Preface
Every careful reader of the Gospels has stumbled at one
point or another upon a seemingly small but stubborn detail: a name, a date, or
a circumstance that appears, on the surface, to be out of place. To the skeptic
it is proof of error; to the faithful it is often passed over in uncomfortable
silence. Yet the Scriptures rarely waste a single word.
This study takes one such apparent discrepancy—the reference
to “Abiathar the high priest” in Mark 2:26—and refuses to treat it as either a
mistake or a minor footnote. Instead, it listens closely to the text, to the
wider biblical narrative, and to the ancient patterns of how Scripture speaks.
What emerges is not a defensive patch for an embarrassing slip, but a
deliberate, theologically rich allusion that unlocks a deeper layer of meaning.
Far from being a careless slip of the tongue, the mention of
Abiathar becomes a quiet yet powerful key—one that opens doors into the drama
of rejected kings and displaced priests, of sacred bread given to the hungry,
and of divine authority shifting from institutions to the Anointed One Himself.
May the reader approach these pages with fresh eyes, willing
to let an ancient detail speak with new clarity.
1. The "Error" on the Surface
- 1
Samuel 21:1-6: David flees from Saul and meets Ahimelech the
priest at Nob. Ahimelech gives him the Lechem HaPanim (Bread
of the Presence).
- Mark
2:26: Yahusha says this happened "in the days of Abiathar the
high priest."
TS2009 Mar 2:26
“How he went into the House of Elohim, while Eḇyathar (Abiathar) was high priest, and ate the
showbread, which is not right to eat, except for the priests, and he gave it
also to those who were with him?”
MT Mar 2:26 How he went
into the house of [*God] *Elohim in the days of Abiathar the high priest, and
did eat the shewbread, which is not lawful to eat but for the priests, and gave
also to them which were with him?
1Sa 21:1 And Dawiḏ came to Noḇ,
to Aḥimeleḵ the priest. And Aḥimeleḵ trembled when he met Dawiḏ, and asked him, “Why are you alone, and no one
is with you?”
1Sa 21:2 And Dawiḏ
said to Aḥimeleḵ the priest, “The sovereign
has commanded me a word, and said to me, ‘Let no one know whatever of the word
about which I send you, and which I have commanded you.’ And I have directed my
young men to such and such a place.
1Sa 21:3 “And now, what do you have on hand? Give
five loaves into my hand, or whatever is found.”
1Sa 21:4 And the priest answered Dawiḏ and said, “There is no
ordinary bread on hand, but there is set-apart bread – provided the young men
have kept themselves from women.”
1Sa 21:5 And Dawiḏ
answered the priest, and said to him, “Truly, women have been kept from us
about three days since I came out. And the vessels of the young men are
set-apart, and it is an ordinary mission, and also, it was set-apart in the
vessel today.”
1Sa 21:6 Then the priest gave him set-apart bread, for there was no bread there except the showbread which had been taken from before יהוה, in order to put hot bread in on the day it is taken away.
2. Why "Abiathar"?
Critics say Yahusha got the name wrong. But look at
the Patterns:
- The
Survivor: Immediately after David eats the bread, Saul massages
Doeg the Edomite to slaughter the priests of Nob. Only one man
escapes: Abiathar, the son of Ahimelech (1 Sam 22:20).
1Sa
22:20 And
one of the sons of Ahimelech the son of Ahitub, named Abiathar, escaped, and
fled after David.
- The
Royal Priest: Abiathar flees to David with the Ephod.
He becomes David’s lifelong companion, the "Priest of the Cave,"
and the one who represented the High Priesthood while Saul’s
"establishment" was falling apart.
- The
"Chapter Title" Method: In ancient Jewish teaching,
they didn't have verse numbers. They identified sections of Scripture by
the most prominent character or theme. Since Abiathar was the High
Priest of David’s kingdom (the one who actually wore the Ephod
for David), the entire narrative of "David on the Run" was known
as the "Abiathar Section."
3. The Theological "Sling" at the Pharisees
Yahusha used Abiathar’s name to mirror His own situation:
- The
Outcast King: David was the anointed King but was an outcast,
hungry and fleeing.
- The
Outcast Priest: Abiathar was the exit to the priesthood under ELI’s
lineage but was also an outcast fleeing Saul.
4. The "Epî" (in the days of) Construction
The Greek word epi in Mark 2:26 can mean "in the time
of" or "towards."
