Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Jeremiah, High Priest, lauds Judith as "the great pride of our nation"


Image result for o maiden of yis'rael dancing victory

'Woe to the nations that rise up against my people!
    The Lord Almighty will take vengeance on them in the day of judgment;
he will send fire and worms into their flesh;
    they shall weep in pain forever'.

Judith 16:17


The lives of four major, indeed heroic, biblical characters were shown to have overlapped, the one with the other, in my far-reaching article:

Jonah, Job, Judith and Jeremiah



"The long-lived Jonah, Job, Judith and Jeremiah were all contemporaneous I shall be arguing here". That is what I wrote.

Jonah knew Judith:
"As the Uzziah of the Book of Judith, Jonah well knew Judith, being a fellow Simeonite, probably of the same family, and living in the same northern city, "Bethulia" (= Bethel = Shechem). Read the Book of Judith for her strong criticism of the city elders, including Uzziah (8:11-20), and for Uzziah's praise of Judith (13:18-20). Later we shall read that Jonah (as Isaiah) also made some glowing references to Jeremiah".

Job and his father knew (of) Jonah.
"Job's father, Tobit, does refer to "Jonah" (Tobit 14:8), and also to Jonah's father, "Amos" (Tobit 2:6)".

Judith knew Jonah (see above).

Jeremiah knew (of) Jonah.
"Jeremiah clearly refers to the Jonah incident (51:34): "Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon has devoured me, he has crushed me, he has made me an empty vessel, he has swallowed me up like a dragon [whale], he has filled his belly with my delicates, he has cast me out"."

Jeremiah knew Judith.
What I forgot to add in that article was that Jeremiah, identified as the High Priest, Eliakim, the "Joakim" (var. Eliakim) of the Book of Judith, wonderfully praised Judith after her incredible victory which saved Israel (Judith 15:8-10):

"Then the high priest Joakim and the elders of the Israelites who lived in Jerusalem came to witness the good things that the Lord had done for Israel, and to see Judith and to wish her well. When they met her, they all blessed her with one accord and said to her, 'You are the glory of Jerusalem, you are the great boast of Israel, you are the great pride of our nation! You have done all this with your own hand; you have done great good to Israel, and God is well pleased with it. May the Almighty Lord bless you forever!' And all the people said, 'Amen'."

Words applied in Catholicism to the even greater victory, the crushing the Serpent's head, of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Jonah, Job, Judith and Jeremiah


Introduction


The long-lived Jonah, Job, Judith and Jeremiah were all contemporaneous I shall be arguing here.

Jonah's long life (120-130 years by tradition) spanned from king Jeroboam II of Israel (2 Kings 14:25) to the early reign of Esarhaddon king of Assyria.

Job would have been born somewhat later than Jonah, probably closer to the reign of king Hoshea the last ruler of the kingdom of Israel. His long life of at least 140 years (Job 42:16) would have overlapped with much of the life of Jonah, and would have taken Job down to the Chaldean period (Job 1:17).

Judith was a young and beautiful woman late in the reign of Esarhaddon's predecessor, Sennacherib. Her long life of 105 years (Judith 16:23) would have taken her, too, into the Chaldean era.

Jeremiah was presumably later than these three, he having begun his ministry in the 13th year of Josiah, king of Judah (Jeremiah 1:2). However, according to what I am going to be suggesting (see

An important note ... below), Jeremiah was actually a young man (na'ar) at the same time as Judith was a young woman, meaning that Jeremiah and Judith would have been born near to the same time.

 

1. Jonah

Jonah I have multi-identified as the long-lived Hosea = Isaiah, and also as the Simeonite "Uzziah" of the Book of Judith:

De-coding Jonah

https://www.academia.edu/43239120/De-coding_Jonah

who, collectively, spanned from Jeroboam II (Hosea 1:1) to at least the reign of king Hezekiah of Judah (Isaiah 1:1).
As the Uzziah of the Book of Judith, Jonah well knew Judith, being a fellow Simeonite, probably of the same family, and living in the same northern city, "Bethulia" (= Bethel = Shechem).
Read the Book of Judith for her strong criticism of the city elders, including Uzziah (8:11-20), and for Uzziah's praise of Judith (13:18-20). Later we shall read that Jonah (as Isaiah) also made some glowing references to Jeremiah.

An important note on the above "De-coding Jonah" article:
This article is absolutely crucial for an understanding of the chronology of Jonah, and how the prophet Jeremiah could have been contemporaneous with both Isaiah (= Jonah) and Judith. One of this article's important conclusions is that the era of Hezekiah, the era of Josiah, of Judah, was the same era, that:
Hezekiah = Josiah;
Shebna = Shaphan;
Joah = Joah;
Hilkiah = Hilkiah;
and so on.
Esarhaddon now becomes identified with Nebuchednezzar 'the Great'. See e.g. my article:

Esarhaddon a tolerable fit for King Nebuchednezzar
https://www.academia.edu/38017900/Esarhaddon_a_tolerable_fit_for_King_Nebuchednezzar

And, in 3. and 4., I shall say who, respectively, Judith is in a Josian context, and who Jeremiah is in a Hezekian context.

