שָׁאוּל
Shaul, the name of an Edomite and two Israelites
Definition
The Hebrew name שָׁאוּל (Sha'ul) is a proper noun meaning 'asked for' or 'borrowed.' It primarily refers to three distinct individuals in the Old Testament. First, it is the name of an early king of Edom (Genesis 36:37-38). Second, it refers to a son of Simeon, the patriarch, and an ancestor of the Simeonite tribe (Genesis 46:10, Exodus 6:15). Most significantly, it is the name of Saul, the first king of Israel, a towering figure whose story of divine election, tragic disobedience, and downfall is recounted in 1 Samuel (e.g., 1 Samuel 9:2, 10:1, 31:4).
Biblical Usage
The name is used 330 times, overwhelmingly (over 300 instances) in reference to King Saul of Israel, concentrated in the books of 1 Samuel, 2 Samuel, and 1 Chronicles. Its usage for the Edomite king is confined to two verses in Genesis 36, and for the Simeonite ancestor in a handful of genealogical passages (Genesis 46:10, Exodus 6:15, Numbers 26:13). The pattern shows the name's primary biblical association is with Israel's first monarch.
Etymology
The name is a passive participle derived from the root verb שָׁאַל (sha'al, H7592), meaning 'to ask, request, borrow.' Thus, שָׁאוּל literally means 'one who is asked for' or 'lent.' This etymology is explicitly noted in 1 Samuel 1:28, where Hannah says of her son Samuel, 'Therefore I have lent him to the LORD,' using a form of the same root, creating a thematic link between the prophet Samuel and the king he anoints.
Semantic Range
The name Saul is theologically significant as it marks Israel's pivotal and flawed transition from a tribal confederation under judges to a monarchy. His story embodies the tension between divine sovereignty and human failure, illustrating the consequences of disobedience and pride (1 Samuel 15:23). Understanding his name's meaning ('asked for') highlights the irony: Israel asked for a king like the nations (1 Samuel 8:5), and God gave them Saul, whose reign ultimately underscored the need for a king after God's own heart.
In ancient Semitic culture, names often described a child's circumstances or expressed a parent's hope or testimony. A name meaning 'asked for' likely indicated a child deeply desired or a direct answer to prayer. For King Saul, his name may have reflected his parents' gratitude or a public testimony of God's provision, which adds depth to the national narrative of Israel 'asking for' a king.
No direct synonyms for a proper name. However, the root verb is key: שָׁאַל (sha'al, H7592) — the root verb meaning 'to ask, request, borrow,' from which the name is derived.
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 →