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Summary: Abimelech means “my father a king” or “father of a king.” This is the name of 5 biblical men; 4 were kings. Abimelech was the common name for Philistine kings, as was the name “Pharaoh” for Egyptian kings.

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Tom lowe

1/5/2022

Abimelech, King of Gerar

Abimelech[1] means “my father a king” or “father of a king.” This is the name of 5 biblical men; 4 were kings. Abimelech was the common name for Philistine kings, as was the name “Pharaoh” for Egyptian kings. Abimelech, the Philistine king of Gerar, reigned during the time of Abraham (Genesis 20:1-18). This is the Abimelech who will be our subject today. By the intervention of Providence, Sarah was delivered from his harem and was restored to her husband, Abraham. As a mark of respect, the king gave Abraham valuable gifts. He offered him a settlement in any part of his country. At the same time, he delicately and yet severely rebuked him for having practiced deception upon him by pretending that Sarah was only his sister.

Among the gifts presented by the king were a thousand pieces of silver as a “covering of the eyes” for Sarah, i.e., either as an atoning gift or a testimony of her innocence in the sight of all. Alternatively, perhaps the silver was to procure a veil for Sarah to conceal her beauty and thus reproof (rebuke, disapproval) to her for not having worn a veil, which she apparently ought to have done in that culture as a married woman.

A few years after this, Abimelech visited Abraham, who had moved southward beyond his territory and entered into an alliance of peace and friendship with him. This league was the first of which we have any record. A mutual oath confirmed it at Beer-sheba (Genesis 21:22-34).

General Notes [more info.]:

[1] Abimelech is a cognomen (surname, nickname) applied to Philistine rulers as Pharaoh, Agag, and Jabin were also applied by the Egyptians, Amalekites, and Canaanites. This title is used of three different persons in the OT: one during Abraham’s time (Gen 20; 21), one during Isaac’s time (ch. 26), and one during David’s days (Ps 34, title).

The king of Gerar was titled Abimelech. Seeing Abraham’s wife Sarah, as Abraham sojourned with his flocks in his country after the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the king or Abimelech of Gerar took her, intending to make her his wife. Abraham, again fearing for his life as he had with Pharaoh (Gen 12:10-20), declared that Sarah was his sister. Whether Abraham was implying that she was doubly protected based on the Nuzu documents is uncertain. There were marriage documents and “sistership documents”; thus, some wives simultaneously had the juridical status of a wife and sister, each recorded in separate, independent, legal documents. Abraham may therefore have been technically correct when he referred to Sarah as his “sister” if she were thus protected. When Abimelech discovered the whole truth or understood the implications of this Hurrian[A].

[A] Hurrian Definition & Meaning - [noun] a member of an ancient non-Semitic people of northern

Mesopotamia, Syria, and eastern Asia Minor about 1500 b.c.

Practice, he asked Abraham why he had done this to him. Abraham answered that he thought “the fear of God” (i.e., true religion) was not in Gerar; therefore, he would be slain for his wife’s sake (Gen 20:11). Indeed “she is my sister,...the daughter of my father, but not the daughter of my mother” (20:12). Abimelech lavished Abraham with some gifts and an invitation to graze his flock in his land to recognize his person and his intercession for him (20:14, 16, 17). Later some twenty-five miles from Gerar, a series of disputes broke out between the servants of the two men over the water wells. Finally, the covenant at a well which they called Beersheba, “well of seven or swearing,” was made by Abraham and Abimelech (21:22-34).

2. The same type of experience occurred almost a century later between Isaac and another Abimelech of Gerar (26:1-11), “king of the Philistines.” Isaac claimed that Rebekah was his sister, and God intervened when Abimelech attempted to move in. A series of incidents involving wells followed, and a covenant concluded the hostilities (26:17-32).

3. The title of Psalm 34 gives us a third Abimelech in David’s time, who was the Philistine king of Gath named Achish (1 Sam 21:10). Most commentators regard Abimelech (Ps 34) as a copyist error for Achish or confusion with Abimelech found earlier (1 Sam 21:1). This misses the point (Gen 26:1) where an Abimelech is a “king of the Philistines” in Gerar.

4. The son of Gideon (also called Jerubbabel) by a Shechemite concubine (Judg 8:31) in a matrilineal marriage (one in which the wife lives in the parental home and the children belong to the clan). After Gideon’s death, Abimelech approached the “Lords” of his clan of Shechem, which is further designated in Judges 9:28 as “the men of Hamor” who still (Gen 34) worshiped the God Berith (Judges 9:4, 9:6 46), and proposed that he be proclaimed “king.” They agreed and promptly paid him seventy pieces of silver from the treasuries of Baalberith. With this start, he hired a handful of assassins who quickly helped Abimelech slay all of his seventy brothers except for the youngest son Jotham who escaped.

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