2. Job

Job I have identified as Tobias, the son of Tobit. See e.g. my article:

Job's Life and Times

https://www.academia.edu/3787850/Jobs_Life_and_Times

a biblical character who belongs to the neo-Assyrian era of "Shalmaneser", of "Sennacherib" and of "Esarhaddon".
Job, therefore, was not some very ancient patriarch of the approximate time of Abraham, as is often thought, nor an Ice Age person at the time of the dinosaurs ("Behemoth" and "Leviathan"), as is also sometimes suggested.
Living as he did in Nineveh, then later in "Uz" (= Transjordanian Hauran), Job we would not expect to be too much involved in the mainstream affairs of Jerusalem, as were, say, Isaiah and Jeremiah. However, Job's father, Tobit, does refer to "Jonah" (Tobit 14:8), and also to Jonah's father, "Amos" (Tobit 2:6).
In a version of Tobit, "Jonah" is replaced by "Nahum", whom I have tentatively identified as Job himself living at Nineveh. Nahum's "Elkosh" (Nahum 1:1) being, perhaps, Ali Kosh near Nineveh. See my article:

Prophet Nahum as Tobias-Job Comforted

https://www.academia.edu/8729042/Prophet_Nahum_as_Tobias-Job_Comforted

 

3. Judith

She, the Simeonite heroine, was, as I have argued in various articles, the Divinely-inspired catalyst for the defeat of Sennacherib's Assyrian army of 185,000. See e.g. my:

"Nadin" (Nadab) of Tobit is the "Holofernes" of Judith

https://www.academia.edu/36576110/_Nadin_Nadab_of_Tobit_is_the_Holofernes_of_Judith

this possibly being the most courageous act of any Old Testament woman, pointing to the Virgin Mary's crushing of the Serpent's head.
In the Josian era, Judith is the famous biblical interpreter of the Law, Huldah. See e.g. my article:

Huldah the Great

https://www.academia.edu/43361211/Huldah_the_Great

Judith's wealthy husband, Manasseh, must then be Huldah's husband, Shallum, whom I have tentatively identified as the prophet Zephaniah, a Kohathite Levite, but geographically a "Simeonite" (as some legends indeed designate him):

Prophet Husband of Judith-Huldah

https://www.academia.edu/43420056/Prophet_Husband_of_Judith-Huldah

4. Jeremiah

Most obviously now, Jeremiah, son of Hilkiah (Josian context) must be identified as Eliakim, son of Hilkiah (Hezekian context), a high priest. See e.g. my article:

Jeremiah as Baruch 1:7's 'Jehoiakim son of Hilkiah'

https://www.academia.edu/43301105/Jeremiah_as_Baruch_1_7s_Jehoiakim_son_of_Hilkiah

Jeremiah clearly refers to the Jonah incident (51:34): "Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon has devoured me, he has crushed me, he has made me an empty vessel, he has swallowed me up like a dragon [whale], he has filled his belly with my delicates, he has cast me out". "Nebuchadrezzar" [Nebuchednezzar] (= Esarhaddon) being my "king of Nineveh" of the Book of Jonah (3:6).
Jonah (as Isaiah) will refer to Jeremiah in his Oracle (22:20-25), Jeremiah also being the most fitting candidate (according to some commentators) for Isaiah's "Suffering Servant", pointing the way to Jesus Christ, the supreme Suffering Servant.

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Huldah the Great


Women in the Bible – Jephthah's Daughter – CEPAD

Part One:
Era of Josiah merged with Era of Hezekiah


by

Damien F. Mackey




Why did king Josiah, upon the finding of the Book of the Law, send his chief ministers to consult, not the male prophets, Jeremiah and Zephaniah, but a mysterious female prophetess named Huldah (חֻלְדָּה, a Hebrew name supposedly meaning "weasel" or "mole")? (2 Kings 22:8-20).

The situation becomes even more extraordinary in the context of my revision which merges the era of king Josiah with that of king Hezekiah, showing that the king's servant "Asaiah" of Josiah is to be identified with the great Isaiah himself. Previously I wrote on this:
"What has king Hezekiah of Judah to do with Jeremiah? it may well be asked.
That is all explained in my most recent article:

De-coding Jonah


in which I merge the era of king Hezekiah with the era of king Josiah, Jeremiah’s era. And so we find:

Hezekiah becomes Josiah;
Hilkiah becomes Hilkiah the high priest;
Shebna the secretary becomes Shaphan the secretary;
Joah the recorder becomes Joah the recorder;
Isaiah becomes Asaiah.

And there will be more names to be added to this list". [End of quote]

Indeed, I have since added Jeremiah as Eliakim son of Hilkiah:

Jeremiah was both prophet and high priest


Two things to be noted here.

Firstly, the prophet Isaiah (= Asaiah), to whom the king was wont to send his officials for consultation (Isaiah 37:2), is now to be found amongst those of the king's officials consulting the woman, Huldah. And, secondly, regarding my statement "there will be more names to be added to this list", we need a female from the era of king Hezekiah to merge with Huldah of king Josiah's era - a female pairing to restore some balance for all of those male connections.

Can we find such an incredibly famous woman at the time of king Hezekiah?
To achieve this, which is the purpose of this present article (see Part Two), will fully serve to answer the question in my title above, "Huldah who?"


Part Two: Huldah’s identity
in reign of king Hezekiah


There is only one woman, and one woman alone, at the time of king Hezekiah of Judah, who can possibly be identified with the famous prophetess Huldah.
That is the Simeonite heroine, Judith.

