מְהֵיטַבְאֵל
Mehetabel, the name of an Edomitish man and woman
Definition
Mehetabel is a proper name meaning 'bettered of God' or 'God makes good.' It is borne by two distinct individuals in the Old Testament: an Edomite king's wife (Genesis 36:39, 1 Chronicles 1:50) and a man, Shemaiah's father, mentioned in Nehemiah 6:10. In the Edomite context, the name likely signifies divine favor or improvement bestowed upon the individual or their family line. In the post-exilic context of Nehemiah, the name's bearer is associated with opposition to Jerusalem's rebuilding, though the name itself still carries its positive meaning.
Biblical Usage
The name Mehetabel appears three times in the Old Testament. It is used in two distinct contexts: first, in the genealogical records of Edom's kings, where Mehetabel is the wife of King Hadar (or Hadad) (Genesis 36:39, 1 Chronicles 1:50). Second, it appears in the historical narrative of Nehemiah as the name of Shemaiah's father, a figure who opposed Nehemiah's work (Nehemiah 6:10). The usage shows it as a personal name for both men and women in different historical periods.
Etymology
The name Mehetabel is a compound of two Hebrew elements. The first part comes from the root יָטַב (yāṭab, H3190), meaning 'to be good' or 'to do well,' often in a causative or intensive form. The second part is אֵל (ʼēl, H410), a primary term for God. Thus, the name literally means 'God makes good,' 'God benefits,' or 'bettered of God,' indicating a person whom God has improved or favored.
Semantic Range
While a personal name, Mehetabel reflects the common Hebrew practice of embedding theological statements into identity. It testifies to a belief in God's active role in bettering human life and granting favor. Understanding its meaning ('God makes good') adds a layer of irony in Nehemiah 6:10, where an individual bearing this name is involved in opposing God's work of restoration, highlighting the complex relationship between professed identity and actual action.
In ancient Semitic culture, names were often descriptive and carried significant meaning, believed to influence or reflect the bearer's character or destiny. A name like Mehetabel, invoking divine blessing, was likely given with hope for God's favor upon the child. Its use for both an Edomite woman and a Judahite man centuries later shows the name's transcendence of strict national boundaries within the broader cultural and linguistic region.
Tobiah (Ṭôḇiyyâh, H2900) — means 'Yahweh is good,' sharing the 'good' root but using the divine name Yahweh. Elidad (ʼĔlîḏāḏ, H449) — means 'God has loved,' sharing the 'El' (God) element but focusing on love rather than improvement.
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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