Difference between revisions of "Abiathar" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:PLATE4DX.jpg|thumb|The high priest's ephod, both a sacred vestment and a device for divination, depicted in yellow.]]
 
[[Image:PLATE4DX.jpg|thumb|The high priest's ephod, both a sacred vestment and a device for divination, depicted in yellow.]]
'''Abiathar ''' (אביתר, Ebyathar — ''the father is plentiful''), in the [[Bible]], was the son of [[Ahimelech]], the chief priest at [[Nob]], in lineage of [[Eli]]. The only person to escape from the infamous massacre of the priests of Nob by King [[Saul]], Abiathar fled to [[David]] bringing with him the sacred [[ephod]] which he used on several occasions to provide David with crucial advice from God.
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'''Abiathar ''' (אביתר, Ebyathar — ''the father is plentiful''), in the [[Bible]], was the son of [[Ahimelech]], the chief priest at [[Nob]], in lineage of [[Eli]]. The only person to escape from the infamous massacre of the priests of Nob by King [[Saul]], Abiathar fled to [[David]], bringing with him the sacred [[ephod]] which he used on several occasions to provide David with crucial advice from God.
  
When David ascended the throne of Judah, Abiathar was appointed high priest (1 Chr. 15:11; 1 Kings 2:26) along with Zadok. He was said to carried the Ark of the Covenant before David and to have shared the king's hardships (1 Kings 2:26). He greatly helped the king at the time of the rebellion of [[Absalom]] both spiritually and by providing military intelligence (2 Sam. 25:24-35).
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When David ascended the throne of Judah, Abiathar was appointed high priest (1 Chr. 15:11; 1 Kings 2:26) along with Zadok. He was said to carried the [[Ark of the Covenant]] before David and to have shared the king's hardships (1 Kings 2:26). He greatly helped the king at the time of the rebellion of [[Absalom]] both spiritually and by providing military intelligence (2 Sam. 25:24-35).
  
Late in David's reign, Abiathar became a supporter of the usurprer [[Adonijah]], for which he was later deposed by [[Solomon]] and banished to Anathoth.
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Late in David's reign, Abiathar became a supporter of the usurprer [[Adonijah]], for which he was deposed by [[Solomon]] and banished to Anathoth. With his demise the lineage of Zadok emerged as the leading priestly clan.
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==

Revision as of 03:19, 7 May 2008

The high priest's ephod, both a sacred vestment and a device for divination, depicted in yellow.

Abiathar (אביתר, Ebyathar — the father is plentiful), in the Bible, was the son of Ahimelech, the chief priest at Nob, in lineage of Eli. The only person to escape from the infamous massacre of the priests of Nob by King Saul, Abiathar fled to David, bringing with him the sacred ephod which he used on several occasions to provide David with crucial advice from God.

When David ascended the throne of Judah, Abiathar was appointed high priest (1 Chr. 15:11; 1 Kings 2:26) along with Zadok. He was said to carried the Ark of the Covenant before David and to have shared the king's hardships (1 Kings 2:26). He greatly helped the king at the time of the rebellion of Absalom both spiritually and by providing military intelligence (2 Sam. 25:24-35).

Late in David's reign, Abiathar became a supporter of the usurprer Adonijah, for which he was deposed by Solomon and banished to Anathoth. With his demise the lineage of Zadok emerged as the leading priestly clan.

Biography

Background

Abiathar's name may be interpreted is several ways, its component syllables meaning "father" and "plentiful," or "pre-eminent." The word "father" may refer to Abiather's own father, to himself as the "father of plenty" or to God, the divine father.

File:Goliath's-Sword.jpg
Abiathar's father Ahimelech gives David the sword of Goliath.

Abiathar's story is told primarily in the first and second Books of Samuel. It begins during the time when King Saul had come to see his young commander David as a threat and was seeking David's life. David came to Abiathar's father, Ahimelech for aid. Ahimelech provided David and his men with consecrated bread and gave David the sword of the famous Philistine giant Goliath, whom David was said to have slain when just a boy.

David then went to the Philistine king Achish but was rejected by him. Sheltering in a cave called Adullam, David gathered a following of some 400 men. He then sought sanctuary with the king of Moab, leaving his parents in that king's care, but was advised by the prophet Gad to return to the lands of Judah. There, his general whereabouts were soon discovered by Saul. The king sought to bribe the neighboring tribesmen of Benjamin to reveal David's hiding place. None of them spoke up, but an Edomite by the name of Doeg, who had been a witness when Ahimelech helped David, was willing to cooperate with Saul. "I saw the son of Jesse come to Ahimelech son of Ahitub at Nob," Doeg revealed. "Ahimelech inquired of the Lord for him; he also gave him provisions and the sword of Goliath the Philistine."

Saul immediately summoned Ahimelech and his entire extended family, the priests of the sanctuary at Nob, and interrogated them. "Why have you conspired against me, you and the son of Jesse," Saul demanded, "giving him bread and a sword and inquiring of God for him, so that he has rebelled against me and lies in wait for me, as he does today?"

Ahimelech protested that he knew nothing of David's rebellion and thought him to be Saul's loyal military commander, for whom he had often performed divination on the king's own business. Saul remained convinced of Ahimelech's treachery, however. He commanded his lieutenants to kill the supposedly treasonous priests, but each of them refused the order. Saul then gave them same order to the Edomite captain, Doeg, who complied, leading his forces to slaughter 85 priests and the entire population of the town of Nob itself, including "its men and women, its children and infants, and its cattle, donkeys and sheep."

