Ebal in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
1. The hill upon which the curses of the law were to be
read; as on the opposite hill GERIZIM the blessings
(Deuteronomy 11:29-30; Deuteronomy 27:12-13; Joshua 8:30-
35). The valley wherein Shethem or Sichem (now Nablous) lay
runs between the two hills. Ebal the mount of the curse, is
steeper and more barren; Gerizim, the mount of the blessing,
more sloping, and having a ravine opposite the W. of Shechem
full of fountains and trees. Gerizim, as the southernmost,
was chosen for the blessing, light and life being associated
with the S. by the Hebrew. The central position of these
mountains adapted them for the scene of the reading. The
associations of the locality were another recommendation.
Here first in Canaan Abraham rested, and built an altar to
Jehovah who appeared unto him (Genesis 12:6-7). Here too
Jacob dwelt upon returning from Mesopotamia, and bought a
field from the children of Hamer, father of Shethem, and
built the altar El-elohe-Israel (Genesis 33:19-20).
On Gerizim the Samaritans in ages long after built
their temple in rivalry of that at Jerusalem. The remains of
the road to it still exist. There is still a rocky
amphitheatrical recess on the side of Ebal, and a
corresponding one of the same dimensions on the side of
Gerizim; probably formed for the accommodation of the
people, when all Israel, their elders, officers, and judges,
stood: half of them, the six blessing tribes, Simeon, Levi,
Judah, Issachar, Joseph, and Benjamin (sprung from Jacob's
proper wives), over against Gerizim; and half, the six
cursing tribes (four sprung from Zilpah and Bilhah, and
Reuben the incestuous oldest and Zebulun the youngest) over
against Ebal: with the ark and the priests and Levites in
the center between the two mountains. The priests pronounced
after Joshua (Joshua 8:33-34) the blessings and curses, the
people responded Amen.
The voices of those standing on Ebal can be
distinctly heard by those on Gerizim (such are the acoustic
properties of the place, according to Tristram, etc.) and in
the intermediate valley, which is about 1,600 ft. broad and
runs from Gerizim S.E. to Ebal N.W. The voice of the priests
in the middle would only have to traverse half the interval
between the hills. The mountains are about 2,500 ft. high.
On Ebal the great altar of unhewn stones was erected,
plastered with lime and inscribed with the law (Deuteronomy
27:2-8) immediately after entering the Holy Land, when
Joshua had the first leisure after destroying Ai. It
symbolized their setting up of Jehovah's law as the
permanent law of Israel in their land of inheritance; and it
was the pledge, in the event of their continued obedience,
that Jehovah would conquer all their foes and establish them
in security. The distance which Joshua had to march from Ai
to Shechem was 30 miles in a straight line.
Translated in Deuteronomy 11:30, "are they not on
the other side Jordan, beyond ('achiree) the way (road) of
the W." (the sunset), i.e. on the further side of the main
route from Syria and Damascus to Jerusalem and Egypt,
through the center of Israel. This road skirts Ebal and
Gerizim. Moses adds "over against Gilgal" (not the Gilgal
near Jericho and the Jordan, first named by Joshua (Joshua
5:9), but the modern Jiljulieh, 12 miles S. of Gerizim and
on the brow of lofty hills, a suitable landmark, 2 Kings
2:1-2), "and beside the oaks (not 'plains,' but terebinths)
of Moreh." These "terebinths of Moreh" near Shechem were
familiar to the people, as marking the spot where Abraham
first entered the land (Genesis 12:6). The significance of
the cursing and blessing is much increased by its scene
being placed at Shechem in the heart of the country,
equidistant between N. and S., E. and W., rather than on the
outskirts of the country, at the Gilgal near Jericho.
"The Canaanites" are mentioned in Deuteronomy 11:30,
as in Genesis 12:6, as then already in the land, which
originally was held by a Semitic race, but was afterward
taken by the Hamitic Canaanites whose original seat was near
the Red Sea, from whence they migrated northwards. The
conquest of the heart of the country by Joshua, mount
Ephraim, Esdraelon or the Jezreel valley, is not detailed;
but the narrative passes from his conquest of the S. and
Gilgal to Merom waters in the far N., the Ebal altar
building and the blessing and cursing being the only
allusion to the central country. The Samaritan Pentateuch
reads "Gerizim "for Ebal (Deuteronomy 27:4) as the site of
the altar and the plastered and law-inscribed stones; but
all the Hebrew authorities are against it, and the site of
the cursing is fitly the site of the altar where the penalty
of the curse is borne by the typical victim.
Moreover, the cursings alone are specified in the
context (Deuteronomy 27:14-26), an ominous presage at the
beginning of Israel's disobedience and consequent
chastisement. The Samaritans' aim in their reading was to
justify their erection of the temple on Gerizim. The curses
of Ebal have been literally fulfilled on the literal
Israelites. Why should not also the blessings be literally
fulfilled to literal Israel? The cross, our glory, was
Israel's stumbling-block. Why should the crown, both our and
their glory, be our stumbling-block? See Micah 5:7;
Zechariah 8:13; Zephaniah 3:20; Romans 11:12; Romans 11:15.
2. EBAL, son of Shobal, son of Seir (Genesis 36:23).
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