Before I had realised that the era of Hezekiah had to be merged with the era of Josiah, Huldah’s era - and having already come to the conclusion that Huldah must be Judith - I had been forced, chronologically, to regard Huldah as Judith in her old age.
That interpretation, for me, accounted, perhaps, for how Huldah - traditionally a mentor of king Josiah - had been able to speak so bluntly about the pious king: ‘Tell the man …’.
2 Kings 22:15-16: “She said to them, ‘This is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: Tell the man who sent you to me, ‘This is what the Lord says: I am going to bring disaster on this place and its people, according to everything written in the book the king of Judah has read’.’”
Here was an aged and famous prophetess, I had thought, bluntly speaking her mind.

{Although it may have been that Huldah was merely quoting verbatim the words that the Lord himself had directed her to speak}.

Huldah appeared to me to have had the same sort of bluntness that Judith had exhibited when addressing the elders of “Bethulia” (e.g., Judith 8:11-13):

‘… you were wrong to speak to the people as you did today. You should not have made a solemn promise before God that you would surrender the town to our enemies if the Lord did not come to our aid within a few days. What right do you have to put God to the test as you have done today? Who are you to put yourselves in God's place in dealing with human affairs? It is the Lord Almighty that you are putting to the test! Will you never learn?’ 

And I had compared Judith, in this regard, with the forthright and outspoken Joan of Arc:

Judith of Bethulia and Joan of Arc


With Josiah’s era now to be merged into the era of Hezekiah, though, there must take place a major chronological reconsideration. Instead of Huldah’s statement belonging to an historical phase significantly later than the victory of the young (or young-ish) Judith over the Assyrian commander-in-chief (on this, see my):

"Nadin" (Nadab) of Tobit is the "Holofernes" of Judith


the Huldah incident must now be regarded as pre-dating by some several years Judith’s victory.
This would mean that Huldah was quite young when she uttered her words, making it even more extraordinary that king Josiah had chosen to send his chief ministers, including the great Isaiah (= Asaiah), all males, to consult the gifted woman.
In this way, we might understand Isaiah’s praise of Judith when he, a fellow Simeonite, said of her, as Uzziah, that Judith’s wisdom was known ever since she was a child (Judith 8:28-29):

“Then Uzziah answered Judith,
‘Everything you have said makes good sense, and no one can argue with it. This is not the first time you have shown wisdom. Ever since you were a child, all of us have recognized the soundness and maturity of your judgment’.” 

Uzziah (= Isaiah) also calls Judith here ‘a deeply religious woman’ (v. 31).

This, therefore, must go a long way towards explaining why the woman Huldah (= Judith) was consulted by king Josiah’s most eminent male officials – even over the great Isaiah himself.

So, adding to our former merger:

Hezekiah becomes Josiah;
Hilkiah becomes Hilkiah the high priest;
Shebna the secretary becomes Shaphan the secretary;
Joah the recorder becomes Joah the recorder;
Isaiah becomes Asaiah;
Eliakim son of Hilkiah becomes Jeremiah son of Hilkiah,

Judith becomes Huldah.


This last identification is not without several difficulties pertaining to genealogy and geography that will need to be addressed now in Part Three.


Part Three:
The heroine’s husband


Happily, we know something about Judith's husband, about Huldahs husband.
But is the former husband the same person as the latter husband?

Whereas Judith's husband seems to have been situated in “Bethulia”, identified as Bethel-Shechem in the north, Huldah, and presumably her husband, appears to dwell in Jerusalem, in the south.

The apparent geographical problem, at least, can easily be accounted for with reference to Isaiah and his father, Amos, the father-son combination of, respectively, Uzziah and Micah, of the Book of Judith. Like Judith, these men were Simeonites, and were no doubt related to her. They spent large portions of their time in the northern Bethel, but were also often found residing in Jerusalem as advisers to a succession of kings of Judah.
Jewish legend even has Amos as the “brother” (no doubt a marriage relationship) of king Amaziah of Judah.

Judith’s husband, “Manasseh, who belonged to her tribe and family”, had died only about three years before the Assyrians invaded Israel (Judith 8:2-5): 

Her husband Manasseh, who belonged to her tribe and family, had died during the barley harvest. For as he stood overseeing those who were binding sheaves in the field, he was overcome by the burning heat, and took to his bed and died in his town Bethulia.
So they buried him with his ancestors in the field between Dothan and Balamon. Judith remained as a widow for three years and four months at home where she set up a tent for herself on the roof of her house. She put sackcloth around her waist and dressed in widow’s clothing. 

He had left Judith a very wealthy woman (v. 7): “Her husband Manasseh had left her gold and silver, men and women slaves, livestock, and fields; and she maintained this estate”.

And Judith never married again (16:21-24):

After this they all returned home to their own inheritances. Judith went to Bethulia, and remained on her estate. For the rest of her life she was honored throughout the whole country. Many desired to marry her, but she gave herself to no man all the days of her life after her husband Manasseh died and was gathered to his people. She became more and more famous, and grew old in her husband’s house, reaching the age of one hundred five. She set her maid free. She died in Bethulia, and they buried her in the cave of her husband Manasseh; and the house of Israel mourned her for seven days. Before she died she distributed her property to all those who were next of kin to her husband Manasseh, and to her own nearest kindred.

