital of the country. Babylonia was frequently invaded by the
Elamite kings, who at times asserted their supremacy over it (as in
the case of Chedorlaomer, the Kudur-Lagamar, or 'servant of the
goddess Lagamar,' of the cuneiform texts).
"The later Assyrian monarchs made several
campaigns against Elam, and finally Assur-bani-pal (about B.C. 650)
succeeded in conquering the country, which was ravaged with fire and
sword. On the fall of the Assyrian Empire, Elam passed into the
hands of the Persians" (A.H. Sayce).
This country was called by the Greeks Cissia
or Susiana.
Elasah - God
made. (1.) One of the descendants of Judah, of the family of Hezron
(1 Chr. 2:39, "Eleasah").
(2.) A descendant of king Saul (1 Chr. 8:37;
9:43).
(3.) The son of Shaphan, one of the two who
were sent by Zedekiah to Nebuchadnezzar, and also took charge of
Jeremiah's letter to the captives in Babylon (Jer. 29:3).
Return
To Dictionary
Elath - grove;
trees, (Deut. 2:8), also in plural form Eloth (1 Kings 9:26, etc.);
called by the Greeks and Romans Elana; a city of Idumea, on the
east, i.e., the Elanitic, gulf, or the Gulf of Akabah, of the Red
Sea. It is first mentioned in Deut. 2:8. It is also mentioned along
with Ezion-geber in 1 Kings 9:26. It was within the limits of
Solomon's dominion, but afterwards revolted. It was, however,
recovered and held for a time under king Uzziah (2 Kings 14:22). Now
the ruin Aila.
El-Bethel - God
of Bethel, the name of the place where Jacob had the vision of the
ladder, and where he erected an altar (Gen. 31:13; 35:7).
Eldad - whom
God has loved, one of the seventy elders whom Moses appointed (Num.
11:26, 27) to administer justice among the people. He, with Medad,
prophesied in the camp instead of going with the rest to the
tabernacle, as Moses had commanded. This incident was announced to
Moses by Joshua, who thought their conduct in this respect
irregular. Moses replied, "Enviest thou for my sake? would God that
all the Lord's people were prophets" (Num. 11:24-30; comp. Mark
9:38; Luke 9:49).
Elder - a name
frequently used in the Old Testament as denoting a person clothed
with authority, and entitled to respect and reverence (Gen. 50:7).
It also denoted a political office (Num. 22:7). The "elders of
Israel" held a rank among the people indicative of authority. Moses
opened his commission to them (Ex. 3:16). They attended Moses on all
important occasions. Seventy of them attended on him at the giving
of the law (Ex. 24:1). Seventy also were selected from the whole
number to bear with Moses the burden of the people (Num. 11:16, 17).
The "elder" is the keystone of the social and political fabric
wherever the patriarchal system exists. At the present day this is
the case among the Arabs, where the sheik (i.e., "the old man") is
the highest authority in the tribe. The body of the "elders" of
Israel were the representatives of the people from the very first,
and were recognized as such by Moses. All down through the history
of the Jews we find mention made of the elders as exercising
authority among the people. They appear as governors (Deut. 31:28),
as local magistrates (16:18), administering justice (19:12). They
were men of extensive influence (1 Sam. 30:26-31). In New Testament
times they also appear taking an active part in public affairs
(Matt. 16:21; 21:23; 26:59).
The Jewish eldership was transferred from the
old dispensation to the new. "The creation of the office of elder is
nowhere recorded in the New Testament, as in the case of deacons and
apostles, because the latter offices were created to meet new and
special emergencies, while the former was transmitted from the
earlies times. In other words, the office of elder was the only
permanent essential office of the church under either dispensation."
The "elders" of the New Testament church were
the "pastors" (Eph. 4:11), "bishops or overseers" (Acts 20:28),
"leaders" and "rulers" (Heb. 13:7; 1 Thess. 5:12) of the flock.
Everywhere in the New Testament bishop and presbyter are titles
given to one and the same officer of the Christian church. He who is
called presbyter or elder on account of his age or gravity is also
called bishop or overseer with reference to the duty that lay upon
him (Titus 1:5-7; Acts 20:17-28; Phil. 1:1).
Elealeh - God
has ascended, a place in the pastoral country east of Jordan, in the
tribe of Reuben (Num. 32:3, 37). It is not again mentioned till the
time of Isaiah (15:4; 16:9) and Jeremiah (48:34). It is now an
extensive ruin called el-A'al, about one mile north-east of Heshbon.
