Ahitub in Wikipedia
brother of goodness = good. A few people in the Bible have
this name:
(1.) The son of Phinehas, grandson of Eli, and brother of
Ichabod. On the death of his grandfather Eli he most likely
succeeded to the office of high priest, and would have been
succeeded by his son Ahijah (references to Ahitub as the
father of are in 1 Sam. 14:3; 22:9, 11, 12, 20). Ahijah
(also spelled Ahiah), who is listed as his son in 1 Samuel
14:2-3, 18-19 , may have been the same person as Ahimelech
(1 Samuel 22:9-20 ), or he may have been another son of
Ahitub (probably an elder son if this was the case).
Preceded by
Eli High Priest of Israel Succeeded by
Ahijah
(2.) The father of Zadok (2 Sam. 8:15-17 ). This Ahitub was
the son of Amariah, who was the son of Meraioth, who was the
son of Zerahiah, who was the son of Uzzi, who was the son of
Bukki, who was the son of Abishua, who was the son of
Phinehas, who was the son of Eleazar, who was the son of
Aaron (1 Chronicles 6:3-8 ). There is a faint possibility
that this Ahitub was made high priest by Saul after the
extermination of the family of Ahimelech, but it is very
unlikely as there are apparently no references supporting
this. It is much more likely that Saul had no official high
priest after this incident until the end of his reign (see
Josephus's Antiquities of the Jews, Book VI, Chapter XII,
Paragraph 7 .
(3.) A priestly descendant through the priestly line of the
first Zadok. This Ahitub is mentioned in 1 Chronicles 6:11-
12 . To make matters a bit more confusing, this Ahitub also
had a son (or probably grandson) by the name of Zadok. This
Ahitub may have been high priest in the later time of the
kings, but he also may not have been a high priest. He did
become the ancestor of later high priests, which served
during the fall of Jerusalem and post-exile.
(4.) An ancestor of a person mentioned in Nehemiah 11:11 .
This person might be one of the three prementioned persons,
but probably is not.
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