Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary
MolechMoloch, king
Smith's Bible Dictionary
Molech(king). The fire-god Molech was the tutelary deity of the children of Ammon, and essentially identical with the Moabitish Chemosh. Fire-gods appear to have been common to all the Canaanite, Syrian and Arab tribes, who worshipped the destructive element under an outward symbol, with the most inhuman rites. According to Jewish tradition, the image of Molech was of brass, hollow within, and was situated without Jerusalem. "His face was (that) of a calf, and his hands stretched forth like a man who opens his hands to receive (something) of his neighbor. And they kindled it with fire, and the priests took the babe and put it into the hands of Molech, and the babe gave up the ghost." Many instances of human sacrifices are found in ancient writers, which may be compared with the description of the Old Testament of the manner in which Molech was worshipped. Molech was the lord and master of the Ammonites; their country was his possession, (Jeremiah 49:1) as Moab was the heritage of Chemosh; the princes of the land were the princes of Malcham. (Jeremiah 49:3; Amos 1:15) His priests were men of rank, (Jeremiah 49:3) taking precedence of the princes. The priests of Molech, like those of other idols, were called Chemarim. (2 Kings 23:5; Hosea 10:5; Zephaniah 1:4)
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
(
n.) The fire god of the Ammonites, to whom human sacrifices were offered; Moloch.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
MOLECH; MOLOCHmo'-lek, mo'-lok (ha-molekh, always with the article, except in 1 Kings 11:7; Septuagint ho Moloch, sometimes also Molchom, Melchol; Vulgate (Jerome's Latin Bible, 390-405 A.D.) Moloch):
1. The Name
2. The Worship in Old Testament History
3. The Worship in the Prophets
4. Nature of the Worship
5. Origin and Extent of the Worship
LITERATURE
1. The Name:
The name of a heathen divinity whose worship figures largely in the later history of the kingdom of Judah. As the national god of the Ammonites, he is known as "Milcom" (1 Kings 11:5, 7), or "Malcam" ("Malcan" is an alternative reading in 2 Samuel 12:30, 31; compare Jeremiah 49:1, 3; Zechariah 1:5, where the Revised Version margin reads "their king"). The use of basileus, and archon, as a translation of the name by the Septuagint suggests that it may have been originally the Hebrew word for "king," melekh. Molech is obtained from melekh by the substitution of the vowel points of Hebrew bosheth, signifying "shame." From the obscure and difficult passage, Amos 5:26, the Revised Version (British and American) has removed "your Moloch" and given "your king," but Septuagint had here translated "Moloch," and from the Septuagint it found its way into the Acts (7:43), the only occurrence of the name in the New Testament.
2. The Worship in Old Testament History:
In the Levitical ordinances delivered to the Israelites by Moses there are stern prohibitions of Molech-worship (Leviticus 18:21; Leviticus 20:2-5). Parallel to these prohibitions, although the name of the god is not mentioned, are those of the Deuteronomic Code where the abominations of the Canaanites are forbidden, and the burning of their sons and daughters in the fire (to Molech) is condemned as the climax of their wickedness (Deuteronomy 12:31; Deuteronomy 18:10-13). The references to Malcam, and to David's causing the inhabitants of Rabbath Ammon to pass through the brick kiln (2 Samuel 12:30, 31), are not sufficiently clear to found upon, because of the uncertainty of the readings. Solomon, under the influence of his idolatrous wives, built high places for Chemosh, the abomination of Moab, and for Milcom, the abomination of the children of Ammon. See CHEMOSH. Because of this apostasy it was intimated by the prophet Ahijah, that the kingdom was to be rent out of the hand of Solomon, and ten tribes given to Jeroboam (1 Kings 11:31-33). These high places survived to the time of Josiah, who, among his other works of religious reformation, destroyed and defiled them, filling their places with the bones of men (2 Kings 23:12-14). Molech-worship had evidently received a great impulse from Ahaz, who, like Ahab of Israel, was a supporter of foreign religions (2 Kings 16:12). He also "made his son to pass through the fire, according to the abominations of the nations, whom Yahweh cast out from before the children of Israel" (2 Kings 16:3). His grandson Manasseh, so far from following in the footsteps of his father Hezekiah, who had made great reforms in the worship, reared altars for Baal, and besides other abominations which he practiced, made his son to pass through the fire (2 Kings 21:6). The chief site of this worship, of which Ahaz and Manasseh were the promoters, was Topheth in the Valley of Hinnom, or, as it is also called, the Valley of the Children, or of the Son of Hinnom, lying to the Southwest of Jerusalem (see GEHENNA). Of Josiah's reformation it is said that "he defiled Topheth.... that no man might make his son or his daughter to pass through the fire to Molech" (2 Kings 23:10).