Eleazar - God
has helped. (1.) The third son of Aaron (Ex. 6:23). His wife, a
daughter of Putiel, bore him Phinehas (Ex. 6:25). After the death of
Nadab and Abihu (Lev. 10:12; Num. 3:4) he was appointed to the
charge of the sanctuary (Num. 3:32). On Mount Hor he was clothed
with the sacred vestments, which Moses took from off his brother
Aaron and put upon him as successor to his father in the high
priest's office, which he held for more than twenty years (Num.
20:25-29). He took part with Moses in numbering the people (26:3,
4), and assisted at the inauguration of Joshua. He assisted in the
distribution of the land after the conquest (Josh. 14:1). The
high-priesthood remained in his family till the time of Eli, into
whose family it passed, till it was restored to the family of
Eleazar in the person of Zadok (1 Sam. 2:35; comp. 1 Kings 2:27).
"And Eleazar the son of Aaron died; and they buried him in a hill
that pertained to Phinehas his son" (Josh. 24:33). The word here
rendered "hill" is Gibeah, the name of several towns in Palestine
which were generally on or near a hill. The words may be more
suitably rendered, "They buried him in Gibeah of Phinehas", i.e., in
the city of Phinehas, which has been identified, in accordance with
Jewish and Samaritan traditions, with Kefr Ghuweirah='Awertah, about
7 miles north of Shiloh, and a few miles south-east of Nablus. "His
tomb is still shown there, overshadowed by venerable terebinths."
Others, however, have identified it with the village of Gaba or
Gebena of Eusebius, the modern Khurbet Jibia, 5 miles north of
Guphna towards Nablus.
(2.) An inhabitant of Kirjath-jearim who was
"sanctified" to take charge of the ark, although not allowed to
touch it, while it remained in the house of his father Abinadab (1
Sam. 7:1, 2; comp. Num. 3:31; 4:15).
(3.) The son of Dodo the Ahohite, of the
tribe of Benjamin, one of the three most eminent of David's
thirty-seven heroes (1 Chr. 11:12) who broke through the Philistine
host and brought him water from the well of Bethlehem (2 Sam. 23:9,
16).
(4.) A son of Phinehas associated with the
priests in taking charge of the sacred vessels brought back to
Jerusalem after the Exile (Ezra 8:33).
(5.) A Levite of the family of Merari (1 Chr.
23:21, 22).
Election of Grace -
The Scripture speaks (1) of the election of individuals to
office or to honour and privilege, e.g., Abraham, Jacob, Saul,
David, Solomon, were all chosen by God for the positions they held;
so also were the apostles. (2) There is also an election of nations
to special privileges, e.g., the Hebrews (Deut. 7:6; Rom. 9:4). (3)
But in addition there is an election of individuals to eternal life
(2 Thess. 2:13; Eph. 1:4; 1 Pet. 1:2; John 13:18).
The ground of this election to salvation is
the good pleasure of God (Eph. 1:5, 11; Matt. 11:25, 26; John 15:16,
19). God claims the right so to do (Rom. 9:16, 21).
It is not conditioned on faith or repentance,
but is of soverign grace (Rom. 11:4-6; Eph. 1:3-6). All that pertain
to salvation, the means (Eph. 2:8; 2 Thess. 2:13) as well as the
end, are of God (Acts 5:31; 2 Tim. 2:25; 1 Cor. 1:30; Eph. 2:5, 10).
Faith and repentance and all other graces are the exercises of a
regenerated soul; and regeneration is God's work, a "new creature."
Men are elected "to salvation," "to the
adoption of sons," "to be holy and without blame before him in love"
(2 Thess. 2:13; Gal. 4:4, 5; Eph. 1:4). The ultimate end of election
is the praise of God's grace (Eph. 1:6, 12). (See
PREDESTINATION.)
Elect lady - to
whom the Second Epistle of John is addressed (2 John 1:1). Some
think that the word rendered "lady" is a proper name, and thus that
the expression should be "elect Kyria."
El-elohe-Isreal -
mighty one; God of Israel, the name which Jacob gave to the
alter which he erected on the piece of land where he pitched his
tent before Shechem, and which he afterwards purchased from the sons
of Hamor (Gen. 33:20).
Elements - In
its primary sense, as denoting the first principles or constituents
of things, it is used in 2 Pet. 3:10: "The elements shall be
dissolved." In a secondary sense it denotes the first principles of
any art or science. In this sense it is used in Gal. 4:3, 9; Col.
