Tophet in Easton's Bible Dictionary
=Topheth, from Heb. toph "a drum," because the cries of
children
here sacrificed by the priests of Moloch were
drowned by the
noise of such an instrument; or from taph or toph,
meaning "to
burn," and hence a place of burning, the name of a
particular
part in the valley of Hinnom. "Fire being the most
destructive
of all elements, is chosen by the sacred writers to
symbolize
the agency by which God punishes or destroys the
wicked. We are
not to assume from prophetical figures that material
fire is the
precise agent to be used. It was not the agency
employed in the
destruction of Sennacherib, mentioned in Isa.
30:33...Tophet
properly begins where the Vale of Hinnom bends round
to the
east, having the cliffs of Zion on the north, and
the Hill of
Evil Counsel on the south. It terminates at Beer
'Ayub, where it
joins the Valley of Jehoshaphat. The cliffs on the
southern side
especially abound in ancient tombs. Here the dead
carcasses of
beasts and every offal and abomination were cast,
and left to be
either devoured by that worm that never died or
consumed by that
fire that was never quenched." Thus Tophet came to
represent the
place of punishment. (See HINNOM -T0001790.)
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