Eden in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
e'-d'-n (`edhen, "delight"; Edem):
(1) The land in which "Yahweh God planted a garden," where
upon his creation "he put the man whom he had formed" (Gen
2:8). In the Assyrian inscriptions idinu (Accadian, edin)
means "plain" and it is from this that the Biblical word is
probably derived. Following are the references to Eden in
the Bible, aside from those in Gen 2 and 3: Gen 4:16; Isa
51:3; Ezek 28:13; 31:9,16,18; 36:35; Joel 2:3. The Garden of
Eden is said to be "eastward, in Eden" Gen (2:8); where the
vegetation was luxurious (2:9) and the fig tree indigenous
(3:7), and where it was watered by irrigation. All kinds of
animals, including cattle, beasts of the field and birds,
were found there (2:19,20). Moreover, the climate was such
that clothing was not needed for warmth. It is not
surprising, therefore, that the plural of the word has the
meaning "delights," and that Eden has been supposed to mean
the land of delights, and that the word became a synonym for
Paradise.
The location of Eden is in part to be determined from the
description already given. It must be where there is a
climate adapted to the production of fruit trees and of
animals capable of domestication, and in general to the
existence of man in his primitive condition. In particular,
its location is supposed to be determined by the statements
regarding the rivers coursing through it and surrounding it.
There is a river (nahar) (Gen 2:10) which was parted and
became four heads (ro'shim), a word which (Jdg 8:16; Job
1:17) designates main detachments into which an army is
divided, and therefore would more properly signify branches
than heads, permitting Josephus and others to interpret the
river as referring to the ocean, which by the Greeks was
spoken of as the river (okeanos) surrounding the world.
According to Josephus, the Ganges, the Tigris, the Euphrates
and the Nile are the four rivers, being but branches of this
one river. Moreover, it is contended by some, with much show
of reason, that the word perath translated Euphrates is a
more general term, signifying "the broad" or "deep" river,
and so may here refer to some other stream than the
Euphrates, possibly to a river in some other region whose
name is perpetuated in the present Euphrates, as "the
Thames" of New England perpetuates the memory of the Thames
of Old England. In ancient times there was a river Phrath in
Persia, and perhaps two. It is doubtful whether the phrase
"eastward, in Eden" refers to the position with reference to
the writer or simply with reference to Eden itself. So far
as that phrase is concerned, therefore, speculation is left
free to range over the whole earth, and this it has done...
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