אֲבִיָּם
Abijam (or Abijah), a king of Judah
Definition
Abijam (also called Abijah in some passages) was the son and successor of King Rehoboam, reigning as the second king of the Kingdom of Judah for three years (1 Kings 15:1-2). His name means 'my father is the sea' or 'father of the sea,' though its exact significance is debated. The biblical narrative presents him as a king who, like his father, did not fully follow the Lord, yet God preserved his lineage for the sake of David (1 Kings 15:3-5). In the books of Chronicles, he is called Abijah and is given a more detailed, though still mixed, account of his reign and a military victory (2 Chronicles 13).
Biblical Usage
This proper name is used exclusively in the historical books of the Old Testament, specifically in 1 Kings 14:31, 15:1, 15:7, and 15:8, where it refers to the king of Judah. The parallel account in 2 Chronicles uses the variant 'Abijah' (H29, אֲבִיָּה) for the same king (e.g., 2 Chronicles 13:1). The usage in Kings is formulaic, marking the transition of royal power and summarizing his reign within the framework of the Davidic covenant.
Etymology
The name אֲבִיָּם (Abiyyam) is a compound of two elements: 'av' (H1, אָב), meaning 'father,' and 'yam' (H3220, יָם), meaning 'sea.' The construction can be interpreted as 'my father is the sea' or 'father of the sea.' Some scholars suggest 'yam' could be a theophoric element referring to the Canaanite god Yamm (sea), though this is uncertain. Alternatively, it may be a symbolic or poetic name. The parallel name Abijah (H29) substitutes 'yam' with the short form of Yahweh (Jah), meaning 'my father is Yahweh,' which may reflect a theological correction or a different tradition.
Semantic Range
Abijam's reign is significant theologically as a test case for the Davidic covenant. Despite his personal failings, described as walking in the sins of his father (1 Kings 15:3), God did not remove the kingdom from him, fulfilling the promise to maintain a lamp for David in Jerusalem (1 Kings 15:4). This highlights God's faithfulness to His unconditional promises to David (2 Samuel 7) over and against the performance of individual kings. His story illustrates the tension between divine grace and human responsibility within the monarchy.
In the ancient Near East, names often carried significant meaning, reflecting parental hopes, circumstances of birth, or attributes of deities. A name containing 'yam' (sea) is unusual for a Judahite king, as the sea was often associated with chaos or foreign deities (like the Canaanite god Yamm). The Chronicler's use of the variant 'Abijah' (my father is Yahweh) may represent a later cultural or religious preference to align the king's name explicitly with Israel's God, avoiding any pagan connotations.
Abijah (ʼĂbîyâh, H29) — A variant name for the same king, used in Chronicles, meaning 'my father is Yahweh.'
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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