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  • Shemaiah
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • 7. One of the Levites sent by King Jehoshaphat in his third year (934 B.C.E.) to teach the Law in the cities of Judah.—2 Chron. 17:7-9.

      8. A Levite descendant of Jeduthun commissioned by Hezekiah in his first year of rule (745 B.C.E.) to help cleanse the temple. Shemaiah and the other Levites took the unclean things down to the Kidron valley. (2 Chron. 29:12, 14-16) Possibly the same person as No. 9 following.

      9. One of the Levites who distributed the tithes and other contributions in the cities of the priests during Hezekiah’s reign. (2 Chron. 31:6, 12, 14, 15) Possibly the same as No. 8 above.

      10. One of the Levite chieftains who made a generous contribution of animal victims for Josiah’s great Passover celebration.—2 Chron. 35:1, 9.

      11. Father of Urijah, a prophet contemporary with Jeremiah; from Kiriath-jearim.—Jer. 26:20.

      12. Father of Delaiah, a Judean prince during the reign of Jehoiakim.—Jer. 36:12.

      13. A false prophet of the town of Nehelam and opponent of Jeremiah taken captive to Babylon with Jehoiachin in 617 B.C.E. From there he wrote back to the priest Zephaniah and associate priests in Jerusalem, condemning Jeremiah for foretelling a long captivity and for urging the captives to settle down in Babylonia. Shemaiah contended that Jeremiah should be put in stocks. Jehovah, however, prophesied against Shemaiah for attempting to make the Jews trust in falsehood and speaking outright revolt: neither he nor his offspring would be among the returning exiles.—Jer. 29:24-32.

      14. A priest, and likely the founder of a priestly family, who returned to Jerusalem with Zerubbabel in 537 B.C.E. In the following generation, Jehonathan headed Shemaiah’s paternal house. (Neh. 12:1, 6, 7, 12, 18) Their representative, or some other priest of the same name, attested to the national covenant during Nehemiah’s governorship.—Neh. 10:1, 8.

      15. A Levite descended from Jeduthun whose son or descendant Obadiah lived in Jerusalem after the exile.—1 Chron. 9:16, 34.

      16. A Levite of the descendants of Merari who also lived in Jerusalem sometime after the Babylonian exile; son of Hasshub.—1 Chron. 9:14, 34; Neh. 11:15.

      17. A leader of the sons of Adonikam who accompanied Ezra to Jerusalem in 468 B.C.E. He is possibly one of those whom Ezra had dispatched to request ministers for the sanctuary, resulting in the gathering of some Levites and Nethinim for the journey.—Ezra 8:1, 13, 16-20.

      18. One of the priests whom Ezra, on arriving in Jerusalem, encouraged to send away the foreign wives they had taken; son of Harim.—Ezra 10:10, 11, 21, 44.

      19. One of the Israelites, son of another Harim, who had also taken foreign wives but who sent them away.—Ezra 10:25, 31, 44.

      20. One of those who helped repair Jerusalem’s wall; son of Shecaniah and a gatekeeper, therefore probably a Levite.—Neh. 3:29.

      21. The false prophet hired by Tobiah and Sanballat to tell Nehemiah of a supposed threat on his life, in this way trying to frighten Nehemiah, who was not a priest, to commit a sin by hiding in the temple, Son of Delaiah.—Neh. 6:10-13.

      22. Presumably a prince of Judah in the thanksgiving choir that marched to the right around Jerusalem atop the rebuilt wall at its inauguration.—Neh. 12:31-34.

      23. A priest of the family of Asaph whose descendant marched in the same procession, evidently as a trumpeter.—Neh. 12:31, 35.

      24. A priestly musician in the same procession; apparently a relative of No. 23 above.—Neh. 12:31, 36.

      25. A priest who apparently played the trumpet when the two thanksgiving choirs met at the house of Jehovah on the occasion of the wall’s inauguration.—Neh. 12:40-42.

      26. A distant descendant of David through Zerubbabel. (1 Chron. 3:9, 10, 19, 22) Some scholars think that the words “and the sons of Shemaiah,” in the middle of verse 22 (which is followed by only five names), should be omitted as a scribal error, thus crediting Shecaniah with six sons. However, other scholars suggest that Shemaiah and his five sons were reckoned as the six descendants of Shecaniah.

  • Shemariah
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMARIAH

      (Shem·a·riʹah) [Jehovah has kept, preserved].

      1. One of the ambidextrous Benjamite warriors who joined David while a fugitive at Ziklag.—1 Chron. 12:1, 2, 5.

      2. A son of King Rehoboam, hence a great-grandson of David.—2 Chron. 11:18, 19.

      3. One of the sons of Harim who dismissed their foreign wives and sons when Ezra came back to Jerusalem.—Ezra 10:31, 32, 44.

      4. One of the sons of Binnui who had also taken foreign wives but sent them away.—Ezra 10:38, 41, 44.

  • Shemeber
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMEBER

      (Shem·eʹber).

      The king of Zeboiim subjugated by Chedorlaomer and presumably the same monarch whose rebellion some years later was put down.—Gen. 14:1-11.

  • Shemed
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMED

      (Sheʹmed) [annihilation].

      A head of a forefather’s house in Benjamin; son or descendant of Elpaal.—1 Chron. 8:1, 12, 13.

  • Shemer
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMER

      (Sheʹmer) [guard].

      1. A descendant of Asher, perhaps his great-grandson. Four sons of Shemer are named. (1 Chron. 7:30, 34) Shemer is spelled Shomer in verse 32.

      2. A Merarite Levite, ancestor of Ethan.—1 Chron. 6:44-47.

      3. The owner of the hill of Samaria, possibly a tribe rather than an individual, for “Samaria” means “belonging to the clan Shemer.” Israelite King Omri bought the mountain for two talents of silver (nearly $2,850) and began ruling from there in 945 B.C.E.—1 Ki. 16:23, 24.

  • Shemida
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMIDA

      (She·miʹda) [the name knows].

      A son of Gilead and great-grandson of Manasseh. From Shemida’s four sons grew a tribal family, the Shemidaites, that was numbered in the second wilderness census and received a territory allotment in the Promised Land.—Num. 26:2, 29-32; Josh. 17:2; 1 Chron. 7:19.

  • Shemidaites
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMIDAITES

      (She·miʹda·ites).

      A family of Manasseh founded by Shemida.—Num. 26:29, 32.

  • Sheminith
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMINITH

      (Shemʹi·nith) [Heb., shemi·nithʹ].

      Although the literal meaning of this musical term is “the eighth,” its exact significance is uncertain. It may refer to a particular musical register, or mode, a lower one, and if any musical instruments were associated with the term, they would probably be those used to play the bass tones of the musical scale.

      At 1 Chronicles 15:21, harps are spoken of as being “tuned to Sheminith [‘possibly referring to the eighth key or to the octave, a lower octave,’ ftn. c, NW, 1955 ed.; ‘probably the bass octave,’ ftn. z, Da].” Consistently, the superscriptions of Psalms 6 and 12 (both psalms being of somber character) read: “To the director (on stringed instruments) on the lower octave [shemi·nithʹ],” which may indicate that these songs would be accompanied by music in a lower range and sung accordingly.

  • Shemiramoth
    Aid to Bible Understanding
    • SHEMIRAMOTH

      (She·mirʹa·moth) [perhaps, name of heights].

      1. A Levite musician who accompanied the ark of the covenant from Obed-edom’s house to Jerusalem and was afterward stationed to play before its tent.—1 Chron. 15:17, 18, 20, 25; 16:1, 4, 5.

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