That is all that we learn about Manasseh.

We also need to take into account the fact that names in the Book of Judith have become confused over time. See e.g. my article:

Book of Judith: confusion of names



Thus Manasseh, for instance, may be found elsewhere in the Scriptures under a different name.
Perhaps, for example, the name “Manasseh” has been derived (in Greek) from a name like MeshelemiahMeshillemithMeshillemothMeshullamMeshullemeth, all being “related names” to Shallum, the husband of Huldah.

Shallum was renowned in Jewish legends. We read of Huldah and Shallum in the article, “Huldah”: https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/philosophy-and-religion/biblical-proper-names-biographies/huldah

HULDAH (Heb. חֻלְדָּה; "weasel"), wife of Shallum son of Tikvah, the "wardrobe keeper" of the king; one of the five women in the Bible referred to as nevi'ah, "female prophet") and the only woman prophet in the book of Kings (ii Kings 22:14–20). She was consulted by *Josiah when he sent to "inquire of the Lord" concerning the Book of the Law discovered during the restoration of the Temple. She prophesied God's ultimate judgment upon the nation. However, this judgment was to be postponed until after Josiah's peaceful death because of the king's acts of repentance. Inasmuch as Josiah's death was not peaceful hers may be a genuine predictive prophecy. Most of her prophecy is molded by the authors of the Book of Kings in Deuteronomistic style. It is of interest that women prophets are well-attested in roughly contemporary Neo-Assyrian sources.
[Tikva S. Frymer /

S. David Sperling (2nd ed.)]

 

In The Aggadah


She was one of the seven prophetesses (by rabbinic count) mentioned by name in the Bible. After Josiah found the copy of the Torah in the Temple, he consulted Huldah rather than Jeremiah, because he felt that a woman would be more compassionate and more likely to intercede with God on his behalf (Meg. 14b).
Since Jeremiah was a kinsman of the prophetess, both being descended from Joshua and Rahab, the king felt no apprehension that the prophet would resent his preference for Huldah (ibid.). While Jeremiah admonished and preached repentance to the men she did likewise to the women (pr 26:129). In addition to being a prophetess, Huldah also conducted an academy in Jerusalem (Targ., ii Kings 22:14). The "Gate of Huldah" in the Temple (Mid. 1:3) was formerly the gate leading to Huldah's schoolhouse (Rashi, ii Kings 22:14). Huldah's husband Shallum, the son of Tikvah, was a man of noble descent and compassionate. Daily he would go beyond the city limits carrying a pitcher of water from which he gave every traveler a drink, and it was as a reward for his good deeds that his wife became a prophetess. Huldah's unattractive name which means "weasel" is ascribed to her arrogance when she referred to Josiah as "the man" (ii Kings 22:15) and not as king.
[Aaron Rothkoff]

 

Bibliography:


Ginzberg, Legends, index. add. bibliography: M. Cogan and H. Tadmor, ii Kings (1988), 295; S. Parpola, Assyrian Prophecies (State Archives of Assyria vol. ix; 1997), xiviii-lii". [End of quotes]

Huldah's husband must have been very old (article, “Shallum”, Jewish Encyclopedia):

".... Even at the time of the prophet Elisha, Shallum was one of the most eminent men ("mi-gedole ha-dor") in the country. Yet he did not think it beneath his dignity to lend personal aid to the poor and the needy. It was one of his daily habits to go outside the gates of the city in order that he might give water to thirsty wanderers. God rewarded him by endowing him and his wife Huldah with the gift of prophecy. Another special reward was given him for his philanthropy, for it is he who is referred to in II Kings xiii. 21, where one who was dead awoke to life after being cast into Elisha's sepulcher and touching the prophet's bones. A son was granted him, who became distinguished for exceeding piety—Hanameel, Jeremiah's cousin (Jer. xxxii. 7; Pirḳe R. El. xxxiii.)".

This brings us to a deeper problem, genealogy.
Whereas Judith’s husband, Manasseh, would appear to have been a Simeonite, as he “belonged to her tribe and family”, Shallum was clearly a Levite. He was “son of Tikvah, the son of Harhas, keeper of the wardrobe” (2 Kings 22:14).
They, apparently, “lived in Jerusalem, in the New Quarter”.
Shallum's ancestors, Tikvah and Harhas, were Kohathite Levites (I Chronicles 6:33, 37): “From the Kohathites ....  the son of Tahath [Tikvah], the son of Assir [Harhas] ...”.

My tentative explanation would be that Manasseh was Shallum, a Kohathite Levite, hence related to the prophet Jeremiah, whose ancestors had set up home in the city of Shechem. “The hill country of Ephraim gave the Kohathites Shechem, which was a city of refuge ...”. (Giver of Truth Biblical Commentary-Vol. 1: Old Testament, pp. 405-406). There, Shallum had married into the family of Simeon, as the Ephraimite (?) father of Samuel may have married a Levite. “It is possible that Elkanah was an Ephraimite who married Hannah, ostensibly a woman from the tribe of Levi” (Robert D. Bergen, 1, 2 Samuel, p. 64). Shallum, or Manasseh, may have married a daughter of Judith's ancestor, Merari.
Judith may have been a wife of Shallum's old age, his second wife.
Shallum, or Manasseh, “belonged to her tribe and family”, but only, I suggest, through marriage.
“Before [Judith] died she distributed her property to all those who were next of kin to her husband Manasseh, and to her own nearest kindred”.