2:8, 20, where the expressions, "elements of the world," "week and
beggarly elements," denote that state of religious knowledge
existing among the Jews before the coming of Christ, the rudiments
of religious teaching. They are "of the world," because they are
made up of types which appeal to the senses. They are "weak,"
because insufficient; and "beggarly," or "poor," because they are
dry and barren, not being accompanied by an outpouring of spiritual
gifts and graces, as the gospel is.
Elephant - not
found in Scripture except indirectly in the original Greek word (elephantinos)
translated "of ivory" in Rev. 18:12, and in the Hebrew word (shenhabim,
meaning "elephant's tooth") rendered "ivory" in 1 Kings 10:22 and 2
Chr. 9:21.
Elhanan - whom
God has graciously bestowed. (1.) A warrior of the time of David
famed for his exploits. In the Authorized Version (2 Sam. 21:19) it
is recorded that "Elhanan the son of Jaare-oregim, a Bethlehemite,
slew the brother of Goliath." The Revised Version here rightly omits
the words "the brother of." They were introduced in the Authorized
Version to bring this passage into agreement with 1 Chr. 20:5, where
it is said that he "slew Lahmi the brother of Goliath." Goliath the
Gittite was killed by David (1 Sam. 17). The exploit of Elhanan took
place late in David's reign.
(2.) The son of Dodo, and one of David's
warriors (2 Sam. 23:24).
Eli - ascent,
the high priest when the ark was at Shiloh (1 Sam. 1:3, 9). He was
the first of the line of Ithamar, Aaron's fourth son (1 Chr. 24:3;
comp. 2 Sam. 8:17), who held that office. The office remained in his
family till the time of Abiathar (1 Kings 2:26, 27), whom Solomon
deposed, and appointed Zadok, of the family of Eleazar, in his stead
(35). He acted also as a civil judge in Israel after the death of
Samson (1 Sam. 4:18), and judged Israel for forty years.
His sons Hophni and Phinehas grossly
misconducted themselves, to the great disgust of the people (1 Sam.
2:27-36). They were licentious reprobates. He failed to reprove them
so sternly as he ought to have done, and so brought upon his house
the judgment of God (2:22-33; 3:18). The Israelites proclaimed war
against the Philistines, whose army was encamped at Aphek. The
battle, fought a short way beyond Mizpeh, ended in the total defeat
of Israel. Four thousand of them fell in "battle array". They now
sought safety in having the "ark of the covenant of the Lord" among
them. They fetched it from Shiloh, and Hophni and Phinehas
accompanied it. This was the first time since the settlement of
Israel in Canaan that the ark had been removed from the sanctuary.
The Philistines put themselves again in array against Israel, and in
the battle which ensued "Israel was smitten, and there was a very
great slaughter." The tidings of this great disaster were speedily
conveyed to Shiloh, about 20 miles distant, by a messenger, a
Benjamite from the army. There Eli sat outside the gate of the
sanctuary by the wayside, anxiously waiting for tidings from the
battle-field. The full extent of the national calamity was speedily
made known to him: "Israel is fled before the Philistines, there has
also been a great slaughter among the people, thy two sons Hophni
and Phinehas are dead, and the ark of God is taken" (1 Sam.
4:12-18). When the old man, whose eyes were "stiffened" (i.e.,
fixed, as of a blind eye unaffected by the light) with age, heard
this sad story of woe, he fell backward from off his seat and died,
being ninety and eight years old. (See
ITHAMAR.)
Eli, Heb. eli, "my God", (Matt. 27:46), an
exclamation used by Christ on the cross. Mark (15:34), as usual,
gives the original Aramaic form of the word, Eloi.
Eliab - to whom God
is father. (1.) A Reubenite, son of Pallu (Num. 16:1, 12; 26:8, 9;
Deut. 11:6).
(2.) A son of Helon, and chief of the tribe
of Zebulun at the time of the census in the wilderness (Num. 1:9;
2:7).
(3.) The son of Jesse, and brother of David
(1 Sam. 16:6). It was he who spoke contemptuously to David when he
proposed to fight Goliath (1 Sam. 17:28).
(4.) One of the Gadite heroes who joined
David in his stronghold in the wilderness (1 Chr. 12:9).
Eliada - whom
God cares for. (1.) One of David's sons born after his establishment
in Jerusalem (2 Sam. 5:16).
(2.) A mighty man of war, a Benjamite (2 Chr.
17:17).
(3.) An Aramite of Zobah, captain of a
marauding band that troubled Solomon (1 Kings 11:23).
Eliakim - whom
God will raise up. (1.) The son of Melea (Luke 3:30), and probably
grandson of Nathan.
(2.) The son of Abiud, of the posterity of
Zerubbabel (Matt. 1:13).
