יוֹעָשׁ
Joash, the name of two Israelites
Definition
Yo'ash (Joash) is a proper name meaning 'Yahweh has given' or 'Yahweh hastens.' In the Old Testament, it refers to two distinct individuals. The first is Yo'ash, a descendant of Benjamin, listed among the family heads in the genealogy of 1 Chronicles 7:8. The second is Yo'ash, an official in King David's administration who was in charge of the royal storehouses of oil, as recorded in 1 Chronicles 27:28. Both instances are simple personal names without narrative development, serving primarily to identify individuals within genealogical or administrative lists.
Biblical Usage
The name Yo'ash appears only twice in the Old Testament, both times in the book of 1 Chronicles. It is used strictly as a personal identifier within lists. In 1 Chronicles 7:8, it identifies a Benjaminite in a tribal genealogy. In 1 Chronicles 27:28, it identifies an official responsible for agricultural resources under David's reign. There is no narrative story or dialogue associated with these specific bearers of the name.
Etymology
The name Yo'ash (יוֹעָשׁ) is a compound of two elements. The first is a shortened form of the divine name Yahweh (יְהֹוָה, H3068). The second comes from the root עוּשׁ (ʻûsh, H5789), meaning 'to hasten' or 'to come to help.' Thus, the name carries the meaning 'Yahweh has hastened (to help)' or 'Yahweh has given.' It is a theophoric name, common in Israelite culture, expressing faith in God's active intervention.
Semantic Range
As a theophoric name, Yo'ash reflects the Israelite practice of embedding faith in Yahweh into personal identity. It testifies to a belief in a personal God who acts swiftly to aid His people. While the specific individuals bearing this name in 1 Chronicles are not central figures, the name itself is a small testament to the covenant relationship, reminding readers that even minor figures in genealogies were part of a community defined by its relationship with Yahweh.
In ancient Israel, names were often descriptive or declarative, not merely labels. A name like Yo'ash, which invokes Yahweh's saving action, likely expressed the parents' gratitude, a prayer, or a statement of faith at the child's birth. It places the individual within the story of Yahweh's covenant people. The administrative role of the second Yo'ash (1 Chronicles 27:28) highlights the organized, agrarian-based economy of the Davidic monarchy.
Yeho'ash (יְהוֹאָשׁ, H3060) — A variant spelling of the same name, borne by the king of Judah (2 Kings 11:21).
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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