Just as Stephen merged the burial sites to show a unified promise, Yahusha
uses Abiathar to show a unified Priesthood under Aharon and that Abiathar
fleeing Saul was in a journey away from high priesthood serving in the
tabernacle. However, Abiathar is the face of the priesthood
that stood by the King in the wilderness. By naming Abiathar, Yahusha is
identifying with the Priesthood of the Outcasts, not the Priesthood of the
Temple Establishment (who were about to kill Him).
MT KJV Mar 2:26 How he went into the house of God in/epi G1909 the days of Abiathar the high priest, and did eat the shewbread, which is not lawful to eat but for the priests, and gave also to them which were with him?
Epi G1909
A primary preposition properly meaning superimposition (of time, place, order, etc.), as a relation of distribution [with the genitive case], that is, over, upon, etc.; of rest (with the dative case) at, on, etc.; of direction (with the accusative case) towards, upon, etc.: - about (the times), above, after, against, among, as long as (touching), at, beside, X have charge of, (be-, [where-]) fore, in (a place, as much as, the time of, -to), (because) of, (up-) on (behalf of) over, (by, for) the space of, through (-out), (un-) to (-ward), with. In compounds it retains essentially the same import, at, upon, etc. (literally or figuratively).
5. The "Survivor" vs. The "Statistic"
Ahimelech being
a brief, tragic figure compared to Abiathar’s long-term legacy
is the key to why this isn't a mistake:
- The
Law of the Living: To the Pharisees, the "Priest" was a
static office defined by the Torah. To Yahusha, the "Priest" was
the one who carried the Ephod (the Presence) to the Anointed
King.
- The
Ephod Connection: When Saul slaughtered the priests at Nob, the
"Institutional Priesthood" essentially died. When Abiathar fled
to David with the Ephod (1 Sam 23:6), the High Priesthood moved
into the wilderness with the King.
1Sa
23:6 And it
came to pass, when Abiathar the son of Ahimelech fled to David to Keilah, that
he came down with an ephod in his hand.
- The
"Epi" (Period) Reference: As noted, "In the days
of" functions as a Title for an Era. Just as we might say
"In the days of Reagan" to describe the 1980s (even if an event
happened in 1979 under Carter but defined the coming shift), "In the
days of Abiathar" defines the era where the Priesthood and
the King became one unit in the Wilderness and not in the Sanctuary.
6. Why this "Angered" the Pharisees
The Pharisees were the "Sauls" of their
day—guarding the building (the Temple) while trying to kill the King (Yahusha).
By naming Abiathar, Yahusha was subtly saying:
1.
I am David: I
am the Anointed One you are hunting.
2.
My Disciples are the New
Priesthood: Like Abiathar, they are outcasts, but they have the
"Bread" and the "Presence."
3.
Your
"Ahimelechs" are gone: The system is about to be
"massacred" (judged), and only the ones who flee to the King will
survive.
4.
Stephen merged
burial sites to show a Unified Promise (Hebron/Shechem).
5.
Yahusha merged
priestly eras to show a Unified Authority (Ahimelech/Abiathar).
6.
The Result: Both
were accused of "blasphemy" because they shifted authority away from
a Static Institution to a Living Person.
7. The Divine Heist
The divine "heist" that occurred
in the spirit realm. When Yahusha mentions Abiathar, He is reminding the
Pharisees of the exact moment the "Enquiry System" (the
Urim and Thummim) was legally stripped from the sitting administration and
handed to the Outcast King.
1. The Judicial Blindness of Saul
Saul had the institutional structure, but he was losing
the mechanism of Revelation:
- The
Rejection: Samuel, the Prophet, had already forsaken him (1
Sam 15:35).
1Sa
15:35 And
Shemu’ěl did not see Sha’ul again until the day of his death, for Shemu’ěl
mourned for Sha’ul. And יהוה was grieved that He had made Sha’ul to reign over
Yisra’ěl.
- The
Silence: Saul tries to enquire of Yahuah, but Yahuah "did
not answer him, either by dreams or by Urim or by
prophets" (1 Sam 28:6).
1Sa
28:6 And
Sha’ul inquired of יהוה, but יהוה did not answer him, either by dreams or by Urim or by the
prophets.
- The
Transition: When Saul ordered the massacre at Nob, he thought he
was crushing a rebellion. In reality, he was severing his own
connection to the Throne of Heaven.
