1CH 1

1 Chronicles 1:33

WEB

The sons of Midian: Ephah, Epher, Hanoch, Abida, and Eldaah. All these were the sons of Keturah.

BSB

The sons of Midian: Ephah, Epher, Hanoch, Abida, and Eldaah. All of these were Keturah’s sons.

KJV

And the sons of Midian; Ephah, and Epher, and Henoch, and Abida, and Eldaah. All these are the sons of Keturah.

Matthew Henry

Verses 28–54

1 Chronicles 1:28–54

All nations but the seed of Abraham are already shaken off from this genealogy: they have no part nor lot in this matter. The Lord's portion is his people. Of them he keeps an account, knows them by name; but those who are strangers to him he beholds afar off. Not that we are to conclude that therefore no particular persons of any other nation but the seed of Abraham found favour with God. It was a truth, before Peter perceived it, that in every nation he that feared God and wrought righteousness was accepted of him. Multitudes will be brought to heaven out of all nations (Rev 7:9), and we are willing to hope there were many, very many, good people in the world, that lay out of the pale of God's covenant of peculiarity with Abraham, whose names were in the book of life, though not descended from any of the following families written in this book. The Lord knows those that are his. But Israel was a chosen nation, elect in type; and no other nation, in its national capacity, was so dignified and privileged as the Jewish nation was. That is the holy nation which is the subject of the sacred story; and therefore we are next to shake off all the seed of Abraham but the posterity of Jacob only, which were all incorporated into one nation and joined to the Lord, while the other descendants from Abraham, for aught that appears, were estranged both from God and from one another.

I. We shall have little to say of the Ishmaelites. They were the sons of the bondwoman, that were to be cast out and not to be heirs with the child of the promise; and their case was to represent that of the unbelieving Jews, who were rejected (Gal 4:22, etc.), and therefore there is little notice taken of that nation. Ishmael's twelve sons are just named here (Ch1 1:29-31), to show the performance of the promise God made to Abraham, in answer to his prayer for him, that, for Abraham's sake, he should become a great nation, and particularly that he should beget twelve princes, Gen 17:20.

II. We shall have little to say of the Midianites, who descended from Abraham's children by Keturah. They were children of the east (probably Job was one of them), and were separated from Isaac, the heir of the promise (Gen 25:6), and therefore they are only named here, Ch1 1:32. The sons of Jokshan, the son of Keturah, are named also, and the sons of Midian (Ch1 1:32, Ch1 1:33), who became most eminent, and perhaps gave denomination to all these families, as Judah to the Jews.

III. We shall not have much to say of the Edomites. They had an inveterate enmity to God's Israel; yet because they descended from Esau, the son of Isaac, we have here an account of their families, and the names of some of their famous men, Ch1 1:35 to the end. Some slight differences there are between some of the names here, and as we had them in Gen. 36, whence this whole account is taken. Three of four names that were written with a Vau there are written with a Jod here, probably the pronunciation being altered, as is usual in other languages. we now write many words very differently from what they were written but 200 years ago. Let us take occasion, from the reading of these genealogies, to think, 1. Of the multitudes that have gone through this world, have acted their part in it, and then quitted it. Job, even in his early day, saw not only every man drawing after him, but innumerable before him, Job 21:33. All these, and all theirs, had their day; many of them made a mighty noise and figure in the world; but their day came to fall, and their place knew them no more. The paths of death are trodden paths, but vestigia nulla retrorsum - none can retrace their steps. 2. Of the providence of God, which keeps up the generations of men, and so preserves that degenerate race, though guilty and obnoxious, in being upon earth. How easily could he cut it off without either a deluge or a conflagration! Write but all the children of men childless, as some are, and in a few years the earth will be eased of the burden under which it groans; but the divine patience lets the trees that cumber the ground not only grow, but propagate. As one generation, even of sinful men, passes away, another comes (Ecc 1:4; Num 32:14), and will do so while the earth remains. Destroy it not, for a blessing is in it.

Cross-references: Rev 7:9 · Gal 4:22 · 1Chr 1:29 · Gen 17:20 · Gen 25:6 · 1Chr 1:32 · 1Chr 1:33 · 1Chr 1:35 · Job 21:33 · Eccl 1:4 · Num 32:14

Hebrew interlinear

H1121

בֵּןbên/bane/

n-m — son

Derivation: from 1129;

a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etc., (like father or brother), etc.)

KJV: afflicted, age, (Ahoh-) (Ammon-) (Hachmon-) (Lev-) ite, (anoint-) ed one, appointed to, ( ) arrow, (Assyr-) (Babylon-) (Egypt-) (Grec-) ian, one born, bough, branch, breed, (young) bullock, (young) calf, × came up in, child, colt, × common, × corn, daughter, × of first, firstborn, foal, very fruitful, postage, × in, kid, lamb, ( ) man, meet, mighty, nephew, old, ( ) people, rebel, robber, × servant born, × soldier, son, spark, steward, stranger, × surely, them of, tumultuous one, valiant(-est), whelp, worthy, young (one), youth.

