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Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (1898–1904) · Public Domain

Abi-albon (Hastings' Dictionary)

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (1898–1904)· Public Domain

A. member of ' the Thirty,' or third division of David s heroes (2 S 23^')- In the parallel passage (1 Ch 11^-) we find 'Abiel' (Sx'it;) ; this is undoubtedly ri'dit, and is supported by B ([rao]o;ii>;/\) and Luc. ([raXcr]o(3i7jt). Klostermann has further conjectured that the final sj liable ' bon' ([13) of Abi-allion is a corrujilion of ' Beth ' (n'3), ar.d belongs to the following word ("naiiTi). Wellliausen and Budde restore Abi-baal (Sv3-'3li). See ARBATiiirE. J. V. Stknxino.

ABIASAPH (icx>3(< 'Ahhi'nsnph = 'hxxU'.'r has gatliered'), Kx 0-' = EBlASAPH C-iV.'^x 'Ehli-i/iin<ii,h = 'fallier hius increa.sed'), 1 Ch O'^-' 9'''; cf. fiirlher 1 Ch 26', where Asaph occurs by error for one of the two preceding forms ; see Bertheau, »./. The evidence for the alternative fonns luny be thus sum niftriscd : — Kor Al)iQaaph— Heb. text and Targ. at Ex (V-i ; and potwibly Vulif. {Abuuaph) in all placott, oiid I..\.\ ("Ariatra,- or 'AJi<Kff«p) In all pliw-f8 excejit cod.

B in \ Ch U'-" ; but Vulj;. and I..\.\ are rt-ally ainbi>:uou8. For Kbyoiaph — Sam. at Kx tV^t ; IlL'b. text In all passapcs In Chroiiick>9. At^oinst the middle n of AbiaN:i))h, and Ihurtt- tore 111 favour of Ebyaaaph, are the Syr. >- <? m 1 '•^] Ei On the meanlngB of this name and the following nainca \-^ (rInniiiL: with Abi. see furtlit'r art. Namks, I'iiopkb ABIATHAK ABIATHAR e", 1 Ch ffO;, 0\ . mnj. 1 Ob 8>7 »U) »nd LXX, B ('A^w««/, U1-3k) in 1 Cb 6^.

The evidence thna preponderates in favour of Ebiasaph. Ebiasaph is the name of a division of the Korahite Levites, and is mentioned only in the genealogies of P and the Chronicler. According to 1 Ch 9" 26' (in the latter passage read Ebiasaph for Asaph ; see above), a section of the division acted as doorkeepers. On the difficulties which arise when Ebiasaph in the genealogies is (eironeously) regarded as an individual, see the article in Smith's DB. G. B. Gray. ABIATHAR (ir;?)

'father of plenty,' for loi^f!, or 'The Great one is father' [Biihr]). — A land- holder (1 K 2') of Anathoth in Benjamin, a priestly city (Jos 21"), whence also sprung the priest-prophet Jeremiah. He was son of the high priest Ahijah or Ahiraelech, and is first mentioned in 1 S 22, where it is implied that he alone escaped from the massacre of the priests at Nob. According to the Heb.

text of 1 S 23', he joined David at Keilah, in which case 22" would be pro- leptic, and 23'- might be explained by supposing that David could inquire of the Lord by a prophet (1 S 28«), e.g. Gad (22'); but according to the LXX 'he went down with David into Keilah,' apparently from the forest of Hareth ; and this seems to harmonise better with the story.

David felt a special appeal to his affections in the young priest's position : ' I have occasioned the death of all the persons of thy father's house. Abide thou with me, fear not ; for he that seeketh my life seeketh thy life.' The friendship thus cemented by a common danger was remembered long after- wards by Solomon when commuting A.'s death sentence into degradation : ' thou hast oeen afflicted in all wherein my father was afflicted.' The adhesion of A.

was of signal serWce to David, inasmuch as he brought with him an ephod, which, whether it were the high priestly ephod containing the Urim and Thummim (so Jerome, Qu. Heb. in loc, and Jos. Ant. vi. xiv. 6) or a sacred image, was at all events a recoCTiised method of 'inquiring of the Lord' (1 S 14", LXX, llVm). In this way A. was able to continue to David (1 S 23* 30') the services rendered before by his father (1 S 22"). Dean Stanley mentions (Jewish Ch. Lect.