(3.) The son of Hilkiah, who was sent to
receive the message of the invading Assyrians and report it to
Isaiah (2 Kings 18:18; 19:2; Isa. 36:3; 37:2). In his office as
governor of the palace of Hezekiah he succeeded Shebna (Isa.
22:15-25). He was a good man (Isa. 22:20; 2 Kings 18:37), and had a
splendid and honourable career.
(4.) The original name of Jehoiakim, king of
Judah (2 Kings 23:34). He was the son of Josiah.
Eliam - God's
people. (1.) The father of Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah (2 Sam.
11:3). In 1 Chr. 3:5 his name is Ammiel.
(2.) This name also occurs as that of a
Gilonite, the son of Ahithophel, and one of David's thirty warriors
(2 Sam. 23:34). perhaps these two were the same person.
Elias - the
Greek form of Elijah (Matt. 11:14; 16:14, etc.), which the Revised
Version has uniformly adopted in the New Testament. (See
ELIJAH.)
Eliashib - whom God
will restore. (1.) A priest, head of one of the courses of the
priests of the time of David (1 Chr. 24:12).
(2.) A high priest in the time of Ezra and
Nehemiah (Neh. 12:22, 23). He rebuilt the eastern city wall (3:1),
his own mansion being in that quarter, on the ridge Ophel (3:20,
21). His indulgence of Tobiah the Ammonite provoked the indignation
of Nehemiah (13:4, 7).
Eliathah - to
whom God will come, one of the foureen sons of the Levite Heman, and
musician of the temple in the time of David (1 Chr. 25:4).
Elidad - whom
God has loved, son of Chislon, and chief of the tribe of Benjamin;
one of those who were appointed to divide the Promised Land among
the tribes (Num. 34:21).
Eliel - to whom
God is might. (1.) A chief of Manasseh, on the east of Jordan (1 Chr.
5:24).
(2.) A Gadite who joined David in the hold at
Ziklag (1 Chr. 12:11).
(3.) One of the overseers of the offerings in
the reign of Hezekiah (2 Chr. 31:13).
Eliezer - God
his help. (1.) "Of Damascus," the "steward" (R.V., "possessor") of
Abraham's house (Gen. 15:2, 3). It was probably he who headed the
embassy sent by Abraham to the old home of his family in Padan-aram
to seek a wife for his son Isaac. The account of this embassy is
given at length in Gen. 24.
(2.) The son of Becher, and grandson of
Benjamin (1 Chr. 7:8).
(3.) One of the two sons of Moses, born
during his sojourn in Midian (Ex. 18:4; 1 Chr. 23:15, 17). He
remained with his mother and brother Gershom with Jethro when Moses
returned to Egypt. (Ex. 18:4). They were restored to Moses when
Jethro heard of his departure out of Egypt.
(4.) One of the priests who blew the trumpet
before the ark when it was brought to Jerusalem (1 Chr. 15:24).
(5.) Son of Zichri, and chief of the
Reubenites under David (1 Chr. 27:16).
(6.) A prophet in the time of Jehoshaphat (2
Chr. 20:37). Others of this name are mentioned Luke 3:29; Ezra 8:16;
10:18, 23, 31.
Elihu - whose
God is he. (1.) "The son of Barachel, a Buzite" (Job 32:2), one of
Job's friends. When the debate between Job and his friends is
brought to a close, Elihu for the first time makes his appearance,
and delivers his opinion on the points at issue (Job 32-37).
(2.) The son of Tohu, and grandfather of
Elkanah (1 Sam. 1:1). He is called also Eliel (1 Chr. 6:34) and
Eliab (6:27).
(3.) One of the captains of thousands of
Manasseh who joined David at Ziklag (1 Chr. 12:20).
(4.) One of the family of Obed-edom, who were
appointed porters of the temple under David (1 Chr. 26:7).
Elijah - whose
God is Jehovah. (1.) "The Tishbite," the "Elias" of the New
Testament, is suddenly introduced to our notice in 1 Kings 17:1 as
delivering a message from the Lord to Ahab. There is mention made of
a town called Thisbe, south of Kadesh, but it is impossible to say
whether this was the place referred to in the name given to the
prophet.
Having delivered his message to Ahab, he
retired at the command of God to a hiding-place by the brook Cherith,
beyond Jordan, where he was fed by ravens. When the brook dried up
God sent him to the widow of Zarephath, a city of Zidon, from whose
scanty store he was supported for the space of two years. During
this period the widow's son died, and was restored to life by Elijah
(1 Kings 17: 2-24).
