פְּלַטְיָה
Pelatjah, the name of four Israelites
Definition
Pelatjah is a Hebrew proper name meaning 'Yahweh has delivered' or 'Yahweh rescues.' It is borne by four distinct individuals in the Old Testament. In 1 Chronicles 3:21, he is a descendant of King David. In 1 Chronicles 4:42, a different Pelatjah is a Simeonite warrior. In Nehemiah 10:22, a Pelatjah is a leader who seals the covenant of renewal. Most notably, in Ezekiel 11:1, Pelatjah is a prince of the people whose false counsel in Jerusalem prompts a divine judgment, and his dramatic death is recorded in Ezekiel 11:13 as a sign of that judgment.
Biblical Usage
The name Pelatjah is used exclusively as a personal name for male Israelites across historical, prophetic, and post-exilic writings. It appears in genealogical lists (1 Chronicles 3:21, 4:42), in a list of covenant signatories (Nehemiah 10:22), and most significantly in the prophetic narrative of Ezekiel. In Ezekiel 11:1, 13, Pelatjah is identified among the 25 men giving wicked counsel at Jerusalem's gate, and his sudden death serves as a powerful prophetic sign against the city's corrupt leadership.
Etymology
The name פְּלַטְיָה (Pᵉlaṭyâh) is a compound theophoric name, combining the verb פָּלַט (pālaṭ, H6403), meaning 'to escape, deliver, or slip away,' with the shortened form of the divine name יָהּ (Yah, H3050). Its full form, פְּלַטְיָהוּ (Pᵉlaṭyâhû), makes the 'Yahweh' component more explicit. It follows a common Hebrew naming pattern declaring God's action, literally meaning 'Yahweh has delivered.'
Semantic Range
The name Pelatjah, meaning 'Yahweh delivers,' carries theological weight, especially in its prophetic context. In Ezekiel 11, the death of Pelatjah—whose name proclaims God's salvation—ironically underscores the certainty of God's judgment on Jerusalem's unrepentant leaders. It serves as a dramatic object lesson that nominal association with God's delivering power is meaningless without genuine faithfulness. Understanding the name's meaning enriches the reading of Ezekiel 11, highlighting the contrast between the hope his name signifies and the judgment his actions incur.
As a theophoric name (containing God's name), Pelatjah reflects the common Israelite practice of embedding faith declarations into personal identity. Such names often expressed parental hopes or gratitude for God's intervention, like deliverance in childbirth or national crisis. The two individuals in Chronicles highlight the importance of lineage and tribal identity, while the Pelatjah in Nehemiah signifies leadership in the restored community. The figure in Ezekiel represents the entrenched Judean aristocracy whose counsel opposed Jeremiah's and Ezekiel's messages of surrender, trusting in Jerusalem's inviolability rather than in Yahweh's true deliverance.
Yeshayah (יְשַׁעְיָה, H3470) — Also a theophoric name meaning 'Yahweh is salvation,' shared by the prophet Isaiah. Eliyahu (אֵלִיָּהוּ, H452) — Meaning 'Yahweh is my God,' another theophoric name of a major prophet. Yeho'ash (יְהוֹאָשׁ, H3060) — Meaning 'Yahweh has given,' a name of kings, sharing the 'Yah' element and declarative structure.
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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