Biblia

Kenites

Kenites

KENITES

A people who dwelt west of the Dead sea, and extended themselves far into Arabia Petraea. Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses, was a Kenite, and his family accompanied the Israelites, and settled with other Kenites in various parts of the Holy Land, Jdg 1:16 ; 4:11; 1Sa 30:29 ; 1Ch 2:55 . Heber and the Rechabites were their descendants. The Kenites of whom we read appear to have known and served Jehovah, and the whole tribe were friendly to the Hebrews. Saul spared them, when sent to destroy the Amalekites among whom they dwelt, Num 24:20,21 ; 1Sa 15:6 .

Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary

Kenites

(A.V. Kenites).

A tribe or family often mentioned in the Old Testament, personified as Qayin from which the nomen gentilicium Qeni is derived. In spite of several attempts at a solution, the origin both of the name and of the tribe is still obscure. Hobab the relative (brother-in-law?) of Moses was a Cinite (Judges, i, 16, iv, 11; as Hobab is also called a Madianite (Numbers 10:29), it follows that the Cinites belonged to that nation. Judging from appearances, the Cinites were true worshippers of Yahweh. Some scholars, on the strength of Ex., xviii, go even so far as to assert that it was from them that the Israelites received a great portion of their monotheistic theology; the passage, however, deals directly and only with social organization. At any rate, the Rechabites, a clan of the Cinites [I Par. (A. V. I Chron.) ii, 55] were even ascetics and insisted on retaining the nomadic habits of the followers of Yahweh (Jeremiah 35), Though calamities were foretold for the Cinites by Balaam (Numbers 24:21 sqq.), they are always represented as being on friendly terms with the Israelites. Owing probably to their alliance with Moses and also to the bonds of a common religion, they befriended the Israelites during their wanderings in the desert [Num., x, 29-32, 1 K. (A.V. I Sam.) xv, 6] and joined them in their march on Chanaan (Judges, 1, 16). There is no intimation that there ever was any enmity between the two nations (cf. 1 Samuel 27:10, 30:29). The Cinites dwelt south of Palestine with the Amalecites, as is evident from Num., xxiv, 21 sqq., I K., xv, 6, and probably from Judges, i, 16 if, instead of the Massoretic version, we use an alternate Hebrew reading — a reading which is supported by several Greek manuscripts and by the Sahidic Coptic Version (cf. Ciasca, Fragm. Copto-Sahidica). One clan of the Cinites left the tribe and settled in the north under Haber, at the time of Barac and Debbera (Judges 4:11); Jahel, who slew Sisara, was the wife of Haber the Cinite (ibid., iv, 17 sqq., v, 24 sqq.). From the facts that we find the Cinites south and north, and that in Aramaic the root from which Qayin is derived implies the idea of a smith, Sayce (in Hastings, Dict. Bib., s.v. Kenites) draws the conclusion that the Cinites were a wandering guild of smiths. This view has against it the obvious meaning of the texts (see especially Genesis 15:19). Apparently the Cinites shared in the Babylonian Exile and in the Restoration, but they do not appear any more as a distinct tribe and very likely were assimilated with the Jews.

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R. BUTIN Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IIICopyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton CompanyOnline Edition Copyright © 2003 by K. KnightNihil Obstat, November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., CensorImprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

Fuente: Catholic Encyclopedia

Kenites

smiths, the name of a tribe inhabiting the desert lying between southern Palestine and the mountains of Sinai. Jethro was of this tribe (Judg. 1:16). He is called a “Midianite” (Num. 10:29), and hence it is concluded that the Midianites and the Kenites were the same tribe. They were wandering smiths, “the gipsies and travelling tinkers of the old Oriental world. They formed an important guild in an age when the art of metallurgy was confined to a few” (Sayce’s Races, etc.). They showed kindness to Israel in their journey through the wilderness. They accompanied them in their march as far as Jericho (Judg. 1:16), and then returned to their old haunts among the Amalekites, in the desert to the south of Judah. They sustained afterwards friendly relations with the Israelites when settled in Canaan (Judg. 4:11, 17-21; 1 Sam. 27:10; 30:29). The Rechabites belonged to this tribe (1 Chr. 2:55) and in the days of Jeremiah (35:7-10) are referred to as following their nomad habits. Saul bade them depart from the Amalekites (1 Sam. 15:6) when, in obedience to the divine commission, he was about to “smite Amalek.” And his reason is, “for ye showed kindness to all the children of Israel when they came up out of Egypt.” Thus “God is not unrighteous to forget the kindnesses shown to his people; but they shall be remembered another day, at the farthest in the great day, and recompensed in the resurrection of the just” (M. Henry’s Commentary). They are mentioned for the last time in Scripture in 1 Sam. 27:10; comp. 30:20.

Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary

Kenites

A Midianite race, for Jethro the Kenite is called priest prince of Midian (Exo 2:15-16; Exo 4:19; Jdg 1:16; Jdg 4:11). The connection with Moses explains their continued alliance with Israel, accompanying them to Jericho “the city of palm trees” (Jdg 1:16; compare 2Ch 28:15), thence to the wilderness of Judah, where “they dwelt among the people” (Israel), realizing Moses’ promise to Hobab, whose name appears slightly altered as that of a wady opposite Jericho (Num 10:32). (See HOBAB.) Hence Saul in a friendly spirit warned them to leave the Amalekites whom he was about to destroy (1Sa 15:6), and David sent presents to them, having previously pretended to Achish that he had invaded their southern border (1Sa 27:10; 1Sa 30:29). (See HEBER; HAZEZON TAMAR; RECHABITES; JEHONADAB.)

E. Wilton (Imperial Dictionary). suggests that Kenites is a religious rather than a gentilic term, meaning “a worshipper of the goddess Kain”, one form of Ashtoreth or Astarte. This would account for God’s denunciation of the Kenites by Balaam (Num 24:21-22 margin). Evidently the Kenites to be dispossessed by Israel (Gen 15:19) were distinct from the Kenites to whom Hobab and Jethro belonged. The latter were of Midianite origin, sprung from Abraham and Keturah, occupying the region E. of Egypt and W. of Seir and the gulf of Akabah (Gen 25:2); the former were Canaanites of the city Kain, which was taken by Judah (Jos 15:57). The Canaanite Kenites Balaam denounces; or else more probably Balaam’s prophecy is “Kain (the Midianite Kenites) shall not be exterminated until Asshur shall carry him away into captivity” (Keil).

Thus “strong is thy dwelling place, and thou puttest thy nest in a rock,” is figurative. The Kenites did not as Edom dwell in the rocks (Oba 1:3-4), but by leaving their nomadic life near Horeb to join Israel wandering in quest of a home the Kenite really placed his rest upon a safe rock, and would only be carried away when Assyria and Babylon took Israel and Judah; with the difference however that Judah should be restored, but the Kenites not so because they forfeited God’s blessing by maintaining independence of Israel though intimately joined and by never entering inwardly into God’s covenant of grace with Israel.

The connection of Midian and the Kenites appears in the name Kenney still attached to a wady in the midst of the Muzeiny or Midianites. Midian (and the Kenites) and Amalek were associated, as still are the Muzeiny and Aleikat (Amalek). The Muzeiny commit their flocks to women, as Jethro committed his to his daughters. The name Medinah betrays connection with Midian. The power of ingratiating themselves with their neighbours characterized the Kenites (Jdg 4:17). Also the love of tent life, hospitality, the use of goat’s milk whey, the employment of women in men’s work, so that the sexes had free contact and yet the female part of the tent was inviolable (4, 5; Exo 2:4; Numbers 25).

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

KENITES

The name Kenites usually refers to that tribal group within the Midianite people to which Moses in-laws belonged. This group had apparently mingled with the ancient Kenite people (who were among the early inhabitants of Canaan) and so were referred to as both Kenites and Midianites (Gen 15:19; Exo 2:15-21; Jdg 1:16; Jdg 4:11). The Israelites allowed the Kenite in-laws of Moses, and their descendants, to live among them in Canaan, and at times showed a special concern for them (Jdg 1:16; 1Sa 15:6; 1Sa 30:26-29; 1Ch 2:55; Neh 3:14).

