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Difference between revisions of "Ishmael"

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== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18715" /> ==
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18715" /> ==
<p> [[Of]] several men named [[Ishmael]] in the Bible, the best known is the son born to [[Abraham]] through his [[Egyptian]] slave-girl, Hagar. [[He]] was born as a result of Abraham and Sarah’s failure of faith, when, feeling that [[Sarah]] could not produce the son [[God]] had promised them, they arranged for Abraham to produce the son through [[Hagar]] ( [[Genesis]] 16:1-3). </p> <p> [[In]] New [[Testament]] times, [[Paul]] saw this as a picture of those who try to achieve salvation through law-keeping instead of through faith in [[Jesus]] Christ. [[As]] Ishmael was the child of a slave-girl, so they are the children of slavery. They are in bondage to the law instead of being free people in [[Christ]] ( [[Galatians]] 4:21-26). </p> <p> [[Concerning]] Ishmael, God promised that he would grow into a fiery independent desert-dweller, and would produce a notable line of descendants ( Genesis 16:11-12; Genesis 17:20). But he was not the son that God had promised to Abraham as the one through whom he would build his covenant people. God’s promises would be fulfilled through Isaac, the son who was later born to Abraham and Sarah ( Genesis 17:15-19). </p> <p> When conflict arose between Sarah and Hagar, Hagar and Ishmael were forced to leave Abraham’s household and establish their own independent existence ( Genesis 21:8-21). In New Testament times, Paul saw the expulsion of Hagar and Ishmael as an illustration that slaves of the law have no place in a family (the church) where people have the freedom of sons and through faith inherit God’s promises ( Galatians 4:28-31). </p> <p> Ishmael grew up to be a tough desert-dweller, as God had foretold ( Genesis 21:20; cf. Genesis 16:12). He married an Egyptian ( Genesis 21:21), and one of his daughters married Isaac’s son, [[Esau]] ( Genesis 28:9). There was a temporary reunion between [[Isaac]] and Ishmael at the funeral of their father ( Genesis 25:7-10). </p> <p> [[Many]] of the tribal peoples who grew up in the region around [[Canaan]] were descended from Ishmael ( Genesis 25:12-18). Even today many of the [[Arab]] peoples claim descent from him. </p>
<p> [[Of]] several men named [[Ishmael]] in the Bible, the best known is the son born to [[Abraham]] through his [[Egyptian]] slave-girl, Hagar. [[He]] was born as a result of Abraham and Sarah’s failure of faith, when, feeling that [[Sarah]] could not produce the son [[God]] had promised them, they arranged for Abraham to produce the son through [[Hagar]] (Genesis 16:1-3). </p> <p> [[In]] New [[Testament]] times, [[Paul]] saw this as a picture of those who try to achieve salvation through law-keeping instead of through faith in [[Jesus]] Christ. [[As]] Ishmael was the child of a slave-girl, so they are the children of slavery. They are in bondage to the law instead of being free people in [[Christ]] (Galatians 4:21-26). </p> <p> [[Concerning]] Ishmael, God promised that he would grow into a fiery independent desert-dweller, and would produce a notable line of descendants (Genesis 16:11-12; [[Genesis]] 17:20). But he was not the son that God had promised to Abraham as the one through whom he would build his covenant people. God’s promises would be fulfilled through Isaac, the son who was later born to Abraham and Sarah (Genesis 17:15-19). </p> <p> When conflict arose between Sarah and Hagar, Hagar and Ishmael were forced to leave Abraham’s household and establish their own independent existence (Genesis 21:8-21). In New Testament times, Paul saw the expulsion of Hagar and Ishmael as an illustration that slaves of the law have no place in a family (the church) where people have the freedom of sons and through faith inherit God’s promises (Galatians 4:28-31). </p> <p> Ishmael grew up to be a tough desert-dweller, as God had foretold (Genesis 21:20; cf. Genesis 16:12). He married an Egyptian (Genesis 21:21), and one of his daughters married Isaac’s son, [[Esau]] (Genesis 28:9). There was a temporary reunion between [[Isaac]] and Ishmael at the funeral of their father (Genesis 25:7-10). </p> <p> [[Many]] of the tribal peoples who grew up in the region around [[Canaan]] were descended from Ishmael (Genesis 25:12-18). Even today many of the [[Arab]] peoples claim descent from him. </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_32060" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_32060" /> ==