3. The Worship in the Prophets:
Even Josiah's thorough reformation failed to extirpate the Molech-worship, and it revived and continued till the destruction of Jerusalem, as we learn from the prophets of the time. From the beginning, the prophets maintained against it a loud and persistent protest. The testimony of Amos (1:15; 5:26) is ambiguous, but most of the ancient versions for malkam, "their king," in the former passage, read milkom, the national god of Ammon (see Davidson, in the place cited.). Isaiah was acquainted with Topheth and its abominations (Isaiah 30:33; Isaiah 57:5). Over against his beautiful and lofty description of spiritual religion, Micah sets the exaggerated zeal of those who ask in the spirit of the Molech-worshipper: "Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" (Micah 6:6). That Molech-worship had increased in the interval may account for the frequency and the clearness of the references to it in tile later Prophets. In Jeremiah we find the passing of sons and daughters through the fire to Molech associated with the building of "the high places of Baal, which are in the Valley of the Son of Hinnom" (32:35; compare 7:31;; 19:5;). In his oracle against the children of Ammon, the same prophet, denouncing evil against their land, predicts (almost in the very words of Amos above) that Malcam shall go into captivity, his priests and his princes together (Jeremiah 49:1, 3). Ezekiel, speaking to the exiles in Babylon, refers to the practice of causing children to pass through the fire to heathen divinities as long established, and proclaims the wrath of God against it (Ezekiel 16:20; Ezekiel 20:26, 31; 23:37). That this prophet regarded the practice as among the "statutes that were not good, and ordinances wherein they should not live" (Ezekiel 20:25) given by God to His people, by way of deception and judicial punishment, as some hold, is highly improbable and inconsistent with the whole prophetic attitude toward it. Zephaniah, who prophesied to the men who saw the overthrow of the kingdom of Judah, denounces God's judgments upon the worshippers of false gods (Zechariah 1:5). He does not directly charge his countrymen with having forsaken Yahweh for Malcam, but blames them, because worshipping Him they also swear to Malcam, like those Assyrian colonists in Samaria who feared Yahweh and served their own gods, or like those of whom Ezekiel elsewhere speaks who, the same day on which they had slain their children to their idols, entered the sanctuary of Yahweh to profane it (Ezekiel 23:39). The captivity in Babylon put an end to Molech-worship, since it weaned the people from all their idolatries. We do not hear of it in the post-exilic Prophets, and, in the great historical psalm of Israel's rebelliousness and God's deliverances (Psalm 106), it is only referred to in retrospect (Psalm 106:37, 38).
4. The Nature of the Worship:
When we come to consider the nature of this worship it is remarkable how few details are given regarding it in Scripture. The place where it was practiced from the days of Ahaz and Manasseh was the Valley of Hinnom where Topheth stood, a huge altar-pyre for the burning of the sacrificial victims. There is no evidence connecting the worship with the temple in Jerusalem. Ezekiel's vision of sun-worshippers in the temple is purely ideal (Ezekiel 8). A priesthood is spoken of as attached to the services (Jeremiah 49:3; compare Zephaniah 1:4, 5). The victims offered to the divinity were not burnt alive, but were killed as sacrifices, and then presented as burnt offerings. "To pass through the fire" has been taken to mean a lustration or purification of the child by fire, not involving death. But the prophets clearly speak of slaughter and sacrifice, and of high places built to burn the children in the fire as burnt offerings (Jeremiah 19:5 Ezekiel 16:20, 21).