Shallum may also have possessed a field in Anathoth (Jeremiah 32:7).



Prophet Husband of Judith-Huldah

 
Minor Prophet & their Message - Zephaniah (2)


Part One:

Era of Josiah merged with Era of Hezekiah




by

Damien F. Mackey





Why did king Josiah, upon the finding of the Book of the Law, send his chief ministers to consult, not the male prophets, Jeremiah and Zephaniah, but a mysterious female prophetess named Huldah (חֻלְדָּה, a Hebrew name supposedly meaning "weasel" or "mole")? (2 Kings 22:8-20).



The situation becomes even more extraordinary in the context of my revision which merges the era of king Josiah with that of king Hezekiah, showing that the king's servant "Asaiah" of Josiah is to be identified with the great Isaiah himself. Previously I wrote on this:

"What has king Hezekiah of Judah to do with Jeremiah? it may well be asked.

That is all explained in my most recent article:



De-coding Jonah





in which I merge the era of king Hezekiah with the era of king Josiah, Jeremiah’s era. And so we find:



Hezekiah becomes Josiah;

Hilkiah becomes Hilkiah the high priest;

Shebna the secretary becomes Shaphan the secretary;

Joah the recorder becomes Joah the recorder;

Isaiah becomes Asaiah.



And there will be more names to be added to this list". [End of quote]



Indeed, I have since added Jeremiah as Eliakim son of Hilkiah:



Jeremiah was both prophet and high priest






Two things to be noted here.



Firstly, the prophet Isaiah (= Asaiah), to whom the king was wont to send his officials for consultation (Isaiah 37:2), is now to be found amongst those of the king's officials consulting the woman, Huldah. And, secondly, regarding my statement "there will be more names to be added to this list", we need a female from the era of king Hezekiah to merge with Huldah of king Josiah's era - a female pairing to restore some balance for all of those male connections.



Can we find such an incredibly famous woman at the time of king Hezekiah?

To achieve this, which is the purpose of this present article (see Part Two), will fully serve to answer the question in my title above, "Huldah who?"





Part Two: Huldah’s identity

in reign of king Hezekiah





There is only one woman, and one woman alone, at the time of king Hezekiah of Judah, who can possibly be identified with the famous prophetess Huldah.

That is the Simeonite heroine, Judith.



Before I had realised that the era of Hezekiah had to be merged with the era of Josiah, Huldah’s era - and having already come to the conclusion that Huldah must be Judith - I had been forced, chronologically, to regard Huldah as Judith in her old age.

That interpretation, for me, accounted, perhaps, for how Huldah - traditionally a mentor of king Josiah - had been able to speak so bluntly about the pious king: ‘Tell the man …’.

2 Kings 22:15-16: “She said to them, ‘This is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: Tell the man who sent you to me, ‘This is what the Lord says: I am going to bring disaster on this place and its people, according to everything written in the book the king of Judah has read’.’”

Here was an aged and famous prophetess, I had thought, bluntly speaking her mind.



{Although it may have been that Huldah was merely quoting verbatim the words that the Lord himself had directed her to speak}.



Huldah appeared to me to have had the same sort of bluntness that Judith had exhibited when addressing the elders of “Bethulia” (e.g., Judith 8:11-13):



‘… you were wrong to speak to the people as you did today. You should not have made a solemn promise before God that you would surrender the town to our enemies if the Lord did not come to our aid within a few days. What right do you have to put God to the test as you have done today? Who are you to put yourselves in God's place in dealing with human affairs? It is the Lord Almighty that you are putting to the test! Will you never learn?’ 



And I had compared Judith, in this regard, with the forthright and outspoken Joan of Arc:



Judith of Bethulia and Joan of Arc






With Josiah’s era now to be merged into the era of Hezekiah, though, there must take place a major chronological reconsideration. Instead of Huldah’s statement belonging to an historical phase significantly later than the victory of the young (or young-ish) Judith over the Assyrian commander-in-chief (on this, see my):



"Nadin" (Nadab) of Tobit is the "Holofernes" of Judith






the Huldah incident must now be regarded as pre-dating by some several years Judith’s victory.

This would mean that Huldah was quite young when she uttered her words, making it even more extraordinary that king Josiah had chosen to send his chief ministers, including the great Isaiah (= Asaiah), all males, to consult the gifted woman.

In this way, we might understand Isaiah’s praise of Judith when he, a fellow Simeonite, said of her, as Uzziah, that Judith’s wisdom was known ever since she was a child (Judith 8:28-29):



“Then Uzziah answered Judith,

‘Everything you have said makes good sense, and no one can argue with it. This is not the first time you have shown wisdom. Ever since you were a child, all of us have recognized the soundness and maturity of your judgment’.” 



Uzziah (= Isaiah) also calls Judith here ‘a deeply religious woman’ (v. 31).



This, therefore, must go a long way towards explaining why the woman Huldah (= Judith) was consulted by king Josiah’s most eminent male officials – even over the great Isaiah himself.