<li> The son of Nethaniah, "of the seed royal" ( [[Jeremiah]] 40:8,15 ). [[He]] plotted against Gedaliah, and treacherously put him and others to death. He carried off many captives, "and departed to go over to the Ammonites." <div> <p> [[Copyright]] StatementThese dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., [[Illustrated]] [[Bible]] Dictionary, [[Third]] Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. [[Public]] Domain. </p> <p> Bibliography InformationEaston, [[Matthew]] George. [[Entry]] for 'Ishmael'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/i/ishmael.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
<li> The son of Nethaniah, "of the seed royal" (Jeremiah 40:8,15 ). [[He]] plotted against Gedaliah, and treacherously put him and others to death. He carried off many captives, "and departed to go over to the Ammonites." <div> <p> [[Copyright]] StatementThese dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., [[Illustrated]] [[Bible]] Dictionary, [[Third]] Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. [[Public]] Domain. </p> <p> Bibliography InformationEaston, [[Matthew]] George. [[Entry]] for 'Ishmael'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/i/ishmael.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
          
          
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35947" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35947" /> ==
<p> (See HAGAR; ISAAC; ABRAHAM) ("God hears"); the name of [[God]] is Εl , "the God of might", in relation to the world at large; not [[Jehovah]] , [[His]] name in relation to His covenant people. </p> <p> 1. [[Born]] of [[Hagar]] when [[Abraham]] was 86 ( [[Genesis]] 16:15-16), dwelling at Mature. "Jehovah," in covenant with Abraham her husband, "heard her affliction" in the wilderness whither she had fled from Sarah. The angel of Jehovah described [[Ishmael]] in a prophecy which history is continually verifying, "he will be a wild man," [[Hebrew]] a wild donkey man, i.e. fierce and wild as the donkey of the desert, the type of restless unbridled lawlessness. [[Job]] 11:12; Job 24:5; "behold, as wild donkeys in the desert, go they forth to their work, rising betimes for a prey (for traveling in the [[East]] is at an early hour, to be before the heat): the wilderness yieldeth food for them and for their children"; i.e., these [[Bedouin]] robbers, with the unbridled wildness of the donkey of the desert, go thither. [[Robbery]] is "their work"; the wilderness which yields no food to other men "yieldeth food for them" by the plunder of caravans. </p> <p> "His hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against him"; an exact picture of Bedouin life." [[Many]] conquerors have marched into the [[Arabian]] wilderness, but they have never been able to catch this wild donkey and to tame him" (Baumgarten). "And he shall dwell in the presence of (in front of) his brethren," in close proximity to their kindred races, hovering round, but never mingling with them, never disappearing by withdrawal to some remote region, but remaining in that high table land S.E. of [[Judaea]] to which [[Judea]] may be said to look. [[Or]] else "to the E. (for as the orientals faced toward the E. in taking the points of the compass, the front meant the E.) of his brethren." [[In]] Job 1:3 the Arabs are called "the sons of the East." Ishmael was circumcised at 13 ( Genesis 17:25), at which age Arabs and Muslims therefore still circumcise. </p> <p> Abraham's love for him appears in his exclaiming, upon God's giving the promise of seed by Sarah, then 90, Abraham himself being 100, "Oh that Ishamel might live before Thee!" whether the words mean that he desires that Ishmael (instead of the seed promised to Sarah) might be heir of the promises, or, as is more consonant with Abraham's faith, that Ishmael might be accepted before God so as to share in blessings. Then God promised: "I have blessed him, ... twelve princes shall he beget, and I will make him a great nation" (compare Genesis 25:12-17). [[See]] ISAAC on Ishmael's expulsion for "mocking," and (See HAGAR on Ishmael being called a "child," or "lad" ( Genesis 25:14-15; Genesis 25:17), being at the time 15 or 16; the bread and bottle, but not the child, were "put on her shoulder.") </p> <p> After God's saving them they "dwelt in the wilderness of Paran," the [[El]] Tih, the desert of Israel's wanderings; stretching from the wady [[Arabah]] on the E. to the gulf of [[Suez]] on the W., and from [[Sinai]] on the S. to [[Palestine]] on the N. According to eastern usage she, as a parent, chose a wife for her son, an Egyptian, possibly the mother of his 12 sons; rabbinical and [[Arab]] tradition give him a second wife; the daughter being termed "sister of Nebaioth" implies probably that the other brothers had a different mother. [[Esau]] married his daughter [[Mahalath]] before