Naaman in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
na'-a-man (na`aman, "pleasantness"; Septuagint: Codices
Vaticanus and Alexandrinus Naiman; so Westcott and Hort, The
New Testament in Greek in the New Testament; Textus Receptus
of the New Testament, Neeman) :
(1) A successful Syrian general, high in the confidence and
esteem of the king of Syria, and honored by his fellow-
countrymen as their deliverer (2 Ki 5:1-27). Afflicted with
leprosy, he heard from a Hebrew slave-maid in his household
of the wonder-working powers of an Israelite prophet. Sent
by his master with a letter couched in somewhat peremptory
terms to the king of Israel, he came to Samaria for healing.
The king of Israel was filled with suspicion and alarm by
the demands of the letter, and rent his clothes; but Elisha
the prophet intervened, and sent word to Naaman that he must
bathe himself seven times in the Jordan. He at first
haughtily resented the humiliation and declined the cure;
but on the remonstrance of his attendants he yielded and
obtained cleansing. At once he returned to Samaria,
testified his gratitude by the offer of large gifts to the
prophet, confessed his faith in Elisha's God, and sought
leave to take home with him enough of the soil of Canaan for
the erection of an altar to Yahweh.
The narrative is throughout consistent and natural,
admirably and accurately depicting the condition of the two
kingdoms at the time. The character of Naaman is at once
attractive and manly. His impulsive patriotic preference for
the streams of his own land does not lessen the reader's
esteem for him, and the favorable impression is deepened by
his hearty gratitude and kindness.
The Israelite king is most probably Jehoram, son of Ahab,
and the Syrian monarch Ben-hadad II. Josephus (Ant., VIII,
xv, 5) identifies Naaman with the man who drew his bow at a
venture, and gave Ahab his death wound (1 Ki 22:34). There
is one reference to Naaman in the New Testament. In Lk 4:27,
Jesus, rebuking Jewish exclusiveness, mentions "Naaman the
Syrian."
(2) A son of Benjamin (Gen 46:21,6). Fuller and more precise
is the description of Nu 26:38,40, where he is said to be a
son of Bela and grandson of Benjamin (see also 1 Ch 8:3 f).
John A. Lees
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