אׇרְנָן
Ornan, a Jebusite
Definition
Ornan (also called Araunah in 2 Samuel 24) was a Jebusite, a member of the pre-Israelite population of Jerusalem, who owned a threshing floor on Mount Moriah. In the biblical narrative, he is most significant for offering this threshing floor to King David as a site for sacrifice to halt a divinely sent plague (1 Chronicles 21:15-25). David insisted on purchasing the property, and this site later became the location of Solomon's Temple (2 Chronicles 3:1). The story presents Ornan as a respectful and generous figure who recognizes David's authority and the God of Israel.
Biblical Usage
The name Ornan appears exclusively in the books of Chronicles (1 Chronicles 21:15-28). It is used ten times within a single narrative sequence detailing David's census, the subsequent plague, and his purchase of Ornan's threshing floor. In the parallel account in 2 Samuel 24, the same individual is called Araunah (H728). The Chronicler's use of 'Ornan' may reflect a variant tradition or a different linguistic form of the Jebusite name.
Etymology
The name אָרְנָן (ʼOrnân) is likely derived from the Hebrew root אֹרֶן (ʼoren, H766), meaning 'cedar' or 'fir tree,' suggesting a meaning like 'strong one' or 'cedar-like.' As a Jebusite name, its exact origin and meaning are uncertain, but it was understood by Hebrew speakers as a foreign name. The variant Araunah (H728) may be a different rendering of the same non-Israelite name.
Semantic Range
Ornan's story is theologically pivotal as it marks the divine selection of the future Temple site. His threshing floor, a place of agricultural work, becomes the place of atonement and God's mercy halting judgment (1 Chronicles 21:26-28). The narrative underscores themes of rightful worship, the cost of devotion (David's insistence on payment), and God's provision of a specific location for meeting with His people, linking the Davidic covenant to the permanent worship center in Jerusalem.
As a Jebusite, Ornan represented the indigenous Canaanite population of Jerusalem before its conquest by David. His ownership of a threshing floor on a high place (likely a flat, windy hilltop) was typical for agricultural processing. David's purchase of the land from a non-Israelite, using full price, not only showed respect for property rights but also symbolized the legitimate transfer of this sacred space into Israelite control for Yahweh's worship.
Araunah (ʼAravnâh, H728) — This is the name used for the same Jebusite individual in the parallel narrative of 2 Samuel 24.
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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