Ishmael's death, for it is written "Esau went unto Ishmael" ( Genesis 28:9). At 137 Ishmael "died in the presence of all his brethren" ( Genesis 25:17-18); i.e., fulfilling the prediction of the angel of Jehovah to Hagar (see above), Ishmael died, his nomad descendants stretching from [[Havilah]] S.E. and [[Shur]] S.W. toward the N.E., i.e. Assyria, in fact traversing the whole Arabian desert from the [[Euphrates]] to the [[Red]] Sea. </p> <p> Ishmael himself cannot have settled far from Abraham's neighbourhood, for he joined with [[Isaac]] in the burial of his father ( Genesis 25:9), and burial in the East follows a few hours after death. Ishmael first went into the wilderness of Beersheba, then into that of Paran. "The East country" unto which Abraham sent away his sons by concubines, not to be in the way of Isaac, must therefore have been in those regions ( Genesis 25:6; Genesis 25:18). The people of [[Arabia]] are called "children of the East," [[Bene]] Kedem ( [[Judges]] 6:3; Job 1:3), in modern times Saracens, i.e. "Easterns" (See EAST.) Ishmael's 12 sons enumerated Genesis 25:13-15 were fathers of tribes, as "their towns and their castles," or rather "hamlets," called after them, imply ( [[Numbers]] 31:10). These "hamlets" were collections of rude dwellings of stones piled on one another and covered with tent cloths, often ranged in a circle. (See HAZEROTH.) </p> <p> The [[Bible]] does not, as scepticism asserts, state that all the Arabs sprang from Ishmael. Nay, Joktanites and even Cushites in the S. and S.E. form a large element in Arab blood. In all the northern tribes which are of [[Ishmaelite]] descent, the characteristics foretold appear, they are "wild ... their hand against every man, and every man's hand against them"; but in S. Arabia, where Joktanite and other blood exists, these characteristics are less seen. The Ishmaelite element is the chief one of the Arab nation, as the native traditions before Muhammed and the language concur with the Bible in proving. The pagan law of blood revenge necessitates every Arab's knowing the names of his ancestors for four generations, so that the race is well defined. </p> <p> The term" Ishmaelites" was applied in course of time to the Midianites, sprung from Abraham and Keturah, and not from Ishmael, because the [[Ishmaelites]] being the more powerful tribe gave their name as a general one to neighbouring associated tribes ( Genesis 37:25; Genesis 37:28; Genesis 37:36; Psalms 83:6), the nomad tribes of Arabia ( Judges 8:24). [[Before]] Muhammed, religion in the middle and S. of Arabia was fetish and cosmic worship, but in the N. relics of the primitive faith of Ishmael survived, and numbers became [[Karaite]] [[Jews]] or held the corrupt form of [[Christianity]] which was all they knew of it. The dissatisfaction felt with both of these creeds pioneered the way for Muhammed's success. The Arab conquerors have won a hundred thrones and established their Mohamedanism from the [[Senegal]] to the Indus, from the Euphrates to the [[Indian]] Ocean. </p> <p> 2. 1 [[Chronicles]] 8:38; 1 Chronicles 9:44. </p> <p> 3. 2 Chronicles 19:11. </p> <p> 4. 2 Chronicles 23:1. </p> <p> 5. 2 Chronicles 10:22. </p> <p> 6. [[Son]] of Nethaniah, son of [[Elishama]] of the seed royal of [[Judah]] ( [[Jeremiah]] 40:7-41; Jeremiah 40:15; 2 Kings 25:23-25). [[Possibly]] descended from Elishama, David's son ( 2 [[Samuel]] 5:16). During the siege of [[Jerusalem]] Ishmael had fled to Baalis, king of Ammon, E. of Jordan. [[Probably]] Ishmael was of [[Ammonite]] blood on the mother's side, as some [[Jewish]] kings had Ammonite women in their harem ( 1 Kings 11:1). [[Baalis]] (called from the idol Baal) his host, urged him to slay [[Gedaliah]] who under the [[Babylonian]] king governed Judaea and the population which had not been carried away. Ishmael's royal descent fired his envy and ambition; hence, he lent a ready ear to the plot proposed by the ancient foe of Judah. Ishmael as well as the brothers [[Johanan]] and Jonathan, sons of Kareah, had commanded separate bands which watched the issue of the siege from the S.E. side of Jordan; "the forces in the fields," i.e. the pasture grounds of [[Moab]] ( Jeremiah 40:7; Jeremiah 40:13), the modern Belka. </p> <p> These captains crossed the [[Jordan]] to pay their respects to Gedaliah at Mizpah, N. of Jerusalem, upon his appointment. In spite of Johanan's open warning of Ishmael's intention, and even private offer to slay Ishmael in order to avert the death of Gedaliah and its evil consequences to the Jewish remnant, the latter in generous unsuspiciousness refused to believe the statement. [[Thirty]] days after, in the seventh month Ishmael and "ten men, princes of the king," at an hospitable entertainment given them by