2. The Transfer of the Ephod (The "Access Key")
When Abiathar escaped, the text emphasizes a specific
detail: "He came down with an ephod in his hand" (1
Sam 23:6).
- The
Spiritual Shift: The Ephod wasn't just a garment; it was
the interface between the King and the Creator.
- The
Outcast Access: Immediately, David uses it: "Bring
the ephod here" (1 Sam 23:9). While Saul is left
"blind" and forced to seek a witch (the occult), David—the
hunted, hungry refugee—has direct access to the Mind of
Elohim.
1Sa
23:9 And
Dawiḏ knew that Sha’ul was plotting evil against him, and said to Abiathar the priest, “Bring the shoulder
garment here.”
3. Yahusha’s Direct Hit on the Pharisees
When Yahusha (the Son of David) says "In the days of
Abiathar," He is telling the Sanhedrin:
- "You
are Saul": You have the Temple building, you have the robes,
and you have the seat of Moses. But you are blind. You have no
"Enquiry System." You are "inquiring" of your own
traditions while the Living Elohim is standing in your grain field.
- "I
am the Ephod": Just as the Ephod moved from the Tabernacle
to David’s side via Abiathar, the Presence of Elohim has
moved from the Temple to the Person of the Messiah.
- The
Bread and the Body: If the "Bread of the Presence" was
given to David by a priest whose line was about to be
"stripped," how much more does the Bread of Life belong
to Yahusha’s disciples?
By the time Saul went to the Witch of Endor, he
was a dead man walking because he had rejected the "Abiathar" of his
day. The Sanhedrin, by rejecting Stephen’s testimony of the Standing
Son of Man, were committing the same spiritual suicide—they were left in a
house that was "left to them desolate" (Matt 23:38).
Mat
23:38 “See!
Your house is left to you laid waste
8. The
Execution of the Priests
According to the biblical record
in 1 Samuel 22, Abiathar was the sole survivor of the massacre at Nob.
When King Saul ordered the
execution of the priests for assisting David, his own guards refused to strike
them. However, Doeg the Edomite complied with the command and carried out the
following slaughter:
Number of Priests Killed:
The Masoretic Text (MT) states that Doeg killed 85 men who wore the linen
ephod.
Wider Massacre: Beyond the
85 priests, Saul ordered the total destruction of the city of Nob. This
included the execution of the priests' entire families—men, women, children,
and infants—along with their livestock.
Variant Traditions: While
the Hebrew Bible (MT) lists 85, other historical and textual traditions provide
different numbers:
Septuagint (LXX): Records
the number as 305 or 385 priests.
Josephus:
In Antiquities of the Jews, he also records the number as 385
LXX Brenton 1Sa 22:18 And the king said to Doec,
Turn thou, and fall upon the priests: and Doec the Syrian turned, and slew the
priests of the Lord in that day, three hundred and five men, all wearing an
ephod.
MT KJV 1Sa 22:18 And the
king said to Doeg, Turn thou, and fall upon the priests. And Doeg the Edomite
turned, and he fell upon the priests, and slew on that day fourscore and
five persons (85) that did wear a linen ephod.
🧬
8.1 Which priestly line was at Nob?
Key figure:
- Ahimelech
Lineage: Eli →
Ahimelech → Abiathar
👉
This is the Ithamar line
So, at the
time of 1 Samuel 21–22:
- The active priesthood at Nob = Eli’s line
(Ithamar)
👉
Therefore: Nob was effectively operating under the Ithamar/Eli priestly
house
The Bible confirms Nob's location
within the tribal lands of Benjamin through later historical lists and
prophetic descriptions:
Nehemiah 11:31–32: This
passage lists the towns settled by the "people of Benjamin" after the
exile, explicitly naming Nob alongside other Benjamite towns like Anathoth and
Ramah.
Neh 11:31 The children also of Benjamin from Geba dwelt
at Michmash, and Aija, and Bethel, and in their villages,
Neh 11:32 And at Anathoth, Nob, Ananiah,
Isaiah 10:32: This describes an Assyrian march toward Yerushalayim, noting that the enemy halts at Nob and shakes his fist at "the mount of Daughter Zion." This places Nob within sight of Yerushalayim, confirming its position on the southern border of Benjamin's territory.
Isa 10:32 Yet he remains at Noḇ that day; he shakes his fist at the mountain of the daughter of Tsiyon, the hill of Yerushalayim.