The popular conception, molded for English readers largely by Milton's "Moloch, horrid king" as described in Paradise Lost, Book I, is derived from the accounts given in late Latin and Greek writers, especially the account which Diodorus Siculus gives in his History of the Carthaginian Kronos or Moloch. The image of Moloch was a human figure with a bull's head and outstretched arms, ready to receive the children destined for sacrifice. The image of metal was heated red hot by a fire kindled within, and the children laid on its arms rolled off into the fiery pit below. In order to drown the cries of the victims, flutes were played, and drums were beaten; and mothers stood by without tears or sobs, to give the impression of the voluntary character of the offering (see Rawlinson's Phoenicia, 113, for fuller details).
On the question of the origin of this worship there is great variety of views. Of a non-Sem origin there is no evidence; and there is no trace of human sacrifices in the old Babylonian religion. That it prevailed widely among Semitic peoples is clear.
5. Origin and Extent of the Worship:
While Milcom or Malcam is peculiarly the national god of the Ammonites, as is Chemosh of the Moabites, the name Molech or Melech was recognized among the Phoenicians, the Philistines, the Arameans, and other Semitic peoples, as a name for the divinity they worshipped from a very early time. That it was common among the Canaanites when the Israelites entered the land is evident from the fact that it was among the abominations from which they were to keep themselves free. That it was identical at first with the worship of Yahweh, or that the prophets and the best men of the nation ever regarded it as the national worship of Israel, is a modern theory which does not appear to the present writer to have been substantiated. It has been inferred from Abraham's readiness to offer up Isaac at the command of God, from the story of Jephthah and his daughter, and even from the sacrifice of Hiel the Bethelite (1 Kings 16:34), that human sacrifice to Yahweh was an original custom in Israel, and that therefore the God of Israel was no other than Moloch, or at all events a deity of similar character. But these incidents are surely too slender a foundation to support such a theory. "The fundamental idea of the heathen rite was the same as that which lay at the foundation of Hebrew ordinance: the best to God; but by presenting to us this story of the offering of Isaac, and by presenting it in this precise form, the writer simply teaches the truth, taught by all the prophets, that to obey is better than sacrifice-in other words that the God worshipped in Abraham's time was a God who did not delight in destroying life, but in saving and sanctifying it" (Robertson, Early Religion of Israel, 254). While there is no ground for identifying Yahweh with Moloch, there are good grounds for seeing a community of origin between Moloch and Baal. The name, the worship, and the general characteristics are so similar that it is natural to assign them a common place of origin in Phoenicia. The fact that Moloch-worship reached the climax of its abominable cruelty in the Phoenician colonies of which Carthage was the center shows that it had found among that people a soil suited to its peculiar genius.
LITERATURE.
Wolf Baudissin, "Moloch" in PRE3; G. F. Moore, "Moloch" in EB; Robertson, Early Religion of Israel, 241-65; Robertson Smith, Religion of the Semites, 352;; Buchanan Gray, Hebrew Proper Names, 138;.
T. Nicol.
Strong's Hebrew
4432. Molek -- a heathen god to whom Isr. sacrificed children... sacrificed children. Transliteration: Molek Phonetic Spelling: (mo'-lek) Short
Definition:
Molech.
... sacrificed children NASB Word Usage
Molech (8).
Molech.
... /hebrew/4432.htm - 6kLibrary
The Unmistakable Honesty of the Writers of the Bible Attests to ...
... examples""Then did Solomon build a high place for Chemosh, the abomination of Moab,
in the hill that is before Jerusalem, and for Molech, the abomination of ...
/.../the divine inspiration of the bible/chapter three the unmistakable honesty.htm
On the Sacrifice of the Mass
... of men. Near the city of Jerusalem there was a great idol named Molech,
to which parents offered their infants in sacrifice. We ...
/.../kinkead/baltimore catechism no 4/lesson 24 on the sacrifice.htm
The Fall of Solomon
... his father.7. Then did Solomon build an high place for Chemosh, the abomination
of Moab, in the hill that is before Jerusalem, and for Molech, the abomination ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture f/the fall of solomon.htm
The Young Josiah and the Book of the Law
... He also destroyed Topheth, which is in the valley of Ben-Hinnom, so that no man
could ever make his son or his daughter pass through the fire to Molech. ...
/.../christianbookshelf.org/sherman/the childrens bible/the young josiah and the.htm
General Index
... 89 Mixed marriages . . . . . 289 Molech . . . . . 264 Monks . . . . ...