Gedaliah slew him with such secrecy that no alarm was given (compare Psalms 41:9), and then slew the Jews and Chaldeans, the men of war immediately about his person (not the rest, Jeremiah 40:16), with him. Jeremiah, who usually was residing there, was providentially elsewhere. [[No]] man knew it outside [[Mizpah]] for a time. </p> <p> [[So]] on the second day fourscore devotees with shaven beards, rent clothes, having cut themselves with pagan mutilations (see [[Leviticus]] 19:27-28; [[Deuteronomy]] 14:1), were seen by Ishmael from the higher ground on which he was, advancing from the N. with offerings and incense in their hand, to bring them to "the house of the Lord," i.e. to the place where the temple had stood, and which was still sacred. They came from Shechem, Shiloh, and Samaria, where such pagan usages prevailed, expressive of sorrow; they hereby indicated their grief at the destruction of the temple and city. Ishmael met them, pretending to weep like themselves, and said, "Come to Gedaliah," as if he were one of his retinue. When they came into the midst of the city, or of the courtyard (Josephus), he closed the entrances and butchered all, except ten who promised, if spared, to show him treasures of wheat, barley, oil, and honey. </p> <p> His greediness and needs overcame his cruelty, or he would not have spared even the ten. The 70 corpses he threw into the pit or cistern made by [[Asa]] to have a water supply when [[Baasha]] was about to besiege the city ( 1 Kings 15:22); as [[Jehu]] did to Ahaziah's 42 relatives, and as Nana [[Sahib]] did in our own times at Cawnpore. [[Next]] he carried off king Zedekiah's daughters, with their eunuchs and Chaldaean guard; and, doubtless being largely reinforced, carried away all the remaining people at Mizpah by way of [[Gibeon]] on the N. (Josephus says by [[Hebron]] round the S. end of the [[Dead]] Sea) toward Ammon, where probably he meant to sell them as slaves ( Jeremiah 41:10; Jeremiah 41:16). Johnnan pursued and overtook him at the great waters in Gibeon ( 2 Samuel 2:13). His captives gladly "cast about," i.e. came round and joined Johanan, who slew two of the ten princes ( Jeremiah 41:1-2; Jeremiah 41:15), leaving Ishmael with but eight to escape to Ammon. </p> <p> The result was a panic among the Jewish remnant in Judaea, as Johanan had foreseen when he warned Gedaliah. But now, in spite of Jeremiah's remonstrance from the Lord, he, instead of checking, promoted the panic, and led all the recovered captives, Jeremiah included, into [[Egypt]] ( Jeremiah 41:16-17; Jeremiah 41:42; Jeremiah 43:5-7). The calamity, Gedaliah's murder and the consequent dispersion of the Jews, was and is commemorated by the fast of the seventh month ( [[Zechariah]] 7:5; Zechariah 8:19), the third of Tisri. Ammon's share in this tragedy was avenged in accordance with the Lord's word ( Jeremiah 49:1-6; [[Ezekiel]] 25:1-7). The lessons from the history are, so long as pride, ambition, and revenge are harboured, men will ever scheme afresh to their own hurt. </p> <p> [[Scarcely]] had Jerusalem paid the awful penalty of her sin than her princes began new plots of violence and bloodshed. Zedekiah's perfidious rebellion had hardly been crushed when Ishmael devised a fresh conspiracy. [[Nothing]] short of God's grace can correct the desperate depravity of man. The mystery that men of guileless simplicity fall victims to murderous treachery is one of many proofs that there is an enemy disordering the present world course. [[Faith]] looks above the cloud, and sees God ordering all things for the good of His people and for the punishment of the transgressors at the last. </p> <p> The coming judgment will vindicate God's ways, glorify the saints with [[Christ]] their King, deliver the earth from the ungodly and [[Satan]] their prince, who shall be cast out for ever. Even now one bad man is made the scourge of another. The nemesis of crime is sure to overtake the guilty at last. [[However]] cunningly and laboriously he weaves iniquity, the web which was on the point of success is in a moment scattered to the winds by the breath of God, and the victims escape. The only fruit Ishmael derived from his crimes was being forced to flee as an outlaw, bearing about, [[Cain]] like, the murderer's brand, and a self torturing conscience, the earnest of the worm that never dieth. </p>