Joshua 18:21–28: While Nob is not in the original list of cities given to Benjamin by Joshua, it is understood to have developed as a religious center later, following the destruction of Shiloh.
8. 2. The Priesthood of Eli's Descendants at Nob
The connection to Eli is established through the genealogy of the high priest Ahimelech, who served at Nob:
1 Samuel 22:20: Identifies Ahimelech as the "son of Ahitub."
1Sa 22:20 And one of the sons of Aḥimeleḵ son of Aḥituḇ, named Eḇyathar, escaped and fled after Dawiḏ.
1 Samuel 14:3: Explicitly links this same family line to Eli, stating that Ahitub was the son of Phinehas, who was the son of Eli, the priest of the Lord in Shiloh.
1Sa 14:3 And Aḥiyah son of Aḥituḇ, Iḵaḇoḏ’s brother, son of Pineḥas, son of Ěli, the priest of יהוה in Shiloh, was wearing a shoulder garment. And the people did not know that Yonathan had gone.
1 Samuel 22:11, 19: Refers to Nob as "the city of the priests" and calls for the death of Ahimelech and "all your father’s house" (Eli’s descendants).
1Sa 22:11 And the sovereign sent someone to call Aḥimeleḵ the priest, son of Aḥituḇ, and all his father’s house, the priests who were in Noḇ. And they all came to the sovereign,
1Sa 22:19 And he struck Noḇ, the city of the priests, with the edge of the sword, from men even to women, from children even to nursing infants, and oxen and donkeys and sheep, with the edge of the sword.
1 Samuel 2:31–33: Contains the prophecy that Eli’s house would be "cut off" and that his descendants would "die in the prime of life." Biblical commentators frequently cite the massacre at Nob as the fulfillment of this specific judgment against Eli's lineage.
1Sa
2:31 See,
the days are coming that I shall cut off your arm and the arm of your father’s
house, so that an old man shall not be found in your house.
1Sa
2:32 And you
shall see an enemy in My Dwelling Place, despite all the good which Elohim does
for Yisra’ěl, and there shall not be an old man in your house forever.
1Sa 2:33 But any of your men whom I do not cut off from My slaughter-place is to consume your eyes and grieve your life, and all the increase of your house die as men.
9. Eli’s household cut off
from Priesthood?
9.1. The Prophecy of Judgment (1 Samuel 2:27–36)
Because Eli’s sons, Hophni and Phinehas, desecrated the sacrifices and Eli failed to restrain them, an unnamed "man of Elohim" delivered a multi-layered curse:
· Termination of Lineage: Elohim promised to "cut
off the arm" of Eli’s house so that no man in his family would reach old
age.
· The Immediate Sign: Both of Eli’s sons would die on
the same day.
· The Replacement: Elohim promised to raise up a "faithful priest" who would do according to His heart and mind and for whom Elohim would build a "sure house".
9.2. Phase 1: The Initial Sign at Aphek (1 Samuel 4)
The first stage of fulfilment occurred shortly after the prophecy.
· Scripture: 1 Samuel 4:11, 18
· Event: In a battle against the Philistines, Hophni and Phinehas were killed on the same day. Upon hearing the news and the capture of the Ark, Eli fell backward, broke his neck, and died. The glory had "departed" (Ichabod) from the house of Eli in Shiloh.
1Sa 4:11 And the ark of Elohim was captured, and
the two sons of Ěli died, Ḥophni and Pineḥas.
1Sa 4:18 And it came to be, when he made mention
of the ark of Elohim, that Ěli fell off the seat backward by the side of the
gate. And his neck was broken and he died, for the man was old and heavy. And
he ruled Yisra’ěl forty years.
9.3. Phase 2: The Massacre at
Nob (1 Samuel 22)
The judgment continued during the
reign of Saul through the treachery of Doeg the Edomite.
Scripture: 1 Samuel 22:18–19
Event: Saul ordered the
execution of the priests at Nob because Ahimelech (Eli’s great-grandson) had
aided David. Doeg personally slaughtered 85 priests (305 including their
families). This act significantly thinned Eli’s surviving line, fulfilling the
"death by the sword" and "dying in the prime of life"
elements of the original prophecy.
9.4. Phase 3: The Final
Deposition of Abiathar (1 Kings 2)
The "faithful priest"
prophecy was fully realized when Solomon ascended the throne.