During all these two years a famine prevailed
in the land. At the close of this period of retirement and of
preparation for his work (comp. Gal. 1:17, 18) Elijah met Obadiah,
one of Ahab's officers, whom he had sent out to seek for pasturage
for the cattle, and bade him go and tell his master that Elijah was
there. The king came and met Elijah, and reproached him as the
troubler of Israel. It was then proposed that sacrifices should be
publicly offered, for the purpose of determining whether Baal or
Jehovah were the true God. This was done on Carmel, with the result
that the people fell on their faces, crying, "The Lord, he is the
God." Thus was accomplished the great work of Elijah's ministry. The
prophets of Baal were then put to death by the order of Elijah. Not
one of them escaped. Then immediately followed rain, according to
the word of Elijah, and in answer to his prayer (James 5:18).
Jezebel, enraged at the fate that had
befallen her priests of Baal, threatened to put Elijah to death (1
Kings 19:1-13). He therefore fled in alarm to Beersheba, and thence
went alone a day's journey into the wilderness, and sat down in
despondency under a juniper tree. As he slept an angel touched him,
and said unto him, "Arise and eat; because the journey is too great
for thee." He arose and found a cake and a cruse of water. Having
partaken of the provision thus miraculously supplied, he went
forward on his solitary way for forty days and forty nights to Horeb,
the mount of God, where he took up his abode in a cave. Here the
Lord appeared unto him and said, "What dost thou here, Elijah?" In
answer to his despondent words God manifests to him his glory, and
then directs him to return to Damascus and anoint Hazael king over
Syria, and Jehu king over Israel, and Elisha to be prophet in his
room (1 Kings 19:13-21; comp. 2 Kings 8:7-15; 9:1-10).
Some six years after this he warned Ahab and
Jezebel of the violent deaths they would die (1 Kings 21:19-24;
22:38). He also, four years afterwards, warned Ahaziah (q.v.), who
had succeeded his father Ahab, of his approaching death (2 Kings
1:1-16). (See
NABOTH.) During these intervals he probably withdrew to some
quiet retirement, no one knew where. His interview with Ahaziah's
messengers on the way to Ekron, and the account of the destruction
of his captains with their fifties, suggest the idea that he may
have been in retirement at this time on Mount Carmel.
The time now drew near when he was to be
taken up into heaven (2 Kings 2:1-12). He had a presentiment of what
was awaiting him. He went down to Gilgal, where was a school of the
prophets, and where his successor Elisha, whom he had anointed some
years before, resided. Elisha was solemnized by the thought of his
master's leaving him, and refused to be parted from him. "They two
went on," and came to Bethel and Jericho, and crossed the Jordan,
the waters of which were "divided hither and thither" when smitten
with Elijah's mantle. Arrived at the borders of Gilead, which Elijah
had left many years before, it "came to pass as they still went on
and talked" they were suddenly separated by a chariot and horses of
fire; and "Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven, "Elisha
receiving his mantle, which fell from him as he ascended.
No one of the old prophets is so frequently
referred to in the New Testament. The priests and Levites said to
the Baptist (John 1:25), "Why baptizest thou, if thou be not that
Christ, nor Elias?" Paul (Rom. 11:2) refers to an incident in his
history to illustrate his argument that God had not cast away his
people. James (5:17) finds in him an illustration of the power of
prayer. (See also Luke 4:25; 9:54.) He was a type of John the
Baptist in the sternness and power of his reproofs (Luke 9:8). He
was the Elijah that "must first come" (Matt. 11:11, 14), the
forerunner of our Lord announced by Malachi. Even outwardly the
Baptist corresponded so closely to the earlier prophet that he might
be styled a second Elijah. In him we see "the same connection with a
wild and wilderness country; the same long retirement in the desert;
the same sudden, startling entrance on his work (1 Kings 17:1; Luke
3:2); even the same dress, a hairy garment, and a leathern girdle
about the loins (2 Kings 1:8; Matt. 3:4)."
How deep the impression was which Elijah made
"on the mind of the nation may be judged from the fixed belief,
which rested on the words of Malachi (4:5, 6), which many centuries
after prevailed that he would again appear for the relief and
restoration of the country. Each remarkable person as he arrives on
the scene, be his habits and characteristics what they may, the
stern John equally with his gentle Successor, is proclaimed to be
Elijah (Matt. 11:13, 14; 16:14; 17:10; Mark 9:11; 15:35; Luke 9:7,
8; John 1:21). His appearance in glory on the mount of
transfiguration does not seem to have startled the disciples. They
were 'sore afraid,' but not apparently surprised."
