מַעֲדַי
Maadai, an Israelite
Definition
Maadai is a proper name referring to an Israelite man who lived during the post-exilic period. The name appears only in Ezra 10:34, where Maadai is listed among those who had married foreign women and pledged to divorce them in accordance with the reforms led by Ezra. As a personal name, it carries no other distinct biblical meanings or senses beyond identifying this individual. The name itself is derived from a root meaning 'ornament' or 'adornment,' suggesting a positive connotation.
Biblical Usage
The word is used only once in the Old Testament, in Ezra 10:34. It functions strictly as a personal name within a list of men who committed to ending their marriages to foreign women as part of a covenant renewal. This places its usage solely in the historical and genealogical context of the Book of Ezra's account of Israel's restoration after the Babylonian exile.
Etymology
The name Maadai (מַעֲדַי) is derived from the Hebrew root עָדָה (ʿādâ, H5710), which means 'to pass on, to adorn, or to ornament.' It is likely a diminutive or gentilic form, meaning 'ornamental' or 'my ornament.' This connects it to the concept of beauty or decoration, a common theme in Hebrew naming conventions.
Semantic Range
While the name Maadai itself is not theologically loaded, its single appearance is theologically significant. It places an otherwise unknown individual within the critical narrative of Ezra 10, which deals with the holiness of the covenant community and the seriousness of separating from practices that lead to idolatry. Understanding that even names on a list represent real people involved in this difficult act of covenant faithfulness personalizes the biblical call to repentance and communal purity.
In ancient Israelite culture, names often carried meaning and reflected parental hopes or circumstances. A name meaning 'ornament' suggests a positive attribute. Its appearance in a list in Ezra highlights the importance of genealogy and recorded participation in communal covenants, which were central to post-exilic Jewish identity and restoration.
There are no direct synonyms for this proper name. Other names in the same list, such as Benaiah (בְּנָיָה, H1141) or Mattaniah (מַתַּנְיָה, H4983), are distinct personal names with their own meanings and etymologies.
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.
Full methodology & sources →