בֵּבַי
Bebai, an Israelite
Definition
Bebai is the name of an Israelite individual and family who returned from the Babylonian exile. The name appears in lists of returnees in Ezra 2:11 and Nehemiah 7:16, where the 'sons of Bebai' number 623 or 628 men. In Ezra 8:11, a specific Bebai is listed among the family heads who returned with Ezra. The name also appears in the list of those who had married foreign wives (Ezra 10:28) and among those who sealed the covenant of renewal (Nehemiah 10:15). The term consistently refers to a person or a clan within the post-exilic community.
Biblical Usage
The name Bebai is used exclusively in the post-exilic historical books of Ezra and Nehemiah. It appears in five verses, always within lists or genealogies documenting the returning exiles. Its usage is formulaic: it identifies a clan ('sons of Bebai') in census lists (Ezra 2:11, Neh 7:16), names an individual family head (Ezra 8:11), marks someone who violated the covenant by intermarriage (Ezra 10:28), and identifies a covenant signatory (Neh 10:15). This pattern shows Bebai as an established family within the restored community.
Etymology
The etymology of בֵּבַי (Bêbay) is uncertain. Most lexicons, including Strong's, note it is 'probably of foreign origin.' It does not derive from a clear Hebrew root. The name may be of Babylonian or Persian origin, which is consistent with the period of exile, suggesting the individual or family may have been given or adopted a name from the surrounding culture during their time in Babylon.
Semantic Range
While the name Bebai itself is not theologically loaded, its consistent appearance in the restoration narratives is significant. It represents the faithfulness of God in preserving specific family lines through the exile and restoring them to the land, fulfilling prophetic promises. The mentions in Ezra 10:28 and Nehemiah 10:15 also place the Bebai family within the community's struggles with covenant fidelity and their commitment to renewal, embodying the post-exilic challenge of rebuilding a holy people.
As a personal/family name likely of foreign (Babylonian/Persian) origin, Bebai reflects the cultural immersion of the Judahite exiles. Carrying such a name did not preclude one from being counted as a faithful Israelite returning to Jerusalem. This illustrates the complex identity of the post-exilic community, which maintained its religious and ethnic distinctiveness while bearing linguistic and cultural marks of their time in a foreign empire.
There are no direct Hebrew synonyms for this proper name. It is part of a large set of Israelite personal and clan names recorded in the genealogies.
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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