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husband of Hammolecheth

Old TestamentEgypt & WildernessMaleFather

Hammolecheth's husband, unnamed in the Bible, was the father of Ishhod, Abiezer, and Mahlah.

husband of Hammolecheth illustration
husband of Hammolecheth

Biography

The husband of Hammolecheth remains unnamed in Scripture, known only through his connection to his wife and their children. Hammolecheth, whose name may mean 'the queen' or 'she who reigns,' was a daughter of Machir from the tribe of Manasseh, and through her marriage this unnamed man fathered Ishhod, Abiezer, and Mahlah (1 Chronicles 7:18). The family belongs to the extended clan of Manasseh during the Egypt and Wilderness era, suggesting roots contemporaneous with the early settlement traditions of the western tribe. Abiezer, one of his sons, became the progenitor of the Abiezrite clan, the same clan from which the judge Gideon later descended (Judges 6:11), giving this otherwise obscure figure a remarkable genealogical legacy.

Significance

Though entirely unnamed, the husband of Hammolecheth is genealogically significant as the paternal ancestor of the Abiezrite clan of Manasseh. The Abiezrites would later produce Gideon, one of Israel's most celebrated judges, through whom God delivered Israel from Midianite oppression (Judges 6-8). This lineage illustrates how God's redemptive purposes often flow through families whose individual members are unknown to history. Scripture's preservation of even unnamed individuals within tribal genealogies reflects the Chronicler's insistence that Israel's story is a communal story, each person, named or not, part of the tapestry through which salvation history unfolds.

Verse Appearances (1)

References

  1. Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
  2. Tyndale House, Cambridge (n.d.) Translators Individualised Proper Names with all References (TIPNR). STEPBible. Available at: https://www.stepbible.org. [CC BY 4.0]
  3. Wikidata contributors (n.d.) Wikidata. Available at: https://www.wikidata.org. [CC0]
  4. Church of England (1769) The Holy Bible, Authorized (King James) Version. [Public Domain]

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Content compiled from public domain scholarship, academic sources, and verified references. Editorial standards · View all sources