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HEBREW: 453 awhyla 'Eliyhuw or (fully) whyla 'Eliyhuw'
NAVE: Elihu
EBD: Elihu
SMITH: ELIHU
ISBE: ELIHU (1) ELIHU (2)
PORTRAITS: Elihu
Eliel | Eliezar | Eliezer | Elihaba | Elihoreph | Elihu | Elijah | Elika | Elim | Elimelech | Elioenai

Elihu

In Bible versions:

Elihu: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEV
son of Tohu/Toah/Nahath; a Levite from Ephraim
a commander from Manasseh who defected to David
son of Shemaiah (Levi); a gatekeeper
brother of David and his chief officer over the tribe of Judah
son of Barachel the Buzite of the family of Ram; friend of Job

he is my God himself
Arts:
Arts Topics: The Wrath of Elihu

Hebrew

Strongs #0453: awhyla 'Eliyhuw or (fully) whyla 'Eliyhuw'

Elihu = "He is my God"

1) the younger man who rebuked Job and his three friends
2) an Ephraimite, Samuel's great grandfather
3) a Manassite warrior chief for David
4) son of Shemaiah and Korhite gatekeeper
5) David's brother

453 'Eliyhuw el-ee-hoo'

or (fully) dEliyhuwh {el-ee-hoo'}; from 410 and 1931; God of
him; Elihu, the name of one of Job's friends, and of three
Israelites:-Elihu.
see HEBREW for 0410
see HEBREW for 01931

Elihu [EBD]

whose God is he. (1.) "The son of Barachel, a Buzite" (Job 32:2), one of Job's friends. When the debate between Job and his friends is brought to a close, Elihu for the first time makes his appearance, and delivers his opinion on the points at issue (Job 32-37).

(2.) The son of Tohu, and grandfather of Elkanah (1 Sam. 1:1). He is called also Eliel (1 Chr. 6:34) and Eliab (6:27).

(3.) One of the captains of thousands of Manasseh who joined David at Ziklag (1 Chr. 12:20).

(4.) One of the family of Obed-edom, who were appointed porters of the temple under David (1 Chr. 26:7).

Elihu [NAVE]

ELIHU
1. A Buzite and one of Job's three friends, Job 32-37.
2. Son of Tohu, 1 Sam. 1:1.
Probably identical with Eliel, 1 Chr. 6:34, and Eliab, 1 Chr. 6:27.
3. A Manassite warrior, who joined David at Ziklag, 1 Chr. 12:20.
4. A porter of the temple, 1 Chr. 26:7.
5. A chief of the tribe of Judah, 1 Chr. 27:18.
Possibly Eliab, the oldest brother of David, 1 Sam. 16:6.

ELIHU [SMITH]

(whose God is he (Jehovah)).
  1. One of the interlocutors in the book of Job. [JOB, JOB, BOOK OF] He is described as the "son of Baerachel the Buzite."
  2. A forefather of Samuel the prophet. (1 Samuel 1:1)
  3. In (1 Chronicles 27:18) Elihu "of the brethren of David" is mentioned as the chief of the tribe of Judah.
  4. One of the captains of the thousands of Manasseh, (1 Chronicles 12:20) who followed David to Ziklag after he had left the Philistine army on the eve of the battle of Gilboa.
  5. A Korhite Levite in the time of David. (1 Chronicles 26:7)

ELIHU (1) [ISBE]

ELIHU (1) - e-li'-hu ('elihu; Eleiou, "He is (my) God," or "my God is He"):

(1) An ancestor of Samuel (1 Sam 1:1), called Eliel in 1 Ch 6:34 and Eliab in 1 Ch 6:27.

See ELIAB.

(2) Found in 1 Ch 27:18 for Eliab, David's eldest brother (1 Sam 16:6); called "one of the brethren of D."

(3) A Manassite who joined David at Ziklag (1 Ch 12:20).

(4) A Korahite porter (1 Ch 26:7).

(5) A friend of Job. See next article.

(6) An ancestor of Judith (Judith 8:1).

ELIHU (2) [ISBE]

ELIHU (2) - ('elihu, 'elihu', "He is (my) God"; Elious): One of the disputants in the Book of Job; a young man who, having listened in silence to the arguments of Job and his friends, is moved to prolong the discussion and from his more just views of truth set both parties right. He is of the tribe of Buz (compare Gen 22:21), a brother-tribe to that of Uz, and of the family of Ram, or Aram, that is, an Aramean. He is not mentioned as one of the characters of the story until chapter 32; and then, as the friends are silenced and Job's words are ended, Elihu has the whole field to himself, until theophany of the whirlwind proves too portentous for him to bear. His four speeches take up chapters 32 through 37. Some critics have considered that the Elihu portion of the Book of Job was added by a later hand, and urge obscurities and prolixities, as well as a different style, to prove that it was the work of an inferior writer. This estimate seems, however, to take into account only the part it plays in a didactic treatise, or a theological debate. It looks quite different when we read it as a real dramatic element in a story; in other words, when we realize that the prevailing interest of the Book of Job is not dialectic but narrative. Thus viewed, the Elihu episode is a skillfully managed agency in preparing the denouncement. Consider the situation at the end of Job's words (31:40). Job has vindicated his integrity and stands ready to present his cause to God (31:35-37). The friends, however, have exhausted their resources, and through three discourses have been silent, as it were, snuffed out of existence. It is at this point, then, that Elihu is introduced, to renew their contention with young constructive blood, and represent their cause (as he deems) better than they can themselves. He is essentially at one with them in condemning Job (34:34-37); his only quarrel with them is on the score of the inconclusiveness of their arguments (32:3,1). His self-portrayal is conceived in a decided spirit of satire on the part of the writer, not unmingled with a sardonic humor. He is very egotistic, very sure of the value of his ideas; much of his alleged prolixity is due to that voluble self-deprecation which betrays an inordinate opinion of oneself (compare 32:6-22). This, whether inferior composition or not, admirably adapts his words to his character. For substance of discourse he adds materially to what the friends have said, but in a more rationalistic vein; speaks edifyingly, as the friends have not done, of the disciplinary value of affliction, and of God's means of revelation by dreams and visions and the interpreting of an intercessory friend (33:13-28). Very evidently, however, his ego is the center of his system; it is he who sets up as Job's mediator (33:5-7; compare 9:32-35), and his sage remarks on God's power and wisdom in Nature are full of self-importance. All this seems designed to accentuate the almost ludicrous humiliation of his collapse when from a natural phenomenon the oncoming tempest shows unusual and supernatural signs. His words become disjointed and incoherent, and cease with a kind of attempt to recant his pretensions. And the verdict from the whirlwind is: "darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge." Elihu thus has a real function in the story, as honorable as overweening self-confidence is apt to be.

John Franklin Genung




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