Scripture: 1 Kings 2:26–27
1Ki 2:26 Then the sovereign said to Eḇyathar the priest, “Go to
Anathoth, to your own fields, for you deserve death. But I do not put you to
death at this time, because you did bear the ark of the Master יהוה
before my father Dawiḏ,
and because you were afflicted in all my father was afflicted in.”
1Ki 2:27 So Shelomoh dismissed Eḇyathar from being priest to יהוה, to fill the word of יהוה which He spoke concerning the house of Ěli at Shiloh.
Event: Abiathar (the lone
survivor of Nob) supported Adoniyah’s attempt to take the throne instead of
Solomon. When Solomon became king, he banished Abiathar to Anathoth.
Direct Fulfilment: The text
explicitly states this was done "that he might fulfil the word of Yahuah
which he spake concerning the house of Eli in Shiloh"
9. 5. The Transition to the Zadokite Priesthood
The high priesthood then shifted permanently back to the
line of Eleazar through Zadok.
Scripture: 1 Kings 2:35
1Ki 2:35 And the sovereign put Benayahu son of Yehoyaḏa in his place over the army, and the sovereign put Tsaḏoq the priest in the place of Eḇyathar.
The "Sure House": Zadok remained faithful to David and Solomon, becoming the "faithful priest" of the prophecy. His descendants remained the exclusive high-priestly line through the first temple period and are singled out in Ezekiel’s vision for their faithfulness (Ezekiel 44:15)
Eze 44:15 “But the priests, the Lěwites, the
sons of Tsaḏoq, who
guarded the duty of My set-apart place when the children of Yisra’ěl went
astray from Me, they shall draw near to Me to serve Me, and shall stand before
Me to bring to Me the fat and the blood,” declares the Master יהוה.
Eze 44:16 “They shall enter My set-apart place, and they shall draw near to My table to serve Me, and they shall guard My charge.
9.6 The Lineage Comparison
While Eli was officiating, the
"rightful" line of Eleazar continued to exist in parallel,
waiting for the divine restoration.
|
Era |
Line of Eleazar (The Promised) |
Line of Ithamar (The Interim/Eli) |
|
Exodus |
EleazaràPhinehas |
Ithamar |
|
Judges |
Uzzi (Bypassed) |
Eli (Assumes office) |
|
Saul |
Ahitub I |
Ahimelech (Slain at Nob) |
|
David |
Zadok (Co-priest) |
Abiathar (Survivor of Nob) |
|
Solomon |
Zadok (Sole High Priest) |
Abiathar (Deposed/Exiled) |
The "merger" of these two lines in David’s day—having both Zadok (Eleazar) and Abiathar (Ithamar) as priests—was the final step before the "Ithamar/Eli" line was legally cut off by Solomon to fulfill the 1 Samuel 2:35 prophecy. It is important to understand what portion was legally cut off which we will see a bit later as the house of Eli continued in its priesthood but in a low profile.
By the time of the Exile, the "Sons of Zadok" were the only ones recognized as faithful (Ezekiel 44:15), finally restoring the priesthood to the line of Phinehas as originally promised.
The house of Eli continued to exist, but it was
drastically reduced in both number and authority as
a direct result of the divine judgments we have traced.
By the time David organized the 24 divisions of the priesthood in 1 Chronicles 24, the data reflects the "thinning out" prophesied in 1 Samuel 2:33.
1Ch 24:4 And there were more leaders found of the
sons of El‛azar than of the sons of Ithamar.
So, they divided the sons of El‛azar into sixteen heads of their fathers’ houses, and the sons of Ithamar into eight heads of their fathers’ houses.
9.7.1 The Numerical Imbalance (16 vs. 8)
As seen in 1 Chronicles 24:4, the sons of Eleazar (Zadok’s line) produced 16 heads, while the sons of Ithamar (Eli/Abiathar’s line) produced only 8 heads.
· The Prophetic Link: In 1 Samuel 2:31, Yahuah said, "I will cut off thine arm, and the arm of thy father's house." The 2-to-1 ratio shows that Eli’s lineage was physically shrinking compared to the "faithful" line of Eleazar.
9.7.2. The Survival of "The Remnant" of Eli
The house of Eli was not annihilated at Nob; it was
"cut down." We see this in the specific wording of the curse:
Scripture: 1 Samuel 2:33 But any of your men whom I do not cut off from My slaughter-place is to consume your eyes and grieve your life, and all the increase of your house die as men.
