- Bethel
Bethel ( _he. בֵּית אֵל), also written as Beth El or Beth-El, meaning "House of God" (in general), or "House of (the specific god named) El", was a town in ancient Israel, about 10 miles north of
Jerusalem . Its location is generally identified with the modernPalestinian village ofBeitin in theWest Bank ; the biblical name has been applied to the adjacentIsraeli settlement ofBeit El . A second biblical Bethel, in the southern Judah, is mentioned inJoshua (8:17 and 12:16), and seems to be the same as Bethul or Bethuel, a city of the tribe ofSimeon .Bethel is mentioned several times in Genesis. It is first mentioned in Genesis 12 [ [http://kodesh.snunit.k12.il/i/t/t0112.htm Genesis 12 / בראשית י"ב (Origin)] , [http://bible.cc/genesis/12-8.htm Genesis 12:8 (Translation)] ] , but the best-known instance is probably Genesis 28 [ [http://kodesh.snunit.k12.il/i/t/t0128.htm Genesis 28 / בראשית כ"ח (Origin)] , [http://bible.cc/genesis/28-19.htm Genesis 28:19 (Translation)] ] , when
Jacob , fleeing from the wrath of his brotherEsau , falls asleep on a stone and dreams of a ladder stretching between Heaven and Earth and thronged withangels ; Yahweh stands at the top of the ladder, and promises Jacob the land ofCanaan ; when Jacob awakes he anoints the stone (baetylus ) with oil and names the place Bethel. Another account, from Genesis 35 [ [http://kodesh.snunit.k12.il/i/t/t0135.htm Genesis 35 / בראשית ל"ה (Origin)] , [http://bible.cc/genesis/35-7.htm Genesis 35:7 (Translation)] ] repeats the covenant with God and the naming of the place (as El-Bethel), and makes this the site of Jacob's own change of name to Israel. Both versions state that the original name of the place wasLuz , a Canaanite name. The same makes true for Luz in the country of the Hettites (i.e. Luhuzati - Lawazantia) called by the earlier name of Beth-El named in the Karum documents.Bethel was an important cult-centre for the northern
Kingdom of Israel following the break-up of the united kingdom ofDavid andSolomon . TheSecond Book of Kings describes howJeroboam , first king of Israel, set up centres for hisGolden Calf cult at Bethel on the southern boundary of his kingdom and Dan on the northern boundary, and appointed non-Levites as his priests. Jeroboam's decision to pass over the Mushite priests ofShiloh , the original cult-centre for Israel, deeply offended the Shiloh priesthood and seems to lie behind much of the animosity directed at Jeroboam and the golden calf, which probably emanated from the Mushite priestly clan.Bethel escaped destruction during the Assyrian conquest of Israel (721 BC), but was occupied by king
Josiah of Judah (c.640-609 BC), who, according to the book of Kings, destroyed the ancient Israelite cult centre. ["Bethel." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica 2007 Ultimate Reference Suite (2007).] The site of this centre has not been located by modernarchaeologist s.References
Jeroboam's Golden Calves account is found in the First Book of Kings Chapter 12
ources
*Encyclopedia Britannica 2007 Ultimate Reference Suite
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