Fuente: Bridgeway Bible Dictionary

Kenites

KENITES.A nomadic tribe, closely connected with the Amalekites (wh. see), and probably indeed a branch of them, but having friendly relations with Israel, and ultimately, it seems, at least in the main, absorbed in Judah. Hobab, Moses father-in-law (Jdg 1:16; Jdg 4:11 RVm [Note: Revised Version margin.] ), who had been invited by Mosesand had doubtless accepted the invitationto he a guide to Israel in the wilderness (Num 10:29-32), was a Kenite; and his descendants came up from Jericho with the tribe of Judah into the S. part of their territory (Arad is about 17 miles S. of Hebron), though afterwards, true to their Bedouin instincts, they roamed beyond the border and rejoined their kinsmen, the Amalekites, in the N. of the Sinaitic Peninsula (Jdg 1:16; read in this verse, with MSS of LXX [Note: Septuagint.] , the Amalekite for the peoplethree letters have dropped out in the Heb.). When Saul, many years later, attacked the Amalekites, he bade the Kenites separate themselves from them, on the ground that they had shown kindness to Israel at the time of the Exodus (1Sa 15:6,alluding doubtless to Hobabs guidance, Num 10:29-32). In Jdg 4:11 Heber the Kenite is mentioned as having separated himself from the main body of the tribe, and wandered northwards as far as the neighbourhood of Kedesh (near the Waters of Merom). From 1Sa 27:10; 1Sa 30:29 we learn that in the time of David there was a district in the S. of Judah inhabited by Kenites; it is possible also that Kinah, in the Negeb of Judah (Jos 15:22), and Kain in the hill-country (Jos 15:57), were Kenite settlements. The Rechabites, with whom the nomadic life had become a religious Institution (Jer 35:1-19), were Kenites (1Ch 2:55). In Gen 15:19 the Kenites are mentioned among the ten nations whose land was to be taken possession of by Israel; the reference is doubtless to the absorption of the Kenites in Judah. In Num 24:21 f. Balaam, with a play on the resemblance of the name to the Heb. kn, nest, declares that though their nest is among the rocky crags (namely, in the S. of Judah), they would in the end be carried away captive by the Assyrians (Kain in Num 24:22 is the proper name of the tribe of which Kenite Is the gentilic adj.; cf. Jdg 4:11 RVm [Note: Revised Version margin.] . Observe here that the oracle on the Kenites follows closely upon that on the Amalekites).

The word kain means in Heb. a spear (2Sa 21:16), and in Arab. [Note: Arabic.] an iron-smith; in Aram, also the word corresponding to Kenite denotes a metal-worker; it has hence been conjectured (Sayce) that the Kenites were a nomad tribe of smiths. There is, however, no support for this conjecture beyond the resemblance in the words.

S. R. Driver.

Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible

Kenites

A people that dwelt with the Amalekites: so called from Kanah, a possession. Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses, was of this people. (1Sa 15:6)

Fuente: The Poor Mans Concordance and Dictionary to the Sacred Scriptures

Kenites

kents (, ha-ken, , haken; in Num 24:22 and Jdg 4:11, , kayin; of , hoi Kenaoi, , hoi Kinaoi: A tribe of nomads named in association with various other peoples. They are first mentioned along with the Kadmonites and Kenizzites among the peoples whose land was promised to Abram (Gen 15:19). Balaam, seeing them from the heights of Moab; puns upon their name, which resembles the Hebrew ken, a nest, prophesying their destruction although their nest was set in the rock – possibly a reference to Sela, the city. Moses’ father-in-law, Jethro, is called the priest of Midian in Exo 3:1; Exo 18:1; but in Jdg 1:16 he is described as a Kenite, showing a close relation between the Kenites and Midian. At the time of Sisera’s overthrow, Heber, a Kenite, at peace with Jabin, king of HaZor, pitched his tent far North of his ancestral seats (Jdg 4:17). There were Kenites dwelling among the Amalekites in the time of Saul (1Sa 15:6). They were spared because they had showed kindness to all the children of Israel, when they came up out of Egypt. David, in his answer to Achish, links the Kenites with the inhabitants of the South of Judah (1Sa 27:10). Among the ancestors of the tribe of Judah, the Chronicler includes the Kenite Hammath, the father of the Rechabites (1Ch 2:55). These last continued to live in tents, practicing the ancient nomadic customs (Jer 35:6 ff).

The word ken in Aramaic means smith. Professor Sayce thinks they may really have been a tribe of smiths, resembling the gipsies of modern Europe, as well as the traveling tinkers or blacksmiths of the Middle Ages (HDB, under the word). This would account for their relations with the different peoples, among whom they would reside in pursuit of their calling.

In Josephus they appear as Kenetides, and in Ant., IV, vii, 3 he calls them the race of the Shechemites.

Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia

Kenites

Kenites

Kenites, a tribe of Midianites dwelling among the Amalekites (1Sa 15:6; comp. Num 24:20-21), or occupying in semi-nomadic life the same region with the latter people in Arabia Petra. When Saul was sent to destroy the Amalekites, the Kenites, who had joined them, perhaps upon compulsion, were ordered to depart from them that they might not share their fate; and the reason assigned was, that they ‘shewed kindness to the children of Israel when they came out of Egypt.’ This kindness is supposed to have been that which Jethro and his family showed to Moses, as well as to the Israelites themselves, in consequence of which the whole tribe appears to have been treated with consideration, while the family of Jethro itself accompanied the Israelites into Palestine, where they continued to lead a nomad life, occupying there a position similar to that of the Tartar tribes in Persia at the present day. To this family belonged Heber, the husband of that Jael who slew Sisera, and who is hence called ‘Heber the Kenite’ (Jdg 4:11). At a later age other families of Kenites are mentioned as resident in Palestine, among whom were the Rechabites (1Ch 2:55; Jer 35:2); but it is not clear whether these were subdivisions of the increasing descendants of Jethro, as seems most likely, or families which availed themselves of the friendly-dispositions of the Israelites towards the tribe to settle in the country. It appears that, whatever was the general condition of the Midianites, the tribe of the Kenites possessed a knowledge of the true God in the time of Jethro [HOBAB]; and that those families which settled in Palestine did not afterwards lose that knowledge, but increased it, is clear from the passages which have been cited [MIDIANITES; RECHABITES].

Fuente: Popular Cyclopedia Biblical Literature

Kenites

[Ke’nites]

There seem to have been several different peoples called by this name, without any apparent link between them. Thus

1. There were some in the land when it was promised to Abraham. Gen 15:19.

2. Jethro, or Raguel, Moses’ father-in-law, is called a Kenite, Jdg 1:16, and is also called a Midianite. Num 10:29. The Midianites sprung from Midian, the son of Abraham and Keturah, Gen 25:2; so these Kenites were probably a branch of the Midianites. The children of the Kenite, Moses’ father-in-law, left Jericho, the city of palm trees, and went into the wilderness of Judah, which was to the south of Arad, and dwelt there. Jdg 1:16 Apparently Heber the Kenite travelled north, and was neutral between Israel and their enemies; but Jael his wife smote Sisera in her tent. Jdg 4:11; Jdg 4:17; Jdg 5:24. Others remained in the far south, for when Saul was going to smite the Amalekites he warned the Kenites, for their own safety, to depart from among them, because they had befriended Israel when they came from Egypt. 1Sa 15:6. They were still in the neighbourhood when David feigned to have attacked them. He regarded them as friends, and sent presents to them. 1Sa 27:10; 1Sa 30:29.

3. There were Kenites whom Balaam saw dwelling in the rocks, and who were to be carried away by Asshur. Num 24:21-22. These may have been a remnant of the Kenites mentioned in Gen 15:19.

4. Descendants of Hemath, the father of the house of Rechab. 1Ch 2:55.

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary

Kenites

1. A Canaanitish tribe whose country was given to Abraham

Gen 15:19; Num 24:21-23

2. The descendants of Jethro, a Midianite, father-in-law of Moses:

Join the Israelites and dwell at Jericho

Jdg 1:16; Jdg 4:11; 1Ch 2:55

Dwell later in the wilderness of Judah

Jdg 1:16-17

Jael, one of the Kenites, betrays and slays Sisera

Jdg 4:17-21

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

KENITES

(1) A Canaanitish tribe or nation

Gen 15:19; Num 24:21

(2) Descendants of Jethro or Hobab

Jdg 1:16; Jdg 4:11; 1Ch 2:55

Fuente: Thompson Chain-Reference Bible

Kenites

people who dwelt westward of the Dead Sea, and extended themselves pretty far into Arabia Petraea: for Jethro, the priest of Midian, and father-in-law to Moses, was a Kenite, Jdg 1:16; 1Ch 2:55; 1Sa 15:6. When Saul was sent to destroy the Amalekites, the Kenites, who had joined them, perhaps by compulsion, were ordered to depart from them, that they might not share in their fate; and the reason assigned was, that they showed kindness to the children of Israel when they came up out of Egypt, 1Sa 15:6. Which, according to the margin of our Bible, is to be understood of the father-in- law of Moses and his family. From the story of Jethro, who is expressly said to be a Midianite, they appear to have retained the worship of the true God among them; for which, and their kindness to the Israelites when passing their country, they were spared in the general destruction of the nations bordering on Canaan. Of these Kenites were the Rechabites, the Tirathites, the Shimeathites, and the Suchathites, mentioned in 1Ch 2:55, whose chief office was that of scribes. (See Rechabites.) Balaam, when invited by Balak, king of Moab, to curse Israel, stood upon a mountain, whence he addressed the Kenites, and said, Strong is thy dwelling place, and thou puttest thy nest in a rock; nevertheless, the Kenite shall be wasted until Asher shall carry thee away captive, Num 24:21-22. The Kenites dwelt in mountains and rocks almost inaccessible. They were conquered and carried into captivity, by Nebuchadnezzar. After Saul the Kenites are not mentioned; but they subsisted, being mingled among the Edomites and other nations of Arabia Petraea.

Fuente: Biblical and Theological Dictionary