Lot in Easton's Bible Dictionary
(Heb. goral, a "pebble"), a small stone used in casting
lots
(Num. 33:54; Jonah 1:7). The lot was always resorted
to by the
Hebrews with strictest reference to the
interposition of God,
and as a method of ascertaining the divine will
(Prov. 16:33),
and in serious cases of doubt (Esther 3:7). Thus the
lot was
used at the division of the land of Canaan among the
serveral
tribes (Num. 26:55; 34:13), at the detection of
Achan (Josh.
7:14, 18), the election of Saul to be king (1 Sam.
10:20, 21),
the distribution of the priestly offices of the
temple service
(1 Chr. 24:3, 5, 19; Luke 1:9), and over the two
goats at the
feast of Atonement (Lev. 16:8). Matthias, who was
"numbered with
the eleven" (Acts 1:24-26), was chosen by lot.
This word also denotes a portion or an inheritance
(Josh.
15:1; Ps. 125:3; Isa. 17:4), and a destiny, as
assigned by God
(Ps. 16:5; Dan. 12:13).
Lot, (Heb. lot), a covering; veil, the son of Haran,
and
nephew of Abraham (Gen. 11:27). On the death of his
father, he
was left in charge of his grandfather Terah (31),
after whose
death he accompanied his uncle Abraham into Canaan
(12:5),
thence into Egypt (10), and back again to Canaan
(13:1). After
this he separated from him and settled in Sodom
(13:5-13). There
his righteous soul was "vexed" from day to day (2
Pet. 2:7), and
he had great cause to regret this act. Not many
years after the
separation he was taken captive by Chedorlaomer, and
was rescued
by Abraham (Gen. 14). At length, when the judgment
of God
descended on the guilty cities of the plain (Gen.
19:1-20), Lot
was miraculously delivered. When fleeing from the
doomed city
his wife "looked back from behind him, and became a
pillar of
salt." There is to this day a peculiar crag at the
south end of
the Dead Sea, near Kumran, which the Arabs call Bint
Sheik Lot,
i.e., Lot's wife. It is "a tall, isolated needle of
rock, which
really does bear a curious resemblance to an Arab
woman with a
child upon her shoulder." From the words of warning
in Luke
17:32, "Remember Lot's wife," it would seem as if
she had gone
back, or tarried so long behind in the desire to
save some of
her goods, that she became involved in the
destruction which
fell on the city, and became a stiffened corpse,
fixed for a
time in the saline incrustations. She became "a
pillar of salt",
i.e., as some think, of asphalt. (See SALT
-T0003196.)
Lot and his daughters sought refuge first in Zoar,
and then,
fearing to remain there longer, retired to a cave in
the
neighbouring mountains (Gen. 19:30). Lot has
recently been
connected with the people called on the Egyptian
monuments
Rotanu or Lotanu, who is supposed to have been the
hero of the
Edomite tribe Lotan.
Read More about Lot in Easton's Bible Dictionary