<p> (See HAGAR; ISAAC; ABRAHAM) ("God hears"); the name of [[God]] is Εl , "the God of might", in relation to the world at large; not [[Jehovah]] , [[His]] name in relation to His covenant people. </p> <p> 1. [[Born]] of [[Hagar]] when [[Abraham]] was 86 (Genesis 16:15-16), dwelling at Mature. "Jehovah," in covenant with Abraham her husband, "heard her affliction" in the wilderness whither she had fled from Sarah. The angel of Jehovah described [[Ishmael]] in a prophecy which history is continually verifying, "he will be a wild man," [[Hebrew]] a wild donkey man, i.e. fierce and wild as the donkey of the desert, the type of restless unbridled lawlessness. [[Job]] 11:12; Job 24:5; "behold, as wild donkeys in the desert, go they forth to their work, rising betimes for a prey (for traveling in the [[East]] is at an early hour, to be before the heat): the wilderness yieldeth food for them and for their children"; i.e., these [[Bedouin]] robbers, with the unbridled wildness of the donkey of the desert, go thither. [[Robbery]] is "their work"; the wilderness which yields no food to other men "yieldeth food for them" by the plunder of caravans. </p> <p> "His hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against him"; an exact picture of Bedouin life." [[Many]] conquerors have marched into the [[Arabian]] wilderness, but they have never been able to catch this wild donkey and to tame him" (Baumgarten). "And he shall dwell in the presence of (in front of) his brethren," in close proximity to their kindred races, hovering round, but never mingling with them, never disappearing by withdrawal to some remote region, but remaining in that high table land S.E. of [[Judaea]] to which [[Judea]] may be said to look. [[Or]] else "to the E. (for as the orientals faced toward the E. in taking the points of the compass, the front meant the E.) of his brethren." [[In]] Job 1:3 the Arabs are called "the sons of the East." Ishmael was circumcised at 13 (Genesis 17:25), at which age Arabs and Muslims therefore still circumcise. </p> <p> Abraham's love for him appears in his exclaiming, upon God's giving the promise of seed by Sarah, then 90, Abraham himself being 100, "Oh that Ishamel might live before Thee!" whether the words mean that he desires that Ishmael (instead of the seed promised to Sarah) might be heir of the promises, or, as is more consonant with Abraham's faith, that Ishmael might be accepted before God so as to share in blessings. Then God promised: "I have blessed him, ... twelve princes shall he beget, and I will make him a great nation" (compare [[Genesis]] 25:12-17). [[See]] ISAAC on Ishmael's expulsion for "mocking," and (See HAGAR on Ishmael being called a "child," or "lad" (Genesis 25:14-15; Genesis 25:17), being at the time 15 or 16; the bread and bottle, but not the child, were "put on her shoulder.") </p> <p> After God's saving them they "dwelt in the wilderness of Paran," the [[El]] Tih, the desert of Israel's wanderings; stretching from the wady [[Arabah]] on the E. to the gulf of [[Suez]] on the W., and from [[Sinai]] on the S. to [[Palestine]] on the N. According to eastern usage she, as a parent, chose a wife for her son, an Egyptian, possibly the mother of his 12 sons; rabbinical and [[Arab]] tradition give him a second wife; the daughter being termed "sister of Nebaioth" implies probably that the other brothers had a different mother. [[Esau]] married his daughter [[Mahalath]] before Ishmael's death, for it is written "Esau went unto Ishmael" (Genesis 28:9). At 137 Ishmael "died in the presence of all his brethren" (Genesis 25:17-18); i.e., fulfilling the prediction of the angel of Jehovah to Hagar (see above), Ishmael died, his nomad descendants stretching from [[Havilah]] S.E. and [[Shur]] S.W. toward the N.E., i.e. Assyria, in fact traversing the whole Arabian desert from the [[Euphrates]] to the [[Red]] Sea. </p> <p> Ishmael himself cannot have settled far from Abraham's neighbourhood, for he joined with [[Isaac]] in the burial of his father (Genesis 25:9), and burial in the East follows a few hours after death. Ishmael first went into the wilderness of Beersheba, then into that of Paran. "The East country" unto which Abraham sent away his sons by concubines, not to be in the way of Isaac, must therefore have been in those regions (Genesis 25:6; Genesis 25:18). The people of [[Arabia]] are called "children of the East," [[Bene]] Kedem (Judges 6:3; Job 1:3), in modern times Saracens, i.e. "Easterns" (See EAST.) Ishmael's 12 sons enumerated Genesis 25:13-15 were fathers of tribes, as "their towns and their castles," or rather "hamlets," called after them, imply (Numbers 31:10). These "hamlets" were collections of rude dwellings of stones piled on one another and covered with tent cloths, often ranged in a circle. (See HAZEROTH.) </p> <p> The [[Bible]] does not, as scepticism asserts, state that all the Arabs sprang from Ishmael. Nay, Joktanites and even Cushites in the S. and S.E. form a large element in Arab blood. In all the northern tribes which are of [[Ishmaelite]] descent, the characteristics foretold appear, they are "wild ... their hand against every man, and every