Cherethites and Pelethites
Cherethites And Pelethites
CHERETHITES AND PELETHITES.These were mercenary soldiers, who probably began to attach themselves to David whilst he was an outlaw (2Sa 22:2 etc.), and subsequently became the kings bodyguard and the nucleus of his army (2Sa 8:18; 2Sa 15:18; 2Sa 20:7; 2Sa 20:23, 1Ki 1:38; 1Ki 1:44, 1Ch 18:17). Benaiah, whom Josephus calls captain of the guard (Ant. VII. xi. 8), was their commander. They accompanied David in his retreat from Jerusalem (2Sa 15:18), fought against Absalom (2Sa 20:7; 2Sa 20:23), acted as Solomons bodyguard at his coronation (1Ki 1:38; 1Ki 1:44). The Cherethites were a Philistine clan (1Sa 30:14), dwelling on the coast (Eze 25:16, Zep 2:5); and the name Pelethites may have been a corrupt form of Philistines. Unwillingness to believe that foreigners stood so near the national hero led certain Jewish scholars to assert that the two clans were Israelites. The appellation Cherethite seems to be connected with Crete, and there is good ground (but see Caphtor) for the belief that Caphtor, from which Amo 9:7 says the Philistines came, is to be identified with Crete. The LXX [Note: Septuagint.] of Eze 25:16, Zep 2:5 uses Cretans as the equivalent of Cherethites.
J. Taylor.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Cherethites and Pelethites
Cherethites and Pelethites, names borne by the royal life-guards in the time of David (2Sa 8:18; 1Ch 18:17). Prevailing opinion translates their names, ‘Headsmen and Foot-runners.’ In the later years of David, their captain, Benaiah, rose to a more commanding importance than the generals of the regular troops; just as in imperial Rome the prefect of the praetorian guards became the second person in the empire. It is evident that, to perpetrate any summary deed, Benaiah and the guards were chiefly relied on. That they were strictly a body-guard is distinctly stated in 2Sa 23:23. In 1Sa 30:14, the Cherethites are named as a nation of the south, and in 2Sa 15:15, the Cherethites and Pelethites are mentioned along with the Gittites, who were undoubtedly foreigners. It has therefore been supposed, with some probability, that David entrusted the care of his person to foreign guards.