![]() ![]() There is some scholarly agreement that Mephibosheth replaced Meribbaal (or Memphibaal) in order to conceal the theophoric name " baal", a reference to a Canaanite deity, which became taboo. Arnold Gottfried Betz and David Noel Freedman argue that Memphibaal, a name preserved in the Lucianic recension may actually be the original name of Jonathan's son, while Meribbaal may originally refer to one of Saul's sons. He is called Mephibosheth, meaning "from the mouth of shame", in the Books of Samuel while the Books of Chronicles ( 8:34 and 9:40) call him Meribbaal. ![]() ĭavid restored Saul's inheritance to Mephibosheth and permitted him to live within his palace in Jerusalem.Īccording to 2 Samuel 9:12, 1 Chron 8:34 and 1 Chron 9:40 he had a son called Micah. Old Testament scholar Walter Brueggemann says the mention of Mephibosheth's disability may have been added to show that he was not a military or political threat to David. Some years later, after his accession to the kingship of the United Monarchy, King David sought "someone of the house of Saul, to whom I may show the kindness of God" and Mephibosheth was brought to him. Īfter the accident, Mephibosheth was carried with the rest of his family beyond the Jordan to the mountains of Gilead, where he found a refuge in the house of Machir ben-Ammiel, a powerful Gadite or Manassite sheik at Lo-debar, not far from Mahanaim, which during the reign of his uncle Ishbosheth was the head-quarters of his family. ( 2 Samuel 4:4) In her haste, the child fell, or was dropped while fleeing. ![]() After the deaths of Saul and Jonathan, Mephibosheth's nurse took him and fled in panic. Mephibosheth was five years old when both his father and grandfather died at the Battle of Mount Gilboa. Mephibosheth (Biblical Hebrew: מְפִיבֹשֶׁת, Məfīḇōšeṯ, also called Meribaal, מְרִיב־בַּעַל, Mərīḇ-Baʻal), or Miphibosheth, was the son of Jonathan-and, thus, a grandson of Saul-mentioned in the Biblical Books of Samuel and Chronicles. Illustration from the Morgan Bible of Mephibosheth kneeling before David. For Mephibosheth, the son of Saul, see Armoni and Mephibosheth. The inequality of the legs of the lame is used in Proverbs 26:7 as a similitude of the ineptness with which a fool uses a parable. ![]()
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