Araunah in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
ARAUNAH or OMAN. A Jebusite, at whose threshing floor the
plague sent for numbering the people was, at David's
intercession, stayed. Be offered the area as a site for
Jehovah's altar, and only by constraint accepted David's pay
(50 shekels of silver, 2 Samuel 24:18-24; 600 shekels of
gold, 1 Chronicles 21:25. As 50 silver shekels is far too
low a price for the whole land, if there be no transcriber's
error here, which is possible, probably the 50 silver
shekels were paid for the small floor, the oxen, and wood of
the yokes only; the 600 gold shekels for the whole hill on
which David afterward built the temple). Contrast his kingly
spirit, "Behold, here be oxen for burnt sacrifice and
threshing instruments for wood," with the groveling excuse
of the man invited to the king's banquet (Luke 14:19).
But compare Elisha's similar spirit when called of:
God's prophet (1 Kings 19:21). Self sacrifice raises one
from degradation low as that of the accursed Jebusites to be
in Israel a "king and a priest unto God" (compare 2 Samuel
24:23 with Exodus 19:6; 1 Peter 2:5; 1 Peter 2:9; Revelation
1:6; Revelation 5:10; Revelation 20:6). "These things did
Araunah (as) a king give" hardly warrant the guess that he
Was of the royal Jebusite race. Keil translates "all this
giveth Araunah, O king, to the king," which suits the fact
that Araunah gave it in intention, but his offer was not
accepted (compare Matthew 8:11-12; 1 Corinthians 1:27).
Josephus (Ant. 7:13, sec. 9) says Araunah was one of David's
chief friends, and spared by him when he took the citadel
(v. 7). Probably he made his friendship when fleeing before
Saul, when also he made that of Uriah the Hittite, Ittai the
Gittite, etc.
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