Eli in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Sprung from Ithamar, Aaron's younger surviving son
(Leviticus 10:1-2; Leviticus 10:12). (Compare ABIATHAR.) (1
Kings 2:26-27; 1 Chronicles 24:3; 2 Samuel 8:17). Compare
Eleazar's genealogy, wherein Eli and Abiathar do not appear
(1 Chronicles 6:4-15; Ezra 7:1-5). No high priest of
Ithamar's line is mentioned before Eli, whose appointment
was of God (1 Samuel 2:30). His grandson Ahitub succeeded (1
Samuel 14:3). Abiathar. Ahitub's grandson, was thrust out by
Solomon for his share in Adonijah's rebellion and the high
priesthood reverted to Eleazar's line in Zadok (1 Kings
2:35). The transfer was foretold to Eli by the unnamed man
of God first, and by the child Samuel next (1 Samuel 2:3): a
punishment from God, because though Eli reproved his wicked
sons Hophni and Phinehas in word he did not in act, put
forth his authority as a judge to punish, coerce, and depose
them, "because his sons made themselves vile, and he
restrained them not."
Another part of the curse, "I will cut off the arm
of thy father's house that. there shall not be an old man in
thine house," was being fulfilled in David's days, when
"there were more chief men found of the sons of Eleazar (16)
than of the sons of Ithamar" (8) (1 Chronicles 24:4). Eli's
grace shone in the meekness with which he bowed to the
Lord's sentence, "It is the Lord, let Him do what, seemeth
Him good." His patriotism and piety especially appear in his
intense anxiety for the safety of the ark; "his heart
trembled for the ark of God." The announcement after the
battle, of the slaughter of the people and even of his sons
did not so much overwhelm him as that of the ark of God:
instantly "he fell from off the seat backward by the side of
the gate, and his neck broke and he died; for he was old and
heavy." The Hebrew Scriptures make his term of office as
judge 40 years; the Greek Septuagint 20 years.
Some reconcile the two by making him co-judge with
Samson for 20 years, and sole judge for 20 more years. He
was 98 years of age at his death. His failing and its
penalty are a warning to all parents, even religious ones,
and all in authority, to guard against laxity in ruling
children and subordinates in the fear of the Lord, punishing
strictly, though in love, all sin, jealous for God's honor
even at the cost of offending man and of painting natural
parental feeling. Condoning sin is cruel to children as well
as dishonoring to God. Children will respect most the parent
who respects God. Perhaps Eli clung to office too long, when
through age he was no longer able vigorously to fulfill it.
He who cannot rule his own house is unfit to rule the house
of God (1 Timothy 3:5).
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