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Ahitophel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biblical counselor of King David
For Dryden's satirical poem, seeAbsalom and Achitophel.

Ahitophel,Achitofel, orAhithophel (Hebrew:אֲחִיתֹפֶל,romanizedʾĂḥīṯōp̄el,lit.'My Brother is Folly') was a counselor ofKing David and a man greatly renowned for his wisdom. DuringAbsalom's attempt to usurp the throne, he deserted David and supported Absalom, whom he then turned to as an advisor. To counteract Ahitophel's counsel, the fleeing David sent his friendHushai back to Absalom. Seeing that his advice against David had not been followed due to Hushai's influence, Ahithophel surmised that the revolt would fail, returned to his hometown ofGiloh, and hanged himself. He was buried in "the sepulcher of his fathers".

A man named Ahitophel is also mentioned in2 Samuel 23:34, and he is said to be the father of Eliam. Since2 Samuel 11:3 notes that Eliam is the father ofBathsheba, some scholars suggest that the Ahitophel of 2 Samuel 15 may be Bathsheba's grandfather.Levenson andBaruch Halpern, for example, note that "the narrator is sufficiently subtle (or guileless) to have Bathsheba's grandfather ... instigate the exaction ofYHWH's pound of flesh," asNathan's curse in 2 Samuel 12:11 comes to fruition.[1]

In Rabbinical literature

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The Talmud speaks of this counsellor of David as "a man, likeBalaam, whose great wisdom was not received in humility as a gift from heaven, and so became a stumbling block to him."[2] He was "one of those who, while casting longing eyes upon things not belonging to them, also lose the things they possess."[3] Accordingly, Ahithophel was granted access by Almighty God into the Divine powers of God. And being thus familiar with Divine wisdom and knowledge as imparted through the Holy Spirit, he was consulted as an oracle like theUrim and Thummim.[4] "..and great as was his wisdom, it was equalled by his scholarship. Therefore, David did not hesitate to submit himself to his instruction, even though Ahithophel was a very youngman at his death, not more than thirty-three years old. The one thing lacking in him was sincere piety, which proved his undoing in the end, for it induced him to participate in Absalom's rebellion against David. Thus, he forfeited even his share in the world to come. To this dire course of action, he was misled by astrology and other signs, which he interpreted as prophecies of his kingship when in reality, they pointed to the royal destiny of his granddaughter Bath-sheba. Possessed by his erroneous belief, he cunningly urged Absalom to commit an unheard-of crime. Thus, Absalom would profit nothing by his rebellion, for, though he accomplished his father's ruin, he would yet be held to account and condemned to death for his violation of family purity, and the way to the throne would be clear for Ahithophel, the great sage in Israel."[5] But he withheld his mystic knowledge from King David in the hour of peril and was therefore doomed to die from strangulation.[6] "Ahitophel of the house of Israel and Balaam of the heathen nations were the two great sages of the world who, failing to show gratitude to God for their wisdom, perished in dishonour. To them, the prophetic word finds application: 'Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom' (Jeremiah 9:23)."[2]

It is also said that David, during his reign, had many disagreeable encounters with Ahithophel. Shortly after his accession, the king seems to have overlooked Ahithophel in his appointments with judges and other officials. Consequently, when David was in despair concerning the visitation upon Uzzah during the attempted transport of the ark (2 Samuel 6:6; seeUzzah) and sought counsel of Ahithophel, the latter mockingly suggested to him that he had better apply to his wise men. Only upon David's malediction, that whoever knew a remedy and concealed it should surely end by committingsuicide, did Ahithophel offer him some rather vague advice, concealing the true solution, which was that the ark must be carried on the shoulders of men instead of upon a wagon.[7]

Curse upon Ahithophel

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Ahithophel hangs himself from a 14th Chronicle of the World by Rudolf vom Emns

Ahithophel rendered a service to David upon another occasion, but not until he was again threatened with the curse. It appears that David excavated too deeply for the foundations of the Temple, resulting in the earth's deepest floods breaking forth and nearly inundating the earth. None could help but Ahithophel, who withheld his counsel from seeing David borne away upon the flood. When David again warned him of the malediction, Ahithophel counselled the king to throw a tile, with theTetragrammaton written upon it, into the cavity; the waters began to sink. Ahithophel is said to have defended his use of the name of God in this emergency by referencing the practice enjoined by Scripture (Numbers 5:23) to restore marital harmony; surely a matter of small importance, he argued, compared with the threatened destruction of the world.[8] David's repeated malediction that Ahithophel would be hanged was finally realized when the latter hanged himself.

