Mt Eyval with Shechem (Nablus) at its foot |
Genesis 36:23 names him as a son of Shoval (שובל) and grandson of Se'ir the Chorite.
Deuteronomy 11:29 speaks about the curse of Mount Eyval (Ebal in most English renditions), which stands opposite Mount Gerizim in northern Ephrayim. YHVH’s injunction was that the Beney Yisra-El would be rewarded if they obeyed the law and cursed if they did not, the blessing being placed upon Gerizim and the curse upon Eyval - a kind of physical analogy for a dualistic concept of heaven and hell, in which the Beney Yisra-El supposedly do not believe. The important shrine of Shechem lay in the valley between them.
Joshua 8:30 describes Yehoshu'a building a sacrificial altar on the mountain, and reciting the law, in what must be seen as the first major covenant ceremony of the Yisra-Eli epoch in Kena'an.
The name means "void of leaves", and for anyone who has ever visited, it is a most appropriate name.
From the link to Se'ir of the Beney Chor we can presume that the mountain shrine was originally dedicated to the Kena'ani - Canaanite - equivalent of Dionysus, the Greek goat-god; the presence of the goat-god, or at least of mountain-goats, may also explain the absence of foliage from the mountainside!
From the link to Se'ir of the Beney Chor we can presume that the mountain shrine was originally dedicated to the Kena'ani - Canaanite - equivalent of Dionysus, the Greek goat-god; the presence of the goat-god, or at least of mountain-goats, may also explain the absence of foliage from the mountainside!
Is "val" (בל) then a form or variation of Ba'al (בעל)? Answer: probably not - because the Ayin (ע) is missing. But i-Ba'al would also make a splendid description of such an infertile place; not only absent of leaves, but absent of a fructifying god as well. And linguistically it would work. Cf I-zevel (אִיזֶבֶל) in 1 Kings 16:31, which is one of the two forms of Jezebel (Yah-Zevel being the other), and I-chavod (אִיכָבוֹד) in 1 Samuel 4:21.
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