The Fulfilment: Abiathar was that man. He remained at the altar to "consume the eyes" of the dying lineage. Even after Solomon deposed him in 1 Kings 2:27, his descendants (the sons of Ithamar) continued to serve in the lower divisions of the 24 courses, but they no longer held the High Priesthood. And that’s how we understand when Yahuah said, "I will cut off thine arm, and the arm of thy father's house."
9.7.3. The Shift in Influence
During David’s reign, both lines were represented at the top:
Zadok (Eleazar) and Ahimelech/Abiathar (Ithamar) are
listed together as the primary priests (2 Samuel 8:17; 1 Chronicles 24:3).
However, once Solomon exiled Abiathar to Anathoth, the house of Eli became a "common" priestly family. They were still priests, but they were the "8 divisions" serving under the shadow of the "16 divisions" of Zadok.
10. The Jeremiah Connection
Interestingly, the prophet Jeremiah was from the "priests that were in Anathoth" (Jeremiah 1:1).
Jer 1:1 The words of Yirmeyahu the son of Ḥilqiyahu, of the priests who were in Anathoth in the land of Binyamin,
· Since Solomon exiled Abiathar specifically to Anathoth (1 Kings 2:26), it is evident that Jeremiah was a direct descendant of the House of Eli.
1Ki 2:26 Then the sovereign said to Eḇyathar the priest, “Go to Anathoth, to your own fields, for you deserve death. But I do not put you to death at this time, because you did bear the ark of the Master יהוה before my father Dawiḏ, and because you were afflicted in all my father was afflicted in.”
· This would mean that while Eli’s house lost the political High Priesthood, Yahuah still used the lineage for prophetic purposes, eventually bringing forth a priest (Jeremiah) who would announce the destruction of the very Temple that the Zadokites were guarding.
10.1. The "Zadokite" Pride vs. The
"Eli" Pedigree
If Jeremiah was indeed from the line of Abiathar/Eli (as his residence in Anathoth strongly suggests, Jeremiah 1:1 compared to 1 Kings 2:26), then the "Zadokite" establishment in Yerushalayim would have viewed him as a "discredited second-class priest."
By the time of Jeremiah, the House of Zadok had held the High Priesthood exclusively for nearly 400 years. They were the "Sure House" (1 Sam 2:35).
The Prejudice: They likely viewed the priests of
Anathoth as "the rejected ones." In their eyes, Jeremiah wasn't just
a "doom-and-gloom" prophet; he was a descendant of a displaced,
cursed lineage trying to tell the "legitimate" priests how to run the
Temple.
The Irony: They used the "Zadokite" promise as a shield, famously chanting, "The temple of Yahuah, the temple of Yahuah, the temple of Yahuah, are these" (Jeremiah 7:4). They believed their office made them invincible, while Jeremiah—from the "cut off" house—knew exactly what it looked like when Yahuah abandoned a Sanctuary (as He did at Shiloh).
Jer 7:4 “Do not trust in these false words, saying, ‘This is the Hěḵal of יהוה, the Hěḵal of יהוה, the Hěḵal of יהוה!’
10.2. "Strip the Arm" (The Office) vs.
"The Seed" (The Service)
· The Scripture: 1 Samuel 2:31 says, "I will cut off thine arm." In Hebrew thought, the "arm" (zeroa) represents strength, authority, and the ability to grasp the Office.
· The Remnant: Yahuah did not say He would annihilate every descendant of Eli. He said they would be "cut off from the altar" (of High Priesthood). They remained priests of the 1 Chronicles 24 divisions (the 8 divisions of Ithamar), but they lost the "Right of Way" to the Most Set Apart Place.
10.3. Jeremiah’s Message: A "Shiloh" Warning
Because Jeremiah came from the line associated with the Tabernacle at Shiloh, his most famous sermon was a direct reference to his own family’s history:
Jeremiah 7:12-14: "But go ye now unto my place which was in Shiloh, where I set my name at the first, and see what I did to it for the wickedness of my people YasharEL... therefore will I do unto this house [the Temple]... as I have done to Shiloh."
The Sting: To the Zadokite priests, this was the ultimate insult. Jeremiah was reminding them that just as his ancestor Eli lost the Ark and the Priesthood, they were about to lose the Temple and the Land.
10.4. The Spiritual "Reverse": The Rejected
Voice
This creates a powerful pattern in Scripture:
· The Establishment (Zadokites) held the Position but
lost the Ruach.
