שֹׁבַי
Shobai, an Israelite
Definition
Shobai is a proper name referring to an Israelite who is listed as the head of a family of gatekeepers (or temple servants, Nethinim) among the exiles returning from Babylon. The name appears in two identical lists (Ezra 2:42, Nehemiah 7:45) that enumerate the families who returned to Jerusalem. As a gatekeeper, Shobai's family would have been responsible for the security, maintenance, and order of the temple gates, a role of significant religious and practical importance. The name itself, meaning 'captor' or possibly derived from a word for 'taking captive,' is a personal name and does not carry multiple senses in its biblical usage.
Biblical Usage
The name Shobai is used exclusively in the post-exilic historical books of Ezra and Nehemiah, specifically in the context of census lists documenting the returnees from the Babylonian exile. It appears in two parallel passages (Ezra 2:42 and Nehemiah 7:45) that record the families of temple gatekeepers. In both instances, Shobai is listed alongside other gatekeeper families like Shallum, Ater, and Talmon, indicating his family's specific Levitical role in the restored worship community.
Etymology
The name Shobai (שֹׁבַי) is likely a derivative or a variant form of the Hebrew word Shobi (שֹׁבִי, H7629), which means 'captor' or 'one who takes captive.' It is a proper noun formed from the root שָׁבָה (shabah, H7617), meaning 'to take captive' or 'to carry away.' As a personal name, it may have originally described a characteristic of an ancestor or held a symbolic meaning, a common practice in Hebrew onomastics.
Semantic Range
While the name Shobai itself is not theologically loaded, its context is significant. His inclusion among the returning gatekeepers highlights God's faithfulness in preserving the Levitical lines and the structures of worship even through exile. The meticulous recording of these names in Scripture (Ezra 2:42, Nehemiah 7:45) underscores the value God places on every individual and family unit in His redemptive plan to restore true worship. Understanding that Shobai was a gatekeeper enriches our reading by connecting a simple name to the vital, priestly service of maintaining the holiness and order of God's house.
In ancient Israel, gatekeepers (שֹׁעֲרִים) were Levites assigned to guard the temple entrances, control access, and perform maintenance duties (1 Chronicles 9:17-27). This was a position of trust and responsibility, protecting the sacred space from defilement. The listing of Shobai's family among the returnees signifies the restoration of this crucial religious office. In the cultural setting, a name meaning 'captor' might reflect circumstances of birth, hope for future strength, or a family history, but its primary function here is as a personal identifier within a community re-establishing its identity around the temple.
Shallum (Shallum, H7967) — Another head of a gatekeeper family listed alongside Shobai in Ezra 2:42. Talmon (Talmon, H2929) — A fellow gatekeeper clan head listed in the same census (Nehemiah 7:45).
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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