//christianbookshelf.org/kinkead/baltimore catechism no 4/general index.htm
The Communion of Goods.
... Not Baal, nor Kamosh, nor Molech, but Mammon, is the idolatrous power in which Satan
appears against the glory of Jehovah, especially among mercantile nations. ...
/.../kuyper/the work of the holy spirit/xxvi the communion of goods.htm
The Person Sanctified.
... revenge. Kamosh is cast out only to make room for Molech; the north wind
conjured away only to be followed by a blast from the east. ...
/.../kuyper/the work of the holy spirit/xiv the person sanctified.htm
Pride of Prosperity
... There, before the altars of heathen deities, "Chemosh, the abomination of Moab,"
and "Molech, the abomination of the children of Ammon," were practiced the ...
/.../white/the story of prophets and kings/chapter 3 pride of prosperity.htm
The Second Part.
... which they oftner inherit then their vertues; as appeares in the Lutherans and the
Jewes, that would sacrifice their children to Molech, in imitation of Abraham ...
/.../ward/a coal from the altar to kindle the holy fire of zeale/the second part.htm
In the Last Chapter we Confined Ourself to the Old Testament, in ...
... hellip]then did Solomon build an high place for Chemosh, the abomination of Moab,
in the hill that was before Jerusalem, and for Molech, the abomination of the ...
//christianbookshelf.org/pink/the antichrist/in the last chapter we.htm
Thesaurus
Molech (16 Occurrences)... Noah Webster's Dictionary (n.) The fire god of the Ammonites, to whom human sacrifices
were offered; Moloch. Int. Standard Bible Encyclopedia.
MOLECH; MOLOCH.
.../m/molech.htm - 24kMoloch (2 Occurrences)
... He is also called Molech (Leviticus 18:21; 20:2-5, etc.), Milcom (1 Kings 11:5,
33, etc.), and Malcham (Zephaniah 1:5). This god became Chemosh among the ...
/m/moloch.htm - 21k
Hinnom (11 Occurrences)
... which is in the valley of the children (margin "son") of Hinnom, that no man might
make his son or his daughter to pass through the fire to Molech" (2 Kings 23 ...
/h/hinnom.htm - 18k
Gehenna (12 Occurrences)
... of the sons of Hinnom"), a deep, narrow glen to the south of Jerusalem, where the
idolatrous Jews offered their children in sacrifice to Molech (2 Chronicles 28 ...
/g/gehenna.htm - 15k
Pollute (42 Occurrences)
... Leviticus 18:21 And of thy seed thou dost not give to pass over to the Molech; nor
dost thou pollute the name of thy God; I 'am' Jehovah. (YLT). ...
/p/pollute.htm - 19k
Fire (602 Occurrences)
...Molech, the fire-god, and other deities were worshipped by certain Canaanitish and
other tribes with human sacrifices (Deuteronomy 12:31 2 Kings 17:31 Psalm 106 ...
/f/fire.htm - 78k
Offspring (186 Occurrences)
... Leviticus 18:21 And you may not make any of your children go through the fire as
an offering to Molech, and you may not put shame on the name of your God: I am ...
/o/offspring.htm - 36k
Profane (69 Occurrences)
... Leviticus 18:21 "'You shall not give any of your children to sacrifice to Molech;
neither shall you profane the name of your God: I am Yahweh. ...
/p/profane.htm - 30k
Sacrifice (300 Occurrences)
... The god who was most frequently worshipped in this way was Moloch or Molech, the
god of the Ammonites (2 Kings 23:10 Leviticus 18:21; Leviticus 20:2), but from ...
/s/sacrifice.htm - 101k
Gods (310 Occurrences)
... for their worship. Chief among these were Chemosh of Moab and Molech of
Ammon (1 Kings 11:2, 4, 8). See CHEMOSH; MOLECH. (10) The ...
/g/gods.htm - 60k
Resources
Who was Moloch/Molech? | GotQuestions.orgWhat does the Bible say about child sacrifice? | GotQuestions.orgWhat is the Queen James Bible? | GotQuestions.orgMolech: Dictionary and Thesaurus | Clyx.comBible Concordance •
Bible Dictionary •
Bible Encyclopedia •
Topical Bible •
Bible Thesuarus