36) a Jewish tradition that the power of thus inquiring of the Lord expired with A. ; and possibly in virtue of this power ho is men- tioned as one of David's counsellors (1 Ch 27**). In David's flight from Absalom we find A. loyal, and only prevented by David's request from sharing his master's exile ; and his son Jonathan, with Ahimaaz, used to convey from the priests to the king secret intelligence of Absalom's plans.

It is very doubtful if the words of Solomon, 'Thou barest the ark of the Lord God before David my father' (I K 2^), refer to the attempt made by Zadok and A. to carry the ark with David on his flight (Stanley), or to the commis- sion given by David to Zadok and A. (1 Ch 15"-'°) to superintend the carrying of the ark by the l.evites from the house of Obededom to Mt. Zion il-ord A. Hervey). On both these occasions A. is not so prominent as Zadok (see esp. 2 S 15^-', where Griitz reads, 'A.

went up' for 'stood still,' cf. Jos 3'"). The reference is much more general, and alludes to the custom of the ark as the symbol of J"'8 presence accompanjring tlie host to battle (see, e.g., Nu 31», Jos %*, 1 S 4', 2 S 11"); The attempt made by Zadok and A. was an instance of this custom, and not a new departure; and David refuses to permit it, not because it was a violation of the sanctity of the ark, but as being himself unworthy to claim the special protection of J".

It may here be noted that a conjecture has been made, that aa Zadok ministered at the tabernacle at Gibeon (1 Ch 16^'), so A. may have been the custodian of the ark on Mt. Zion. On the defeat of Absalom, Zadok and A. smoothed the way for the king's restoration (2 S 19"). A.'s loyalty did not, how- ever, remain proof to the end ; he united with Joab in lending his influence to the abortive in.surrection of Adonijah.

Both priest and chief captain were possibly actuated by jealousy, the one of Zadok, and the other of Benaiah. But while Joab was executed in accordance with David's dying in- structions, A.'s life was spared in consideration of his old loyalty: 'So Solomon thrust out A. from being priest unto the Lord ; that he might fulfil the word of the Lord which He spake concerning the house of Eli in Shiloh '(IK 2^). With the deposition of A. the direct high priestly line of Eleazar came to an end.

It is important to emphasize this, since it has been commonly held, on the authority of Chron. and Josephus, thai the high priests, from Eli to A. inclusive, were of the line of Ithamar, and that the line of Eleazar was restored in the person of Zadok. Let us examine the evidence on which this state- ment rests. The Chronicler mentions as priests in David's time, ' Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Aliime- lech of the sons of Ithamar' (1 Ch 24»-^'), this Ahimelech being son of A.

, according to v.' Now ' Ahimelech, son of A.,' is guite unhistorical. In 2 S 15-', 1 K 1", Jonathan is son and representa- tive of A. ; and, moreover, A. did not lose the oflice of high priest until the reign of Solomon. The mistake originated in 2 S 8", where, by a very ancient error, ' Ahimelech, son of A.,' is joint priest with Zadok. The emendation, 'A., son of Ahimelech,' found in the Sjt. version, is adojited by Gesenius, Wellhausen, and Driver, and may be regarded as certain.

The Chronicler not only copies the mistake (1 Ch 18"), with the obvious blunder ' Ahimelech,' but treats this Ahimelech aa a real personage. It is noteworthy that Josephus in his paraphrase of I Ch 24 (Ant. vii. 14. 7) nientions A., not Ahimelech, and yet he accepts (viii. 1. 3, V. 10. 4) the descent of A. from Ithamar, and further distinctly asserts that during the high priestliood of Eli and his successors the descendants of Eleazar were merely private individuals.

The Chronicler, on the other hand, ignores Eli and his descendants, and in 1 Ch 6"''^- ""'^ gives what seems intended to be a list of high priests from Aaron to the Captivity in the line of Eleazar.