man's hand against them"; but in S. Arabia, where Joktanite and other blood exists, these characteristics are less seen. The Ishmaelite element is the chief one of the Arab nation, as the native traditions before Muhammed and the language concur with the Bible in proving. The pagan law of blood revenge necessitates every Arab's knowing the names of his ancestors for four generations, so that the race is well defined. </p> <p> The term" Ishmaelites" was applied in course of time to the Midianites, sprung from Abraham and Keturah, and not from Ishmael, because the [[Ishmaelites]] being the more powerful tribe gave their name as a general one to neighbouring associated tribes (Genesis 37:25; Genesis 37:28; Genesis 37:36; Psalms 83:6), the nomad tribes of Arabia (Judges 8:24). [[Before]] Muhammed, religion in the middle and S. of Arabia was fetish and cosmic worship, but in the N. relics of the primitive faith of Ishmael survived, and numbers became [[Karaite]] [[Jews]] or held the corrupt form of [[Christianity]] which was all they knew of it. The dissatisfaction felt with both of these creeds pioneered the way for Muhammed's success. The Arab conquerors have won a hundred thrones and established their Mohamedanism from the [[Senegal]] to the Indus, from the Euphrates to the [[Indian]] Ocean. </p> <p> 2. 1 [[Chronicles]] 8:38; 1 Chronicles 9:44. </p> <p> 3. 2 Chronicles 19:11. </p> <p> 4. 2 Chronicles 23:1. </p> <p> 5. 2 Chronicles 10:22. </p> <p> 6. [[Son]] of Nethaniah, son of [[Elishama]] of the seed royal of [[Judah]] (Jeremiah 40:7-41;Jeremiah 40:15; 2 Kings 25:23-25). [[Possibly]] descended from Elishama, David's son (2 [[Samuel]] 5:16). During the siege of [[Jerusalem]] Ishmael had fled to Baalis, king of Ammon, E. of Jordan. [[Probably]] Ishmael was of [[Ammonite]] blood on the mother's side, as some [[Jewish]] kings had Ammonite women in their harem (1 Kings 11:1). [[Baalis]] (called from the idol Baal) his host, urged him to slay [[Gedaliah]] who under the [[Babylonian]] king governed Judaea and the population which had not been carried away. Ishmael's royal descent fired his envy and ambition; hence, he lent a ready ear to the plot proposed by the ancient foe of Judah. Ishmael as well as the brothers [[Johanan]] and Jonathan, sons of Kareah, had commanded separate bands which watched the issue of the siege from the S.E. side of Jordan; "the forces in the fields," i.e. the pasture grounds of [[Moab]] (Jeremiah 40:7; [[Jeremiah]] 40:13), the modern Belka. </p> <p> These captains crossed the [[Jordan]] to pay their respects to Gedaliah at Mizpah, N. of Jerusalem, upon his appointment. In spite of Johanan's open warning of Ishmael's intention, and even private offer to slay Ishmael in order to avert the death of Gedaliah and its evil consequences to the Jewish remnant, the latter in generous unsuspiciousness refused to believe the statement. [[Thirty]] days after, in the seventh month Ishmael and "ten men, princes of the king," at an hospitable entertainment given them by Gedaliah slew him with such secrecy that no alarm was given (compare Psalms 41:9), and then slew the Jews and Chaldeans, the men of war immediately about his person (not the rest, Jeremiah 40:16), with him. Jeremiah, who usually was residing there, was providentially elsewhere. [[No]] man knew it outside [[Mizpah]] for a time. </p> <p> [[So]] on the second day fourscore devotees with shaven beards, rent clothes, having cut themselves with pagan mutilations (see [[Leviticus]] 19:27-28; [[Deuteronomy]] 14:1), were seen by Ishmael from the higher ground on which he was, advancing from the N. with offerings and incense in their hand, to bring them to "the house of the Lord," i.e. to the place where the temple had stood, and which was still sacred. They came from Shechem, Shiloh, and Samaria, where such pagan usages prevailed, expressive of sorrow; they hereby indicated their grief at the destruction of the temple and city. Ishmael met them, pretending to weep like themselves, and said, "Come to Gedaliah," as if he were one of his retinue. When they came into the midst of the city, or of the courtyard (Josephus), he closed the entrances and butchered all, except ten who promised, if spared, to show him treasures of wheat, barley, oil, and honey. </p> <p> His greediness and needs overcame his cruelty, or he would not have spared even the ten. The 70 corpses he threw into the pit or cistern made by [[Asa]] to have a water supply when [[Baasha]] was about to besiege the city (1 Kings 15:22); as [[Jehu]] did to Ahaziah's 42 relatives, and as Nana [[Sahib]] did in our own times at Cawnpore. [[Next]] he carried off king Zedekiah's daughters, with their eunuchs and Chaldaean guard; and, doubtless being largely reinforced, carried