Abiathar was the only one to escape this horrific massacre. Fleeing to David, he reported the crime and repented for his own failure to speak up when he realized that Doeg had witnessed Ahimilech's aid to David. "That day, when Doeg the Edomite was there, I knew he would be sure to tell Saul. I am responsible for the death of your father's whole family," Abiathar confessed. David comforted the young priest, saying "Stay with me; don't be afraid; the man who is seeking your life is seeking mine also. You will be safe with me." This was the beginning a long and usually fruitful association between the two.

Abiathar and his ephod

Although not described in detail in the text, Abiathar's ephod may have included the breastplate reportedly used by his predecessor Aaron and other high priests as a divination device.

It is of particular significance that when Abiathar escaped Saul and came to David, he brought with him an item known as the ephod, a special linen priestly garment used for divination. This artifact gave David a distinct advantage, for Abiathar knew how to use it to determine the will of the Lord. David immediately put this power to good use against the Philistines, learning by "inquiring of the Lord" whether, when, and where to attack.

Abiathar's ephod also provided David with intelligence in his struggle with Saul. "Bring the ephod," David commanded Abiathar. Its answers from the Lord informed David that Saul would come to attack him, and that David could not trust the citizens of Keilah, among whom he was hiding. David and his men quickly escaped, leaving Saul and his forces frustrated.

Later, David discovered that an Amalekite raiding party had destroyed the town of Zikag, where David had been living, carrying off its inhabitants, including David's wives Ahinoam and Abigail. He again commanded Abiathar to bring forth the ephod. He learned that God indeed wanted him to pursue a the Amalekite raiding party, despite their having a three-day head start. When he did so, he was able to learn of the party's whereabouts from a captured Egyptian slave. David soon liberated his wives and took substantial booty from the Amalekites after killing them. Abiathar's help thus enabled him to send valuable gifts to the elders of Judah, which would stand him in good stead with them.

After becoming king, David ruled the tribe of Judah from Hebron but was eventually able to capture the fortress city of Jerusalem from the Jebusites. When he made the city his new capital and brought the Ark of the Covenant there from its sanctuary at Shiloh, Abiathar apparently was in charge of charrying the Ark (2 Samuel 6:14-15; 1 Kings 2:26).

Abiathar as high priest

In describing David's consolidation of power after defeating several foreign enemies, the text identifies Abiathar as one of two high priests appointed by David, along with Zadok and perhaps others. Abiathar remained loyal to David during Absalom's rebellion, and it was he who offered sacrifices on the king's behalf when David was forced to leave the capital in the face of Absalom's advance. David commanded Abiathar and Zadok to remain with the Ark of the Covenant in Jerusalem together with their sons, confident that God will guide and protect them. The two priests were soon able to secure valuable military intelligence for David and communicate it to him through their sons, an important factor in David's survival and eventual triumph over Absalom's forces.

Near the end of David's life, however, Abiathar found himself on the wrong side of the succession struggle. He and the military commander Joab backed Adonijah, David's son by his wife Haggith, while Zadok and the prophet Nathan backed Solomon, David's son by Bathsheba. Abiathar sought divine approval for Adonijah's kingship by publicly sacrificing sheep, cattle and fattened calves on his behalf and conducting a sacred feast in his honor. When these ceremonies were brought to David's attention by Nathan and Bathsheba, David immediately appointed Solomon as his successor and had him declared the true king. Still consuming the feast marking his own supposed rise to the throne, Adonijah was brought the bad news by Abiathar's son Jonathan.

For his part in the conspiracy, Abiathar was removed from the priesthood and sent to his family home: "Go back to your fields in Anathoth," Solomon commanded. "You deserve to die, but I will not put you to death now, because you carried the ark of the Sovereign Lord before my father David and shared all my father's hardships."

Adonijah and Joab, however, would soon be put to death by Solomon's henchman Benaiah.

Legacy

Abiathar's deposition was the sole historical instance of the ouster of a Israelite high priest by an Israelite king. It also brought to an end the priestly dynasty of Eli, which had begun at Shiloh, dating back before the birth of Samuel. The priesthood thus passed from the house of Ithamar (1 Sam. 2:30-36; 1 Kings 1:19; 2:26, 27). Zadok now became sole high priest.

Abiathar is known to readers of the New Testament through a reference in Mark which mistakenly identifies him, rather than his father Ahimelech, as the priest of Nob who aided Saul. Jesus said: "Have you never read what David did when he and his companions were hungry and in need? In the days of Abiathar the high priest, he entered the house of God and ate the consecrated bread, which is lawful only for priests to eat. And he also gave some to his companions." (Mark 2:25-26)

Had Abiathar refrained from supporting Adonijah in his attempt to usurp the throne from David, he or his son might have gone down in history as the first high priest of the Temple of Jerusalem, and his lineage would probably have long endured in that position. As it stands, he is remembered with honor for the important service he did in bringing the sacred ephod to David after the massacre of the priests of Nob, and for acting as God's true priest throughout most of the king's career. In his defense, Abiathar may not have known that David intended for Solomon to be his successor, but by backing Adonijah attempt to seize the throne while David still lived, Abiathar placed himself tragically on the wrong side of history.

Preceded by:
Ahimelech
High Priest of Israel Succeeded by: Zadok

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Grabbe, Lester L. Priests, Prophets, Diviners, Sages: A Socio-Historical Study of Religious Specialists in Ancient Israel. Valley Forge, Pa: Trinity Press International, 1995. ISBN 9781563381324
  • Himmelfarb, Martha. A Kingdom of Priests: Ancestry and Merit in Ancient Judaism. Jewish culture and contexts. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006. ISBN 9780812239508
  • Millar, William R. Priesthood in Ancient Israel. Understanding biblical themes. St. Louis, Mo: Chalice Press, 2001. ISBN 9780827238299
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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