Those who are familiar with the peculiar tendencies of the Chron- icler will not think the suggestion unreasonable, that here we have an attempt both to vindicate the unbroken succession of the high priests of his own time, and to evade what he would have considered a stumbling-block in the earlier his- tory. Thus, if A. were the lineal successor of Eleazar, would not his deposition be a breaking on God's part of the promise to Phinehas of an ever- lasting priesthood? (Nu 25").

Yet the unbiiussed reader of I S 2^ can scarcely fail to see a plain allusion to the promise to Phinehas, and a no less plain assertion that the promise was conditional : ' I said, indeed, that thy house, and the house of thy father, should walk before Me for ever ; hut now the Lord saith. Be it far from Me,' etc. These words cannot refer to the general promise to Aaron's family in Ex 29», for God's puroose in that respect was not altered ; the Aaronic descent of Zadok being undisputed.

It is interesting to observe that the Chronicler does not say that Eli's family had usurped the high priesthood, as Josephus insinuates; and, indeed, such a usurpation couhl not ABU; ABIHAIL have been passed over in silence in the earlier his- tory liad it ever occurred. The Chronicler, on the other hand, provides an explanation of another stumbling, block — the dual hiL;h priesthood of Zadok and A.

in David's reign — \iy the statement with which 1 Ch 24 opens, that 'Eleazar and Ithamar executed the priests' otlice.' This seems an excellent precedent for a dual priesthood, but labours under two difficulties : first, that it is quite unsupported by the Pent, and Josh., in which Eleazar alone is high priest after Aaron's death ; and, secondly, that although Zadok's name alwaj-8 comes first when the two are mentioned togetlier, yet A.

was the chief until the reign of Solomon, when Zadok was promoted to his place (1 K 2*). It is remarkable, too, that the priests who serve in Ezekiel's ideal temple are always styled 'the sons of Zadok' (40" 43" 44" 48"), as if they could claim no higher antiquity. A. is mentioned in 1 K 4'' as still joint priest ■with Zadok ; but this is probably a mistake, or may refer to the beginning of Solomon's reign, just as, in 2 S 23, Asaliel and Uriah are enumerated among David's mighty men.

There is a difficulty connected with the mention of A. in Mk 2^ R v, where Christ is made to say that David ate the shewbread ' when A. was high priest,' ^Tri 'A^iidap dpxKp^'ot, B, H, Vulg. {' sub A. principe sacer- dotum '). The words are omitted by D and some Old Latin MSS, while A, C, 1, 33 insert toD before dpxiipe'^f, ' in the days of A. the high priest,' i.e. in his lifetime, but not necessarily during bis high priesthood. N. J. D. WHITE. ABIB (3'3^n, always with art.

, mV tui' ytwv, mensis novorum or novarum frugum, Ex 13^ 23" 34'«, Dt 16'). See Time.

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Abi-albon — ISBE (1915) article

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International Standard Bible Encyclopedia on Abi-albon

Abi-albon ab-i-al'-bon, abi-al'-bon ('abhi `alebhon, meaning not known. Gesenius infers from the Arabic a stem which would give the meaning "father of strength," and this is at worst not quite so groundless as the conjectures which explain `alebhon as a textual misreading for 'el or ba`al): Abi-albon the Arbathite was one of David's listed heroes (2Sa 23:31), called Abiel the Arbathite in 1Ch 11:32. Presumably he was from Beth-arabah (Jos 15:6,61; 18:22). ⇒See a list of verses on ABI-ALBON in the Bible. ⇒See also the McClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia.

References

  1. Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
  2. Easton, M.G. (1893) Easton's Bible Dictionary. 3rd edn. Thomas Nelson. [Public Domain]
  3. Nave, O.J. (1897) Nave's Topical Bible. Topical Bible Publishing Co.. [Public Domain]
  4. Hastings, J. (ed.) (1909) A Dictionary of the Bible. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. [Public Domain]
  5. Smith, W. (ed.) (1884) Smith's Bible Dictionary. London: John Murray. [Public Domain]
  6. Fausset, A.R. (1878) Fausset's Bible Dictionary. [Public Domain]A Critical and Expository Bible Cyclopaedia

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