So, adding to our former merger:



Hezekiah becomes Josiah;

Hilkiah becomes Hilkiah the high priest;

Shebna the secretary becomes Shaphan the secretary;

Joah the recorder becomes Joah the recorder;

Isaiah becomes Asaiah;

Eliakim son of Hilkiah becomes Jeremiah son of Hilkiah,



Judith becomes Huldah.





This last identification is not without several difficulties pertaining to genealogy and geography that will need to be addressed now in Part Three.





Part Three:

The heroine’s husband





Happily, we know something about Judith's husband, about Huldahs husband.

But is the former husband the same person as the latter husband?



Whereas Judith's husband seems to have been situated in “Bethulia”, identified as Bethel-Shechem in the north, Huldah, and presumably her husband, appears to dwell in Jerusalem, in the south.



The apparent geographical problem, at least, can easily be accounted for with reference to Isaiah and his father, Amos, the father-son combination of, respectively, Uzziah and Micah, of the Book of Judith. Like Judith, these men were Simeonites, and were no doubt related to her. They spent large portions of their time in the northern Bethel, but were also often found residing in Jerusalem as advisers to a succession of kings of Judah.

Jewish legend even has Amos as the “brother” (no doubt a marriage relationship) of king Amaziah of Judah.



Judith’s husband, “Manasseh, who belonged to her tribe and family”, had died only about three years before the Assyrians invaded Israel (Judith 8:2-5): 



Her husband Manasseh, who belonged to her tribe and family, had died during the barley harvest. For as he stood overseeing those who were binding sheaves in the field, he was overcome by the burning heat, and took to his bed and died in his town Bethulia.

So they buried him with his ancestors in the field between Dothan and Balamon. Judith remained as a widow for three years and four months at home where she set up a tent for herself on the roof of her house. She put sackcloth around her waist and dressed in widow’s clothing. 



He had left Judith a very wealthy woman (v. 7): “Her husband Manasseh had left her gold and silver, men and women slaves, livestock, and fields; and she maintained this estate”.



And Judith never married again (16:21-24):



After this they all returned home to their own inheritances. Judith went to Bethulia, and remained on her estate. For the rest of her life she was honored throughout the whole country. Many desired to marry her, but she gave herself to no man all the days of her life after her husband Manasseh died and was gathered to his people. She became more and more famous, and grew old in her husband’s house, reaching the age of one hundred five. She set her maid free. She died in Bethulia, and they buried her in the cave of her husband Manasseh; and the house of Israel mourned her for seven days. Before she died she distributed her property to all those who were next of kin to her husband Manasseh, and to her own nearest kindred.



That is all that we learn about Manasseh.



We also need to take into account the fact that names in the Book of Judith have become confused over time. See e.g. my article:



Book of Judith: confusion of names







Thus Manasseh, for instance, may be found elsewhere in the Scriptures under a different name.

Perhaps, for example, the name “Manasseh” has been derived (in Greek) from a name like MeshelemiahMeshillemithMeshillemothMeshullamMeshullemeth, all being “related names” to Shallum, the husband of Huldah.



Shallum was renowned in Jewish legends. We read of Huldah and Shallum in the article, “Huldah”: https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/philosophy-and-religion/biblical-proper-names-biographies/huldah



HULDAH (Heb. חֻלְדָּה; "weasel"), wife of Shallum son of Tikvah, the "wardrobe keeper" of the king; one of the five women in the Bible referred to as nevi'ah, "female prophet") and the only woman prophet in the book of Kings (ii Kings 22:14–20). She was consulted by *Josiah when he sent to "inquire of the Lord" concerning the Book of the Law discovered during the restoration of the Temple. She prophesied God's ultimate judgment upon the nation. However, this judgment was to be postponed until after Josiah's peaceful death because of the king's acts of repentance. Inasmuch as Josiah's death was not peaceful hers may be a genuine predictive prophecy. Most of her prophecy is molded by the authors of the Book of Kings in Deuteronomistic style. It is of interest that women prophets are well-attested in roughly contemporary Neo-Assyrian sources.

[Tikva S. Frymer /



S. David Sperling (2nd ed.)]

 


 


 


 


In The Aggadah




She was one of the seven prophetesses (by rabbinic count) mentioned by name in the Bible. After Josiah found the copy of the Torah in the Temple, he consulted Huldah rather than Jeremiah, because he felt that a woman would be more compassionate and more likely to intercede with God on his behalf (Meg. 14b).

Since Jeremiah was a kinsman of the prophetess, both being descended from Joshua and Rahab, the king felt no apprehension that the prophet would resent his preference for Huldah (ibid.). While Jeremiah admonished and preached repentance to the men she did likewise to the women (pr 26:129). In addition to being a prophetess, Huldah also conducted an academy in Jerusalem (Targ., ii Kings 22:14). The "Gate of Huldah" in the Temple (Mid. 1:3) was formerly the gate leading to Huldah's schoolhouse (Rashi, ii Kings 22:14). Huldah's husband Shallum, the son of Tikvah, was a man of noble descent and compassionate. Daily he would go beyond the city limits carrying a pitcher of water from which he gave every traveler a drink, and it was as a reward for his good deeds that his wife became a prophetess. Huldah's unattractive name which means "weasel" is ascribed to her arrogance when she referred to Josiah as "the man" (ii Kings 22:15) and not as king.

