Zaraphath in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
zar'-e-fath (tsarephath; Sarepta): The Sidonian town in
which Elijah was entertained by a widow after he left the
brook Cherith (1 Ki 17:9 ff). Obadiah refers to it as a
Canaanite (probably meaning Phoenicia) town (Ob 1:20). It
appears in the Greek form Sarepta in Lk 4:26 (the King James
Version), and is said to be in the land of Sidon. Josephus
(Ant., VIII, xiii, 2) says it was not "far from Sidon and
Tyre, for it lay between them." Eusebius, Onomasticon (s.v.
"Sarefta"), places it on the public road, i.e. the road
along the seashore. It can be no other than the modern
Sarafend, about 13 miles North of Tyre, on the spur of the
mountain which divides the plain of Tyre from that of Sidon.
The site of the ancient town is marked by the ruins on the
shore to the South of the modern village, about 8 miles to
the South of Sidon, which extend along the shore for a mile
or more. They are in two distinct groups, one on a headland
to the West of a fountain called Ain el-Qantara, which is
not far from the shore. Here was the ancient harbor which
still affords shelter for small craft. The other group of
ruins is to the South, and consists of columns, sarcophagi
and marble slabs, indicating a city of considerable
importance. The modern village of Sarafend was built some
time after the 12th century, since at the time of the
Crusades the town was still on the shore.
It is conjectured that the Syrophoenician woman mentioned in
Lk 4:26 was an inhabitant of Zarephath., and it is possible
that our Lord visited the place in His journey to the region
as narrated in Mk 7:24-31, for it is said that he "came
through Sidon unto the sea of Galilee."
The place has been identified by some with Misrephoth-maim
of Josh 11:8 and 13:6, but the latter passage would indicate
that Misrephoth-maim was at the limit of the territory of
the Sidonians, which Zarephath was not in the days of
Joshua.
See MISREPHOTH-MAIM; SIDON.
Originally Sidonian, the town passed to the Tyrians after
the invasian of Shalmaneser IV, 722 BC. It fell to
Sennacherib 701 BC. The Wely, or shrine bearing the name of
el-Khudr, the saint in whom George is blended with Elijah,
stands near the shore. Probably here the Crusaders erected a
chapel on what they believed to be the site of the widow's
house.
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