יִזְרַחְיָה
Jizrachjah, the name of two Israelites
Definition
Yizrachyâh is a proper name meaning 'Yahweh will shine' or 'Jah will shine.' It is borne by two individuals in the Old Testament. The first is a descendant of Issachar, a family head and mighty warrior listed in the genealogy of 1 Chronicles 7:3. The second is a Levite, likely a choir leader, who participated in the dedication of Jerusalem's rebuilt wall (Nehemiah 12:42). In both contexts, the name signifies an individual within the covenant community of Israel.
Biblical Usage
This name appears only twice in the Old Testament, in two distinct contexts. In 1 Chronicles 7:3, it identifies a tribal leader and warrior from the tribe of Issachar, used in a genealogical list. In Nehemiah 12:42, it identifies a Levite who helped lead the musical celebration at the dedication of Jerusalem's wall. The usage shows the name was used among both the northern tribes (Issachar) and the Levitical priesthood.
Etymology
The name is a compound of two Hebrew elements: the verb זָרַח (zāraḥ, H2224), meaning 'to rise' or 'to shine' (as of the sun), and the divine name יָהּ (Yāh, H3050), a shortened form of Yahweh. It is a theophoric name, common in Israelite culture, expressing a statement of faith: 'Yahweh will shine forth.'
Semantic Range
As a theophoric name meaning 'Yahweh will shine,' it embodies a hopeful declaration about God's character and active presence. It connects to themes of divine revelation, glory, and salvation, as God's 'shining' often signifies deliverance and favor (e.g., Numbers 6:25, Psalm 80:1). While the individuals themselves are not major figures, their names serve as enduring, personal testimonies to Israel's faith in a God who reveals Himself and acts on behalf of His people.
In ancient Israel, names were often meaningful statements of faith or circumstances. A name like Yizrachyâh, which invokes Yahweh's shining, likely expressed the parents' hope for God's blessing, guidance, and manifest presence in their child's life. It reflects the common practice of embedding theology into personal identity.
Zerachyah (זְרַחְיָה, H2228) — A variant spelling of the same name, borne by a Levite in 1 Chronicles 26:25. Uzziyyah (עֻזִּיָּה, H5818) — 'My strength is Yah'; another theophoric name combining a divine attribute with Yahweh.
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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