away all the remaining people at Mizpah by way of [[Gibeon]] on the N. (Josephus says by [[Hebron]] round the S. end of the [[Dead]] Sea) toward Ammon, where probably he meant to sell them as slaves (Jeremiah 41:10; Jeremiah 41:16). Johnnan pursued and overtook him at the great waters in Gibeon (2 Samuel 2:13). His captives gladly "cast about," i.e. came round and joined Johanan, who slew two of the ten princes (Jeremiah 41:1-2; Jeremiah 41:15), leaving Ishmael with but eight to escape to Ammon. </p> <p> The result was a panic among the Jewish remnant in Judaea, as Johanan had foreseen when he warned Gedaliah. But now, in spite of Jeremiah's remonstrance from the Lord, he, instead of checking, promoted the panic, and led all the recovered captives, Jeremiah included, into [[Egypt]] (Jeremiah 41:16-17; Jeremiah 41:42; Jeremiah 43:5-7). The calamity, Gedaliah's murder and the consequent dispersion of the Jews, was and is commemorated by the fast of the seventh month (Zechariah 7:5; [[Zechariah]] 8:19), the third of Tisri. Ammon's share in this tragedy was avenged in accordance with the Lord's word (Jeremiah 49:1-6; [[Ezekiel]] 25:1-7). The lessons from the history are, so long as pride, ambition, and revenge are harboured, men will ever scheme afresh to their own hurt. </p> <p> [[Scarcely]] had Jerusalem paid the awful penalty of her sin than her princes began new plots of violence and bloodshed. Zedekiah's perfidious rebellion had hardly been crushed when Ishmael devised a fresh conspiracy. [[Nothing]] short of God's grace can correct the desperate depravity of man. The mystery that men of guileless simplicity fall victims to murderous treachery is one of many proofs that there is an enemy disordering the present world course. [[Faith]] looks above the cloud, and sees God ordering all things for the good of His people and for the punishment of the transgressors at the last. </p> <p> The coming judgment will vindicate God's ways, glorify the saints with [[Christ]] their King, deliver the earth from the ungodly and [[Satan]] their prince, who shall be cast out for ever. Even now one bad man is made the scourge of another. The nemesis of crime is sure to overtake the guilty at last. [[However]] cunningly and laboriously he weaves iniquity, the web which was on the point of success is in a moment scattered to the winds by the breath of God, and the victims escape. The only fruit Ishmael derived from his crimes was being forced to flee as an outlaw, bearing about, [[Cain]] like, the murderer's brand, and a self torturing conscience, the earnest of the worm that never dieth. </p>
          
          
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_41256" /> ==
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_41256" /> ==
[[Genesis]] 16:11 Genesis 16:12 Genesis 21:20[[Abraham]]
[[Genesis]] 16:11Genesis 16:12 Genesis 21:20[[Abraham]]
          
          
== Hitchcock's Bible Names <ref name="term_45978" /> ==
== Hitchcock's Bible Names <ref name="term_45978" /> ==
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== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47932" /> ==
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47932" /> ==
<p> The son of [[Abraham]] and Hagar. [[His]] name is derived from Shamah, to bear; and El, God. ( [[Genesis]] 16:1) </p>
<p> The son of [[Abraham]] and Hagar. [[His]] name is derived from Shamah, to bear; and El, God. (Genesis 16:1) </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51783" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51783" /> ==
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== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70254" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70254" /> ==
<p> [[Ishmael]] ( ísh'ma-el), whom [[God]] heareth. 1. The son of [[Abraham]] by Hagar, and the ancestor of [[Arabian]] tribes, generally called "Ishmaelites." [[Genesis]] 25:12-18; 1 [[Chronicles]] 2:17; 1 Chronicles 18:3. [[Previous]] to his birth [[Hagar]] was informed by an angel what would be the character of her son, and that his posterity would be innumerable. Genesis 16:11. When Hagar was banished to the wilderness, God directed her to a fountain, and renewed his promise to make him a great nation. Ishmael married an [[Egyptian]] woman, and dwelt in the wilderness, Genesis 16:12; he was distinguished for lawless predatory habits, as his descendants have always been. Genesis 21:20-21. [[So]] rapidly did Ishmael's family multiply, that in a few years afterwards they are spoken of as a trading nation. Genesis 37:25; Genesis 39:1. [[Isaac]] and Ishmael amicably met at the burial of their father. Genesis 25:9. Ishmael died, perhaps in battle, at the age of 137 years. [[He]] was the father of twelve sons, who