Abiathar in Easton's Bible Dictionary
father of abundance, or my father excels, the son of
Ahimelech
the high priest. He was the tenth high priest, and
the fourth in
descent from Eli. When his father was slain with the
priests of
Nob, he escaped, and bearing with him the ephod, he
joined
David, who was then in the cave of Adullam (1 Sam.
22:20-23;
23:6). He remained with David, and became priest of
the party of
which he was the leader (1 Sam. 30:7). When David
ascended the
throne of Judah, Abiathar was appointed high priest
(1 Chr.
15:11; 1 Kings 2:26) and the "king's companion" (1
Chr. 27:34).
Meanwhile Zadok, of the house of Eleazar, had been
made high
priest. These appointments continued in force till
the end of
David's reign (1 Kings 4:4). Abiathar was deposed
(the sole
historical instance of the deposition of a high
priest) and
banished to his home at Anathoth by Solomon, because
he took
part in the attempt to raise Adonijah to the throne.
The
priesthood thus passed from the house of Ithamar (1
Sam.
2:30-36; 1 Kings 1:19; 2:26, 27). Zadok now became
sole high
priest. In Mark 2:26, reference is made to an
occurrence in "the
days of Abiathar the high priest." But from 1 Sam.
22, we learn
explicitly that this event took place when
Ahimelech, the father
of Abiathar, was high priest. The apparent
discrepancy is
satisfactorily explained by interpreting the words
in Mark as
referring to the life-time of Abiathar, and not to
the term of
his holding the office of high priest. It is not
implied in Mark
that he was actual high priest at the time referred
to. Others,
however, think that the loaves belonged to Abiathar,
who was at
that time (Lev. 24:9) a priest, and that he either
himself gave
them to David, or persuaded his father to give them.
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