Ahithophel's death was a great loss to David, for his wisdom was so great that Scripture itself (2 Samuel 16:23) avoids calling him a man, likening him to an angel;[9] in the passage quoted the Hebrew word for man is omitted in the text, being supplied only by the Masorah. (The preceding statement is incorrect because the word for "man" in 2 Samuel 16:23 refers to one who asks at the word of God and not to Ahithophel. Thus, its absence does not imply anything about Ahithophel.) Indeed, his wisdom bordered on that of the angels.[10] His learning in the Law was also extensive so that David did not scruple to call him "master";[11] the two things which David is there said to have learned from Ahithophel are more closely described in Masechet Kallah.[12] Ahithophel's disposition, however, was a jealous one; and he always sought to wound David by mocking remarks.[13] His devotion to the study of the Law was not founded on worthy motives.[14] Ahithophel was thirty-three years old when he died.[14] In his will, he left three warnings to his children to 1. Refrain from doing aught against a favourite of fortune. 2. Take heed not to rise up against the royal house of David and to take no part in their dissensions[15] 3. IfShavuot falls on a sunny day, then sow wheat. Posterity has been favored with the knowledge of but a small part of Ahithophel's wisdom, and that little through two widely different sources, throughSocrates, who was his disciple, and through a fortune-book written by him.[16]

Ahithophel is counted among those that have no share in the world to come.[17]

In Christian interpretation

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Christian interpreters often seeJudas Iscariot as anantitype to Ahithophel.[18]Alexander Kirkpatrick, in theCambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges, calls his suicide "the first deliberate suicide on record".[19]

Ahithophel's betrayal of David and subsequent suicide are seen as anticipating Judas' betrayal ofJesus, and the gospels' account of Judas hanging himself (Matthew 27:5).Psalm 41:9, which seems to refer to Ahithophel,[20] is quoted inJohn 13:18 as being fulfilled in Judas.[21]

References

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  1. ^Jon D. Levenson andBaruch Halpern, "The Political Import of David's Marriages,"JBL 99 [1980] 514.
  2. ^abNumbers Rabbah 22
  3. ^(Tosefta, Sotah, 4:19
  4. ^2 Samuel 16:23, Yerushalmi Sanhedrin 10 (29a), Sukkah 53a et seq.
  5. ^Legends of the Jews pp.62-67Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain.
  6. ^Tanna debe Eliyahu Rabbah 31; Midrash Tehillim 3:7; Exodus Rabbah 4, Makkot 11a
  7. ^Numbers Rabbah 4:20, Yerushalmi Sanhedrin 10 (29a)
  8. ^Sukkah 53a,b
  9. ^Midrash Tehillim, 3
  10. ^Yerushalmi Sanhedrin 10 2; Yalkut Shimoni, II Samuel § 142
  11. ^Avot, 6:2
  12. ^Kallah, 16a (ed. N. Coronel
  13. ^Pesikta, 2 10b; Midrash Tehillim 3:3, and parallel passages in Buber, note 68
  14. ^abSanhedrin 106b
  15. ^Yerushalmi l.c.
  16. ^Legends of the Jews pp.71-74Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain.
  17. ^Sanhedrin 11:1; Bava Batra 147a
  18. ^Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 2 Samuel 17;Pulpit Commentary on 2 Samuel 17, both accessed 5 August 2017
  19. ^Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 2 Samuel 17
  20. ^Pulpit Commentary on 2 Samuel 17: "Here Ahithophel is almost certainly intended"
  21. ^Eugen J. Pentiuc,Judas’ Profile in the Psalms: Meditation on the Holy Wednesday, accessed 5 August 2017

Attributions

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Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainEaston, Matthew George (1897). "Ahithophel".Easton's Bible Dictionary (New and revised ed.). T. Nelson and Sons.
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Achitopel".Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
 This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906)."AHITHOPHEL".The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

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