(2.) The Elijah spoken of in 2 Chr. 21:12-15
is by some supposed to be a different person from the foregoing. He
lived in the time of Jehoram, to whom he sent a letter of warning
(comp. 1 Chr. 28:19; Jer. 36), and acted as a prophet in Judah;
while the Tishbite was a prophet of the northern kingdom. But there
does not seem any necessity for concluding that the writer of this
letter was some other Elijah than the Tishbite. It may be supposed
either that Elijah anticipated the character of Jehoram, and so
wrote the warning message, which was preserved in the schools of the
prophets till Jehoram ascended the throne after the Tishbite's
translation, or that the translation did not actually take place
till after the accession of Jehoram to the throne (2 Chr. 21:12; 2
Kings 8:16). The events of 2 Kings 2 may not be recorded in
chronological order, and thus there may be room for the opinion that
Elijah was still alive in the beginning of Jehoram's reign.
Elika - God is his
rejector, one of David's thirty-seven distinguished heros (2 Sam.
23:25).
Elim - trees,
(Ex. 15:27; Num. 33:9), the name of the second station where the
Israelites encamped after crossing the Red Sea. It had "twelve wells
of water and threescore and ten palm trees." It has been identified
with the Wady Ghurundel, the most noted of the four wadies which
descend from the range of et-Tih towards the sea. Here they probably
remained some considerable time. The form of expression in Ex. 16:1
seems to imply that the people proceeded in detachments or companies
from Elim, and only for the first time were assembled as a complete
host when they reached the wilderness of Sin (q.v.).
Elimelech - God
his king, a man of the tribe of Judah, of the family of the
Hezronites, and kinsman of Boaz, who dwelt in Bethlehem in the days
of the judges. In consequence of a great dearth he, with his wife
Naomi and his two sons, went to dwell in the land of Moab. There he
and his sons died (Ruth 1:2,3; 2:1,3; 4:3,9). Naomi afterwards
returned to Palestine with her daughter Ruth.
Elioenai -
toward Jehovah are my eyes, the name of several men mentioned in the
Old Testament (1 Chr. 7:8; 4:36; Ezra 10:22, 27). Among these was
the eldest son of Neariah, son of Shemaiah, of the descendants of
Zerubbabel. His family are the latest mentioned in the Old Testament
(1 Chr. 3:23, 24).
Eliphalet - God
his deliverance, one of David's sons (2 Sam. 5:16); called also
Eliphelet (1 Chr. 3:8).
Eliphaz - God
his strength. (1.) One of Job's "three friends" who visited him in
his affliction (4:1). He was a "Temanite", i.e., a native of Teman,
in Idumea. He first enters into debate with Job. His language is
uniformly more delicate and gentle than that of the other two,
although he imputes to Job special sins as the cause of his present
sufferings. He states with remarkable force of language the infinite
purity and majesty of God (4:12-21; 15:12-16).
(2.) The son of Esau by his wife Adah, and
father of several Edomitish tribes (Gen. 36:4, 10, 11, 16).
Elipheleh - God
will distinguish him, one of the porters appointed to play "on the
Sheminith" on the occasion of the bringing up of the ark to the city
of David (1 Chr. 15:18, 21).
Eliphelet - God
his deliverance. (1.) One of David's distinguished warriors (2 Sam.
23:34); called also Eliphal in 1 Chr. 11:35.
(2.) One of the sons of David born at
Jerusalem (1 Chr. 3:6; 14:5); called Elpalet in 1 Chr. 14:5. Also
another of David's sons (1 Chr. 3:8); called Eliphalet in 2 Sam.
5:16; 1 Chr. 14:7.
(3.) A descendant of king Saul through
Jonathan (1 Chr. 8:39).
Elisabeth - God
her oath, the mother of John the Baptist (Luke 1:5). She was a
descendant of Aaron. She and her husband Zacharias (q.v.) "were both
righteous before God" (Luke 1:5, 13). Mary's visit to Elisabeth is
described in 1:39-63.
Elisha - God
his salvation, the son of Shaphat of Abel-meholah, who became the
attendant and disciple of Elijah (1 Kings 19:16-19). His name first
occurs in the command given to Elijah to anoint him as his successor
(1 Kings 19:16). This was the only one of the three commands then
given to Elijah which he accomplished. On his way from Sinai to
Damascus he found Elisha at his native place engaged in the labours
of the field, ploughing with twelve yoke of oxen. He went over to
him, threw over his shoulders his rough mantle, and at once adopted
him as a son, and invested him with the prophetical office (comp.
