Shaphan

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A coney, a scribe or secretary of king Josiah (2 Kings 22:3-7). He consulted Huldah concerning the newly-discovered copy of the law which was delivered to him by Hilkiah the priest (2 Kings 22:8-14). His grandson Gedaliah was governor of Judea (2 Kings 25:22).


shā´fan (שׁפן naf´, shāphān, “rockbadger,” English Versions of the Bible “coney”; Σαφφάν, Saphphán): An old totem clan name (so W.R. Smith; compare, however, the article Totemism; Gray, Gray, Studies in Hebrew Proper Names, 103 ff, and Jacob's Studies in Biblical Archaeology, 84 ff).

(1) Son of Azaliah and scribe of King Josiah. He received from Hilkiah the Book of the Law which had been found in the Temple (2Ki_22:3 ff; 2 Ch 34:8-28). It was from Shaphan's lips that Josiah heard the Law read. Shaphan was also one of those sent by the king to the prophetess Huldah (2 Ki 22; 2 Ch 34). He was undoubtedly one of the staunchest supporters of Josiah in his work of reform. He was the father of Ahikam (2Ki_22:12; 2Ch_34:20; Jer_26:24), who befriended and protected the prophet Jeremiah. Another son, Elasah, was one of the two men entrusted by Jeremiah with his letter to the captives in Babylon (Jer_29:3). A third son, Gemariah, vainly tried to prevent King Jehoiakim from burning “the roll” (Jer_36:10, Jer_36:11, Jer_36:12, Jer_36:25). The Micaiah of Jer_36:11, Jer_36:12, and Gedaliah, the governor of Judea after the captivity of 586 BC, were his grandsons (Jer_39:14).

(2) Perhaps the father of Jaazaniah, one of the 70 men whom Ezekiel saw, in his vision of the Temple, sacrificing to idols (Eze_8:11).

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