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Anan

Old TestamentExile & ReturnMaleReturned leader

Anan was one of the leaders who signed the covenant during the time of Nehemiah.

Anan illustration
Anan

Biography

Anan was one of the leaders of the people who affixed his seal to the written covenant of renewed dedication to God recorded in Nehemiah 10:26. He was among the civic leaders, as distinguished from the priests and Levites, who publicly committed the community to obedience to the Mosaic Law, including observance of the Sabbath, the sabbatical year, prohibitions on intermarriage with surrounding peoples, and financial support of the temple and its servants. His name in Hebrew means "cloud," likely carrying connotations of the divine presence. The covenant document of Nehemiah 10 represents one of the most concrete acts of collective covenant renewal in the post-exilic literature.

Significance

Anan's participation in the covenant renewal of Nehemiah 10 illustrates the corporate nature of covenant faithfulness in the Hebrew Bible. Biblical covenant was never merely an individual transaction but a communal commitment binding the entire people together in accountability before God. The leaders who signed, including Anan, exercised a representative function, their public commitment carried weight for the community they led. His action also reflects the post-exilic community's hard-won understanding that exile had resulted from covenant violation, and that genuine restoration required more than physical return to the land, it demanded a renewed and documented commitment to God's revealed will as the ordering principle of communal life.

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. 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