Luke 9:61, 62). Elisha accepted the call thus given (about four
years before the death of Ahab), and for some seven or eight years
became the close attendant on Elijah till he was parted from him and
taken up into heaven. During all these years we hear nothing of
Elisha except in connection with the closing scenes of Elijah's
life. After Elijah, Elisha was accepted as the leader of the sons of
the prophets, and became noted in Israel. He possessed, according to
his own request, "a double portion" of Elijah's spirit (2 Kings
2:9); and for the long period of about sixty years (B.C. 892-832)
held the office of "prophet in Israel" (2 Kings 5:8).
After Elijah's departure, Elisha returned to
Jericho, and there healed the spring of water by casting salt into
it (2 Kings 2:21). We next find him at Bethel (2:23), where, with
the sternness of his master, he cursed the youths who came out and
scoffed at him as a prophet of God: "Go up, thou bald head." The
judgment at once took effect, and God terribly visited the dishonour
done to his prophet as dishonour done to himself. We next read of
his predicting a fall of rain when the army of Jehoram was faint
from thirst (2 Kings 3:9-20); of the multiplying of the poor widow's
cruse of oil (4:1-7); the miracle of restoring to life the son of
the woman of Shunem (4:18-37); the multiplication of the twenty
loaves of new barley into a sufficient supply for an hundred men
(4:42-44); of the cure of Naaman the Syrian of his leprosy (5:1-27);
of the punishment of Gehazi for his falsehood and his covetousness;
of the recovery of the axe lost in the waters of the Jordan (6:1-7);
of the miracle at Dothan, half-way on the road between Samaria and
Jezreel; of the siege of Samaria by the king of Syria, and of the
terrible sufferings of the people in connection with it, and
Elisha's prophecy as to the relief that would come (2 Kings
6:24-7:2).
We then find Elisha at Damascus, to carry out
the command given to his master to anoint Hazael king over Syria (2
Kings 8:7-15); thereafter he directs one of the sons of the prophets
to anoint Jehu, the son of Jehoshaphat, king of Israel, instead of
Ahab. Thus the three commands given to Elijah (9:1-10) were at
length carried out.
We do not again read of him till we find him
on his death-bed in his own house (2 Kings 13:14-19). Joash, the
grandson of Jehu, comes to mourn over his approaching departure, and
utters the same words as those of Elisha when Elijah was taken away:
"My father, my father! the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen
thereof."
Afterwards when a dead body is laid in
Elisha's grave a year after his burial, no sooner does it touch the
hallowed remains than the man "revived, and stood up on his feet" (2
Kings 13:20-21).
Elishah - the
oldest of the four sons of Javan (Gen. 10:4), whose descendants
peopled Greece. It has been supposed that Elishah's descendants
peopled the Peloponnesus, which was known by the name of Elis. This
may be meant by "the isles of Elishah" (Ezek. 27:7).
Elishama - whom
God hears. (1.) A prince of Benjamin, grandfather of Joshua (Num.
1:10; 1 Chr. 7:26). (2.) One of David's sons (2 Sam. 5:16). (3.)
Another of David's sons (1 Chr. 3:6). (4.) A priest sent by
Jehoshaphat to teach the people the law (2 Chr. 17:8).
Elishaphat -
whom God has judged, one of the "captains of hundreds" associated
with Jehoiada in the league to overthrow the usurpation of Athaliah
(2 Chr. 23:1).
Elisheba - God
is her oath, the daughter of Amminadab and the wife of Aaron (Ex.
6:23).
Elishua - God
his salvation, a son of David, 2 Sam. 5:15 = Elishama, 1 Chr. 3:6.
Elkanah -
God-created. (1.) The second son of Korah (Ex. 6:24), or, according
to 1 Chr. 6:22, 23, more correctly his grandson.
(2.) Another Levite of the line of Heman the
singer, although he does not seem to have performed any of the usual
Levitical offices. He was father of Samuel the prophet (1 Chr. 6:27,
34). He was "an Ephrathite" (1 Sam. 1:1, 4, 8), but lived at Ramah,
a man of wealth and high position. He had two wives, Hannah, who was
the mother of Samuel, and Peninnah.
Elkosh - God my
bow, the birth-place of Nahum the prophet (Nah. 1:1). It was
probably situated in Galilee, but nothing definite is known of it.
Ellasar - the
oak or heap of Assyria, a territory in Asia of which Arioch was king
(Gen. 14:1, 9). It is supposed that the old Chaldean town of Larsa
was the metropolis of this kingdom, situated nearly half-way between
Ur (now Mugheir) and Erech, on the left bank of the Euphrates. This
town is represented by the mounds of Senkereh, a little to the east
of Erech.
