Beth Shemesh in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
("house of the sun".)
1. A town on the N. boundary of Judah (Joshua
15:10), itself low in situation. A "valley" of wheat fields
is mentioned accordingly as nigh (1 Samuel 6:13). Now Ain
Shems, on the N.W. slopes of the mountains of Judah, "a low
plateau at the junction of two fine plains" (Robinson), two
miles from the Philistian plain, and seven from Ekron. From
the latter was the road to Bethshemesh, on which the
Philistines sent back the ark to Israel after its fatal stay
among them. In the field of Joshua the Bethshemite was "the
great Abel" (the Septuagint reads Aben "stone"; others
retaining Abel explain it "the stone of mourning," compare 1
Samuel 6:19) whereon the ark was set (1 Samuel 6:18).
Providence fitly arranged that Bethshemesh being a priests'
city (Joshua 21:16; 1 Chronicles 1:59) had Levites and
priests ready on the spot duly to receive the ark and
sacrifice before it.
Curiosity tempted many to stare at (not necessarily
"into") the ark beneath the cover; compare Numbers 4:20; 2
Samuel 6:6-7. So God smote in the proportion of 50 out of
the 1,000, i.e. one twentieth instead of one tenth of the
population, as sometimes; seventy men in all, out of the
population of Bethshemesh, which amounted to 1,400 in this
view. The numbers in the English Bible are evidently a
mistake (1 Samuel 6:19). Josephus (Ant. 6:4) makes it only
70. It was one of Solomon's commissariat districts under
Bendekar (margin 1 Kings 4:9). Here Joash king of Israel
encountered and made prisoner of Amaziah of Judah (2 Kings
14:11-13; 2 Chronicles 25:21-23). In Ahaz' reign the
Philistines occupied Bethshemesh (2 Chronicles 28:18.) Ir-
shemesh was the older name (compare Joshua 15:10; Joshua
19:41; Joshua 19:43; 1 Kings 4:9). Harcheres, "mount of the
Sun." was another name for Bethshemesh (Judges 1:35.)
2. A city on Issachar's border (Joshua 19:22).
3. A fenced city of Naphtali (Joshua 19:38; Judges
1:33). The inhabitants were not expelled, but became
Israel's tributaries.
4. An idol sanctuary in Egypt (Jeremiah 43:13), the
Greek Heliopolis, Egyptian On, E. of the Nile, a few miles
N. of Memphis (Genesis 41:45). The statue in honor of the
sun rose to 60 cubits, the base was 10, above there was a
miter a thousand pounds weight. These many towns of this
name show how widespread the worship of the sun had been.
Read More about Beth Shemesh in Fausset's Bible Dictionary