[Aaron Rothkoff]

 


Bibliography:




Ginzberg, Legends, index. add. bibliography: M. Cogan and H. Tadmor, ii Kings (1988), 295; S. Parpola, Assyrian Prophecies (State Archives of Assyria vol. ix; 1997), xiviii-lii". [End of quotes]



Huldah's husband must have been very old (article, “Shallum”, Jewish Encyclopedia):




".... Even at the time of the prophet Elisha, Shallum was one of the most eminent men ("mi-gedole ha-dor") in the country. Yet he did not think it beneath his dignity to lend personal aid to the poor and the needy. It was one of his daily habits to go outside the gates of the city in order that he might give water to thirsty wanderers. God rewarded him by endowing him and his wife Huldah with the gift of prophecy. Another special reward was given him for his philanthropy, for it is he who is referred to in II Kings xiii. 21, where one who was dead awoke to life after being cast into Elisha's sepulcher and touching the prophet's bones. A son was granted him, who became distinguished for exceeding piety—Hanameel, Jeremiah's cousin (Jer. xxxii. 7; Pirḳe R. El. xxxiii.)".



This brings us to a deeper problem, genealogy.

Whereas Judith’s husband, Manasseh, would appear to have been a Simeonite, as he “belonged to her tribe and family”, Shallum was clearly a Levite. He was “son of Tikvah, the son of Harhas, keeper of the wardrobe” (2 Kings 22:14).

They, apparently, “lived in Jerusalem, in the New Quarter”.

Shallum's ancestors, Tikvah and Harhas, were Kohathite Levites (I Chronicles 6:33, 37): “From the Kohathites ....  the son of Tahath [Tikvah], the son of Assir [Harhas] ...”.



My tentative explanation would be that Manasseh was Shallum, a Kohathite Levite, hence related to the prophet Jeremiah, whose ancestors had set up home in the city of Shechem. “The hill country of Ephraim gave the Kohathites Shechem, which was a city of refuge ...”.

(Giver of Truth Biblical Commentary-Vol. 1: Old Testament, pp. 405-406). There, Shallum had married into the family of Simeon, as the Ephraimite (?) father of Samuel may have married a Levite. “It is possible that Elkanah was an Ephraimite who married Hannah, ostensibly a woman from the tribe of Levi” (Robert D. Bergen, 1, 2 Samuel, p. 64). Shallum, or Manasseh, may have married a daughter of Judith's ancestor, Merari.

Judith may have been a wife of Shallum's old age, his second wife.

Shallum, or Manasseh, “belonged to her tribe and family”, but only, I suggest, through marriage.

“Before [Judith] died she distributed her property to all those who were next of kin to her husband Manasseh, and to her own nearest kindred”.



Shallum may also have possessed a field in Anathoth (Jeremiah 32:7).











Part Four:

The prophet Zephaniah as Shallum-Manasseh





“Woe to you who long for the day of the Lord! Why do you long for the day of the Lord?
That day will be darkness, not light”.



Amos 5:18



“The great day of the Lord is near—near and coming quickly.
The cry on the day of the Lord is bitter; the Mighty Warrior shouts his battle cry”.



Zephaniah 1:14







Zephaniah appears to me to have, like Shallum, a Levite genealogy, except that, whereas Shallum is Kohathite Levite - as argued in Part Three - the lengthy genealogy of Zephaniah looks to me definitely like a Merarite Levite one. Zephaniah, who must have been important to have been introduced with an untypically lengthy genealogy (1:1): “Zephaniah son of Cushi, the son of Gedaliah, the son of Amariah, the son of Hezekiah [var. Hilkiah] ...”, was, again like Shallum-Manasseh, a contemporary of king Josiah, as argued above, “during the reign of Josiah ...” (1:1).



In I Chronicles 6 we finally seem to find our genealogical pathway.

Firstly, we are given the chronological location to the time of king David (vv. 31-32) “These are the men David put in charge of the music in the house of the Lord after the Ark came to rest there. They ministered with music before the tabernacle, the tent of meeting, until Solomon built the Temple of the Lord in Jerusalem. They performed their duties according to the regulations laid down for them”.



Now compare the genealogy of Zephaniah with this Merarite list (vv. 44, 45):



“... and from their associates, the Merarites, at his left hand:

Ethan son of Kishi (var. Kushaiah), the son of Abdi,

the son of Malluk, the son of Hashabiah,

the son of Amaziah, the son of Hilkiah ...”.



Cushi - Kishi (var. Kishaiah/Kushaiah); Amaziah - Amariah; Hilkiah - Hilkiah.



Young Jehudi of Jeremiah 36:14 appears to have been of the very same Cushi lineage: “Jehudi son of Nethaniah, the son of Shelemiah, the son of Cushi ...”, again an impressive genealogy.



The “Ethan” above, in the Merarite list, a contemporary of King David, could possibly be the same as Jehudi's “Nethaniah”. Thus T. K. Cheyne writes in “From Isaiah to Ezra: A Study of Ethanites and Jerahmeelites”, The American Journal of Theology, 5, no. 3 (Jul., 1901), p. 435: “Elnathan is a variation of Nethaniah, which is an altered form (note the reflex action of n) of the ethnic Ethani”.