Elm - Hos.
4:13; rendered "terebinth" in the Revised Version. It is the
Pistacia terebinthus of Linn., a tree common in Palestine,
long-lived, and therefore often employed for landmarks and in
designating places (Gen. 35:4; Judg. 6:11, 19. Rendered "oak" in
both A.V. and R.V.). (See TEIL
TREE.)
Elnathan - whom God
has given. (1.) An inhabitant of Jerusalem, the father of Nehushta,
who was the mother of king Jehoiachin (2 Kings 24:8). Probably the
same who tried to prevent Jehoiakim from burning the roll of
Jeremiah's prophecies (Jer. 26:22; 36:12). (2.) Ezra 8:16.
Elon - oak.
(1.) A city of Dan (Josh. 19:43). (2.) A Hittite, father of
Bashemath, Esau's wife (Gen. 26:34). (3.) One of the sons of Zebulun
(Gen. 46:14). (4.) The eleventh of the Hebrew judges. He held office
for ten years (Judg. 12:11, 12). He is called the Zebulonite.
Elparan - oak
of Paran, a place on the edge of the wilderness bordering the
territory of the Horites (Gen. 14:6). This was the farthest point to
which Chedorlaomer's expedition extended. It is identified with the
modern desert of et-Tih. (See
PARAN.)
Eltekeh - God is
its fear, a city in the tribe of Dan. It was a city of refuge and a
Levitical city (Josh. 21:23). It has been identified with Beit-Likia,
north-east of latrum.
Elul - (Neh.
6:15), the name of the sixth month of the ecclesiastical year, and
the twelfth of the civil year. It began with the new moon of our
August and September, and consisted of twenty-nine days.
Elymas -
magician or sorcerer, the Arabic name of the Jew Bar-jesus, who
withstood Paul and Barnabas in Cyprus. He was miraculously struck
with blindness (Acts 13:11).
Embalming - the
process of preserving a body by means of aromatics (Gen. 50:2, 3,
26). This art was practised by the Egyptians from the earliest
times, and there brought to great perfection. This custom probably
originated in the belief in the future reunion of the soul with the
body. The process became more and more complicated, and to such
perfection was it carried that bodies embalmed thousands of years
ago are preserved to the present day in the numberless mummies that
have been discovered in Egypt.
The embalming of Jacob and Joseph was
according to the Egyptian custom, which was partially followed by
the Jews (2 Chr. 16:14), as in the case of king Asa, and of our Lord
(John 19:39, 40; Luke 23:56; 24:1). (See
PHARAOH.)
Embroider - The art
of embroidery was known to the Jews (Ex. 26:36; 35:35; 38:23; Judg.
5:30; Ps. 45:14). The skill of the women in this art was seen in the
preparation of the sacerdotal robes of the high priest (Ex. 28). It
seems that the art became hereditary in certain families (1 Chr.
4:21). The Assyrians were also noted for their embroidered robes
(Ezek. 27:24).
Emerald - Heb.
nophek (Ex. 28:18; 39:11); i.e., the "glowing stone", probably the
carbuncle, a precious stone in the breastplate of the high priest.
It is mentioned (Rev. 21:19) as one of the foundations of the New
Jerusalem. The name given to this stone in the New Testament Greek
is smaragdos, which means "live coal."
Emerod - See
HAEMORRHOIDS.
Emims - terrors, a
warlike tribe of giants who were defeated by Chedorlaomer and his
allies in the plain of Kiriathaim. In the time of Abraham they
occupied the country east of Jordan, afterwards the land of the
Moabites (Gen. 14:5; Deut. 2:10). They were, like the Anakim,
reckoned among the Rephaim, and were conquered by the Moabites, who
gave them the name of Emims, i.e., "terrible men" (Deut. 2:11). The
Ammonites called them Zamzummims (2:20).
Emmanuel - God
with us, Matt. 1:23). (See
IMMANUEL.)
Emmaus - hot baths,
a village "three-score furlongs" from jerusalem, where our Lord had
an interview with two of his disciples on the day of his
resurrection (Luke 24:13). This has been identified with the modern
el-Kubeibeh, lying over 7 miles north-west of Jerusalem. This name,
el-Kubeibeh, meaning "little dome," is derived from the remains of
the Crusaders' church yet to be found there. Others have identified
it with the modern Khurbet Khamasa i.e., "the ruins of Khamasa",
about 8 miles south-west of Jerusalem, where there are ruins also of
a Crusaders' church. Its site, however has been much disputed.
Return
To Dictionary
|