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BAALZEBUB BEELZEBUL See also: Kings i. we read that Ahaziah See also: ben Ahab, See also: king of Israel,
See also: fell sick, and sent to inquire of Baalzebub, the See also: god of the See also: Philistine city Ekron,
Usually Zebub is identified with a See also: Hebrew See also: common noun zebub=flies,' occurring twice in the Old Testament,2 so that Baalzebub "is the See also: Baal to whom flies belong or are See also: holy
.
As See also: children of the summer they are symbols of the warmth of the See also: sun, to which
.
.
.
Baal stands in close relation
.
Divination by means of flies was known at See also: Babylon." 1 There are other cases of names compounded of Baal and an See also: element See also: equivalent to a descriptive epithet, e.g
.
Baalgad, the Baal of See also: Fortune.4 For the "Fly-god," sometimes interpreted as the "averter of See also: insects," cf
.
See also: Zeus &aopvws, pviaypos, and the Hercules ,uvia-ypos
.
Clemens See also: Alexander speaks of a Hercules &irbpvcos as worshipped at
See also: Rome
.
It has been suggested that Baalzebub was the dung-beetle, Scarabaeus pillularius, worshipped in See also: Egypt
.
A name of a deity on an See also: Assyrian inscription of the 12th century B.C. has been read as Baal-zabubi, but this See also: reading has now been abandoned in favour of Baal-sapunu (Baal-Zephon).1 See also: Cheyne considers that Baalzebub is a " contemptuous uneuphonic Jewish modification of the true name Baalzebul." 8
In the New Testament we meet with Beelzebul,' which some of the versions, especially the Vulgate and See also: Syriac, followed by the Authorized Version, have changed to See also: Beelzebub, under the influence of 2 Kings
.
In Matt. x
.
25, Christ speaks of men calling the master of theSee also: house, i.e
.
Himself, Beelzebul.8 In Mark iii
.
22-27,9 the See also: scribes explain that Jesus is possessed by Beelzebul10 and is thus enabled to cast out devils
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The passage speaks of Beelzebul as Satan and as the See also: prince of the demons
.
The origin of the name Beelzebul is variously explained
.
(a) It is " a phonetic corruption, perhaps a softening of the See also: original word"; as Bab-el-mandel is a corruption of Bab-elmandeb
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(b) Zebul is from zebel, a word found in the Targums in the sense of "dung," so that Beelzebul would mean "See also: Lord of Dung," a See also: term of contempt
.
The further See also: suggestion has been made that zebul itself in the sense of "dung" is a term for a See also: heathen deity, cf. the Old Testament use of "abomination" &c, for heathen deities, so that Beelzebul would mean "Chief of false gods," and so See also: arch-fiend
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(c) Zebul is found in 1 Kings viii
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13 in the sense of "height," beth-zebul—lofty house, and in Rabbinical writings in the sense of "house" or "See also: temple,1' or "the See also: fourth heaven";" and Beelzebul may equal "Lord of the High House" or "Lord of Heaven." This view is perhaps favoured by Matt. x
.
25, "if they have called the lord of the house Beelzebul." It appears, however, that Rabbinical writings use yom (See also: day-of) zebul for the festival of a heathen deity; and Jastrow connects this usage with the meaning " house" or " temple," so that the meaning "Lord of the False Gods" might be arrived at in a different way
.
The names See also: Zebulun, 'Izebel (Jezebel), suggest that Zebul may be an See also: ancient name of a deity; cf. the names SaiK 5v~ (B'L 'ZBL), S~tor, (ShMZBL) in Punic and Phoenician
1 So See also: Clarendon See also: Press, Hebrew See also: Lexicon, p
.
127, with LXX . 2Ecc1. x . 1; See also: Isaiah vii
.
18
.
Baethgen, Beitrage z::+ semitischen Religionsgeschichte, p
.
25, ef. pp
.
65, 261
.
Josh. xii
.
7
.
6 See also: Art
.
" Baalzebub," Black and Cheyne's Ency
.
Bibl
.
6 With various spellings (e.g . Belzebul, and in XB, Beezebul), all variants of Beelzebul . Cf . Deissmann, See also: Bible Studies, 332
.
' There is a variation of reading, which has been held to support the view that the passage means that men reproached Jesus with His supposed connexion with Beelzebul; cf
.
A
.
B
.
See also: Bruce, in loco
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6 And in the parallel passages, Matt. xii
.
22-29; See also: Luke xi
.
14-22
.
9 Cf
.
See also: John vii
.
20, viii
.
48, 52, x
.
20
.
10 Swete, in loco
.
11 Jastrow,
See also: Diet. of the Trrgumim, &c.,, sub voce
.
1T,
inscriptions.' The substitution of Beelzebub for Beelzebul by the Syriac, Vulgate and other versions implies the See also: identification of the New Testament arch-fiend with the god of Ekron; this substitution, however, may be due to the influence of the Aramaic B'el-debaba, " adversary," sometimes held to be the original of these names
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There is no trace of Beelzebul or Beelzebub outside of the Biblical passages mentioned, and the literature dependent on them
.
If we assume a connexion between the two names, there is nothing to show how the god became in later times the devil
.
In See also: Paradise Lost, See also: Book ii., Beelzebub appears as second only to Satan himself
.
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