This would then give us the Merarite line as (with gaps):



Nethaniah-Ethan; Cushi - Kishi (Kishaiah); Amaziah - Amariah; Hilkiah - Hilkiah.



{I am not claiming that the names Amaziah and Amariah are of the same meaning, but they are alike and might easily have been confused}.



Given that Jehudi, at the time of Baruch, was at least a close contemporary of the prophet Zephaniah, the latter’s ancestor “Cushi” could not have been his actual father, as the superscription of Zephaniah 1:1 might seem to imply. Cushi was at the very least the great grandfather of Jehudi, and hence a few generations removed from Zephaniah.

Remember that Eliakim (son of Hilkiah), high priest at the time of king Hezekiah, was still in office, as Jehoiakim (son of Hilkiah) in the days of Baruch, Jehudi’s contemporary.



Zephaniah a Simeonite?



With Shallum, husband of Huldah (my Judith), a Kohathite Levite, and the prophet Zephaniah, a Merarite Levite, I would have left the matter alone right there.



Except that there is a tradition (pseudo-Epiphanius) that Zephaniah was a Simeonite - as I have argued Shallum to have been (as Judith’s husband “Manasseh”) through marriage. Regarding the Simeonite tradition, we read in The Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Testament, and Apocrypha, Volume 2:



According to Epiphanius, [Zephaniah] was of the tribe of Simeon, and of mount Sarabatha, a place not mentioned in Scripture. Dr. Gray thinks it probable, that the place of his nativity was Saraa, near Eshthaol, in the tribe of Simeon, which, by the addition of the common word beth to the name of places, would come near to Sarabatha. The Jews are of opinion, that the ancestors of Zephaniah, mentioned at the beginning of this prophecy, were all prophets themselves. Some have pretended, but without any foundation, except from the enumeration of his ancestors, that he was of an illustrious family.



Zephaniah would most certainly have been “of an illustrious family”, “all prophets themselves”, if he were related through marriage to the Simeonite clan of Amos, Isaiah, and Judith (= the prophetess Huldah). Tradition has Zephaniah “buried in a cave” in the north, and Judith’s husband was likewise buried in a cave near “Bethulia” (my Shechem) (Judith 16:22).

It would not be surprising, then, if Zephaniah (meaning “northerner’?) were closely related to Amos and Isaiah, that one might find, as Greg A. King writes (“The Message of Zephaniah: an urgent echo”, Andrews University Seminary Studies, Autumn 1996, Vol. 32, No. 2, p. 212), “thematic and verbal parallels between the book of Zephaniah … and the books of the eighth-century prophets, Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, and Micah …”.

In my revision, Amos is Micah and Isaiah is Hosea (refer back to “De-coding Jonah” article).



Marriage would be the likely way that a Merarite Levite would find his way into the Ephraïmite city of Shechem, which was, as we have found, a city of refuge for the Kohathites. It was not one of the cities set aside for the Merarites, however (I Chronicles 6:63): “The descendants of Merari, clan by clan, were allotted twelve towns from the tribes of Reuben, Gad and Zebulun”.



Zephaniah's genealogy includes the name Hezekiah, though some versions have Hilkiah, which I accept. Regarding any connection back to king Hezekiah, some have expressed doubts about this. For instance, according to the Jewish virtual library: “The genealogy given in Zephaniah 1:1 traces Zephaniah's ancestry back four generations to a certain Hezekiah, who some have identified with Hezekiah, king of Judah (715–687 B.C.E.) [sic], although this identification is sometimes doubted because Hezekiah is not referred to as king ...”:


The connection would be quite impossible in my revision, given that Zephaniah was an actual contemporary of king Hezekiah, as Josiah. As said, some texts replace the name “Hezekiah” with the variant reading, “Hilkiah”, in Zephaniah's superscription.

“Hilkiah”, I believe, is the correct reading.



Can my Shallum = Manasseh, a Kohathite Levite, be connected to the prophet Zephaniah, a Merarite Levite, through, say, a marital fusion of the two related families?



Perhaps Ethan is the vital connection between Kohathite and Merarite.




…. It is not impossible, however, that the names “Heman, Calcol, and Dara” have been interpolated in the text of Chronicles [from] the passage in Kings, especially as the writer goes on to state only the descendants of Carmi or Zimri and Ethan [verses 7,8]. In this case Ethan, the son of Zerah, may be Ethan the Ezrahite; but there is no Heman the Ezrahite.

-             Kitte, S.V. A readier solution of the whole difficulty would be to suppose that “Ezrahite” in the title to Psalm 88 is merely an orthographical variety for IZRAHITE … Ch 26:23 …, a Levitical family to which the musical Heman certainly belonged [I Ch 1:33-38]; and that the epithet has crept into the title of Psalm 89 by assimilation of the names of Ethan and Heman so frequently associated together [these two Psalms being apparently closely related in authorship, and perhaps originally joined together; [see] Delitzsch, Commentar fib. den Psalter, 1;653 sq.]. SEE ZARHITE.

-              



For the Izharites were Kohathite Levites:




(Izharites): “The descendants of Izhar, son of Kohath, and grandson of Levi (Numbers 3:19,27). In David's reign some of these were "over the treasures of the house of Yahweh" (1 Chronicles 26:23), others "were for the outward business over Israel, for officers and judges" (ibid., 26:29)”.