Henadad
Henadad, son of Bani, was a Levite who repaired a section of the wall of Jerusalem. (Neh.3.24)
Biography
Henadad son of Bani was a Levite who contributed to Nehemiah's reconstruction of Jerusalem's walls, repairing a section recorded in Nehemiah 3:24. The precision of the Nehemiah 3 account, naming specific individuals and their assigned wall sections, reflects Nehemiah's remarkable organizational leadership and his intention to honor each contributor by name in the permanent record. Henadad son of Bani worked on a stretch of wall near the house of Azariah, contributing to the sequential repair effort that would ring the entire city. Whether he and Henadad son of Binnui (Nehemiah 3:18) were relatives within the same extended Levitical family or simply shared a common name is uncertain, but both represent Levitical investment in Jerusalem's physical and spiritual restoration. His participation in this communal project is a small but genuine expression of covenant loyalty.
Significance
Henadad son of Bani's wall-repair work in Nehemiah 3:24 is one of dozens of such contributions in that chapter, each seemingly small in isolation but collectively constituting the full restoration of Jerusalem's walls. Theologically, this image of coordinated, distributed labor around a shared sacred project carries enduring significance. The wall of Jerusalem was not merely a military installation but a symbol of the covenant community's integrity and God's protecting presence. Every section repaired, including the one entrusted to Henadad, contributed to the whole. This vision of collective faithfulness anticipates the New Testament church as a community where each member's contribution, however modest, is indispensable to the body's completeness (1 Corinthians 12:12–27).
Verse Appearances (1)
Nehemiah
References
- Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
- Tyndale House, Cambridge (n.d.) Translators Individualised Proper Names with all References (TIPNR). STEPBible. Available at: https://www.stepbible.org. [CC BY 4.0]
- Wikidata contributors (n.d.) Wikidata. Available at: https://www.wikidata.org. [CC0]
- Church of England (1769) The Holy Bible, Authorized (King James) Version. [Public Domain]