gave their names to as many tribes, who dwelt in the wilderness, from [[Havilah]] unto Shur. Genesis 17:20. The prophecies concerning him, Genesis 16:12; Genesis 17:20; Genesis 21:13; Genesis 21:18, confirm the Bible; being literally carried out for nearly 4000 years to the present day. Ishmael no doubt became a wild man of the desert, the progenitor of the roaming [[Bedouin]] tribes of the East, so well known as robbers to this day that travellers through their territory must be well armed and hire a band of robbers to protect them against their fellow-robbers. Ishmael is also the spiritual father of the Mohammedans, who are nothing but bastard Jews. They apply to themselves the promise of a large posterity given to Ishmael. Genesis 21:13; Genesis 18:2. A prince of the royal family of Judah, who murdered the governor Gedaliah, with several of the Hebrews and [[Chaldeans]] who were attached to him. He fled to the Ammonites. [[Jeremiah]] 40:7-16; Jeremiah 41:1-18. There are six persons of this name mentioned in the Scriptures. </p>
<p> [[Ishmael]] (ísh'ma-el), whom [[God]] heareth. 1. The son of [[Abraham]] by Hagar, and the ancestor of [[Arabian]] tribes, generally called "Ishmaelites." [[Genesis]] 25:12-18; 1 [[Chronicles]] 2:17; 1 Chronicles 18:3. [[Previous]] to his birth [[Hagar]] was informed by an angel what would be the character of her son, and that his posterity would be innumerable. Genesis 16:11. When Hagar was banished to the wilderness, God directed her to a fountain, and renewed his promise to make him a great nation. Ishmael married an [[Egyptian]] woman, and dwelt in the wilderness, Genesis 16:12; he was distinguished for lawless predatory habits, as his descendants have always been. Genesis 21:20-21. [[So]] rapidly did Ishmael's family multiply, that in a few years afterwards they are spoken of as a trading nation. Genesis 37:25; Genesis 39:1. [[Isaac]] and Ishmael amicably met at the burial of their father. Genesis 25:9. Ishmael died, perhaps in battle, at the age of 137 years. [[He]] was the father of twelve sons, who gave their names to as many tribes, who dwelt in the wilderness, from [[Havilah]] unto Shur. Genesis 17:20. The prophecies concerning him, Genesis 16:12; Genesis 17:20; Genesis 21:13; Genesis 21:18, confirm the Bible; being literally carried out for nearly 4000 years to the present day. Ishmael no doubt became a wild man of the desert, the progenitor of the roaming [[Bedouin]] tribes of the East, so well known as robbers to this day that travellers through their territory must be well armed and hire a band of robbers to protect them against their fellow-robbers. Ishmael is also the spiritual father of the Mohammedans, who are nothing but bastard Jews. They apply to themselves the promise of a large posterity given to Ishmael. Genesis 21:13; Genesis 18:2. A prince of the royal family of Judah, who murdered the governor Gedaliah, with several of the Hebrews and [[Chaldeans]] who were attached to him. He fled to the Ammonites. [[Jeremiah]] 40:7-16; Jeremiah 41:1-18. There are six persons of this name mentioned in the Scriptures. </p>
          
          
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_73041" /> ==
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_73041" /> ==
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== Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia <ref name="term_311" /> ==
== Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia <ref name="term_311" /> ==
<p> Sarai, Abram's wife, was barren ( [[Genesis]] 11:30 ). [[Impatient]] at the long delay of the promise, [[Sarah]] agreed for [[Abram]] to cohabit with her maid Hagar, and as a result [[Ishmael]] was born eleven years after Abram and Sarah entered [[Canaan]] ( Genesis 16:1-16 ). [[He]] was finally cast out of Abram's house at Sarah's request and the Lord's approval, for Abram's Descendants were to be counted from [[Isaac]] ( Genesis 21:1-21 ). </p>
<p> Sarai, Abram's wife, was barren (Genesis 11:30 ). [[Impatient]] at the long delay of the promise, [[Sarah]] agreed for [[Abram]] to cohabit with her maid Hagar, and as a result [[Ishmael]] was born eleven years after Abram and Sarah entered [[Canaan]] (Genesis 16:1-16 ). [[He]] was finally cast out of Abram's house at Sarah's request and the Lord's approval, for Abram's Descendants were to be counted from [[Isaac]] (Genesis 21:1-21 ). </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15911" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15911" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_45385" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_45385" /> ==
<
<
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_74921" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_74921" /> ==