בֵּן

n.m — son

בֵּן 4870 n.m. son

1. son, male child, born of a woman

2. children (male and female)

3. youth, young men

4. the young of animals

5. of plant shoots

6. fig. of lifeless things, sparks, stars, arrows

7.

a. member of a guild, order or class

b. of animals son of (the) herd

8. ב׳ as n. relat. followed by word of quality, characteristic, etc.

9. n. relat. of age

בְּנוֹ

n.pr.m — his son

בְּנוֹ 1 Ch 24:26, 27 as n.pr.m. in AV, RV, but render: the sons of Jaaziah his son, & the sons of Merari by Jaaziah his son, cf. VB & Be Öt.

H4080

מִדְיָןMidyân/mid-yawn'/

n-pr-m n-pr-loc — Midjan

Derivation: the same as 4079;

Midjan, a son of Abraham; also his country and (collectively) his descendants

KJV: Midian, Midianite.

מִדְיָן

n.pr.m — Midian

מִדְיָן n.pr.m.

1. son of Abraham and Keturah

2. an Arabian tribe

3. the land of Midian; land on Ælanitic gulf

H5891

עֵיפָהʻÊyphâh/ay-faw'/

n-pr-m n-pr-f — Ephah

Derivation: the same as 5890;

Ephah, the name of a son of Midian, and of the region settled by him; also of an Israelite and of an Israelitess

KJV: Ephah.

עֵיפָה

n.pr — Ephah

עֵיפָה n.pr.

1. gent. ‘son’ of Midian

2. m. name in Judah

3. f. concubine of Caleb

H6081

עֵפֶרʻÊpher/ay'-fer/

n-pr-m — Epher

Derivation: probably a variation of 6082; gazelle;

Epher, the name of an Arabian and of two Israelites

KJV: Epher.

עֵ֫פֶר

n.pr.m — Epher

עֵ֫פֶר n.pr.m.

1. ‘son’ of Midian

2. in Judah

3. in Manasseh

H2585

חֲנוֹךְChănôwk/khan-oke'/

n-pr-m n-pr-loc — Chanok

Derivation: from 2596; initiated;

Chanok, an antediluvian patriach

KJV: Enoch.

חֲנוֹךְ

n.pr.m — Enoch

חֲנוֹךְ n.pr.m.

1. son of Cain

2. son of Jered (line of Seth), the pious Enoch, who walked with God and was taken by him

3. a son of Midian

4. a son of Reuben

H28

אֲבִידָעʼĂbîydâʻ/ab-ee-daw'/

n-pr-m — Abida

Derivation: from 1 and 3045; father of knowledge (i.e. knowing);

Abida, a son of Abraham by Keturah

KJV: Abida, Abidah.

אֲבִידָע

n.pr.m — Abida

אֲבִידָע n.pr.m. (my father took knowledge) a son of Midian

H420

אֶלְדָּעָהʼEldâʻâh/el-daw-aw'/

n-pr-m — Eldaah

Derivation: from 410 and 3045; God of knowledge;

Eldaah, a son of Midian

KJV: Eldaah.

אֶלְדָּעָה

n.pr.m — Eldaah

אֶלְדָּעָה n.pr.m. (God has called?) son of Midian

H3605

כֹּלkôl/kole/

n-m — whole, all, any, every

Derivation: or (Jeremiah 33:8) כּוֹל; from 3634;

properly, the whole; hence, all, any or every (in the singular only, but often in a plural sense)

KJV: (in) all (manner, (ye)), altogether, any (manner), enough, every (one, place, thing), howsoever, as many as, (no-) thing, ought, whatsoever, (the) whole, whoso(-ever).

כֹּל

n.m — the whole

כֹּל once כּוֹל n.m. the whole, all

1. with foll. gen. (as usually) the whole of, to be rendered, however, often in our idiom, to avoid stiffness, any or every

2. Absolutely:

a. without the art., all things, all

b. with the art. הַכֹּל

(a). where the sense is limited by the context to things (or persons) just mentioned

(b). in a wider sense, all, whether of all mankind or of all living things, the universe, or of all the circumstances of life (chiefly late)

H428

אֵלֶּהʼêl-leh/ale'-leh/

d — these, those

Derivation: prolonged from 411;

these or those

KJV: an-(the) other; one sort, so, some, such, them, these (same), they, this, those, thus, which, who(-m).

אֵ֫לֶּה

pr.pl.m — these

אֵ֫לֶּה pr.pl.m. & f. these

a. in appos. to a subst. with a pron. suff. (always without the article)

b. repeated, אלהואלה, thesethose

c. with the art. (but only after a subst. determined likewise by the art.)

d. with preps.

H6989

קְטוּרָהQᵉṭûwrâh/ket-oo-raw'/

n-pr-f — Keturah

Derivation: feminine passive participle of 6999; perfumed;

Keturah, a wife of Abraham

KJV: Keturah.

קְטוּרָה

n.pr.f — Keturah

קְטוּרָה n.pr.f. a wife of Abraham, after Sarah's death

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