· The Displaced (House of Eli/Jeremiah) lost the Position but carried the Word in affliction.
This mirrors our earlier discussion on Stephen. The Sanhedrin (The Establishment) held the "Seat of Moses," but Stephen (The Outcast) held the "Vision of the Son of Man."
The "Zadokite" priests likely dismissed Jeremiah’s warnings as "bitterness" from a displaced family, not realizing that Yahuah often speaks through the very person the "religious elite" have already written off.
10.5. The Geographical Evidence (Anathoth)
The strongest scriptural link is Jeremiah’s hometown.
Jeremiah 1:1: Identifies him as "one of the
priests at Anathoth."
1 Kings 2:26-27: Records that King Solomon deposed Abiathar (the last High Priest of Eli's line) and exiled him specifically to his family estate in Anathoth.
Significance: Anathoth was a small priestly town. The presence of a "displaced" priestly family there—descended from the only survivor of the Nob massacre (Abiathar)—strongly suggests that the priests of Anathoth in Jeremiah's day were the descendants of that exiled house. Solomon in 1Kings 2:26 record tells Abiathar “Go to Anathoth, to your own fields which is evidence that this parcel of land was given to the Levites from Eli’s household.
Jos
21:18 Anathoth
with its open land, and Almon with its open land – four cities.
Jos 21:19 All the cities of the children of Aharon, the priests, were thirteen cities with their open lands.
While Joshua doesn’t tell which clan of Levi Anathoth was given, it is evident that when Solomon tells Abiathar to go to Anathoth, to your own fields and Jeremiah was a priest from Anathoth, it is evident Eli’s household dwelt there and Jeremiah was one of them.
Anathoth is a Levitical priestly city and Abiathar is sent to his “own fields” there, it indicates hereditary priestly possession. Jeremiah being identified as a priest from Anathoth therefore places him within that same priestly lineage, most naturally the line of Eli through Abiathar
10.6.
Rabbinic and Historical Evidence
Rabbinic literature often explores Jeremiah’s lineage to explain his "outsider" status and his prophetic obsession with the destruction of Shiloh.
Pesikta de-Rav Kahana 13 (The "Words of Jeremiah" Piska): This midrashic collection explicitly links Jeremiah's harsh rebukes to his lineage. It presents Jeremiah as a descendant of Eli, using his family history of loss (Shiloh) to justify why he was the one chosen to announce the destruction of the Second Temple.
Jewish Encyclopedia / Traditional Commentaries: Rabbinic tradition identifies Jeremiah’s father, Hilkiah, as a descendant of Abiathar. This is used to explain the unique authority with which Jeremiah spoke about the "desolation of Shiloh" (Jeremiah 7:12)—he was speaking of the tragedy that ended his own ancestor’s High Priesthood.
10.7. The "Weeping Eye" Prophetic Parallel
There is a specific verbal tie between the judgment on Eli and the character of Jeremiah.
· 1 Samuel 2:33 (The Curse): "The man of thine... shall be spared to weep his eyes out and to grieve his heart."
1Sa 2:33 And the man of thine, whom I shall not cut off from mine altar, shall be to consume thine eyes, and to grieve thine heart: and all the increase of thine house shall die in the flower of their age.
· Jeremiah 9:1 (The Fulfillment): Jeremiah is known as the "Weeping Prophet," famously saying, "Oh, that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night."
Jer 9:1 Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!
· Significance: We can see Jeremiah as the literal fulfilment
of this part of Eli's curse—the one descendant kept alive at the altar
specifically to weep over the destruction of the nation.
· A priest
· From a non-central location (Anathoth)
· Speaking against the Temple establishment
· Marked by lamentation and grief
👉 That fits perfectly with: a displaced priestly heritage carrying memory of loss
Jeremiah is understood as a descendant of Eli whose prophetic grief and Shiloh warning echo the earlier collapse of his own priestly line—making him a fitting voice to announce the fall of the Temple.
11. Relation to Yahusha
Yahusha’s mention of Abiathar in Mark 2:26 is the ultimate fulfilment of the "Displaced Priest" theme we’ve discussed. By naming Abiathar specifically—rather than the officiating priest Ahimelech—Yahusha wasn't making a historical mistake; He was invoking a specific Legal and Prophetic Era that mirrored His own.
11.1. The Era of the Outcast Presence
Abiathar was the one who escaped the massacre at Nob and brought the Ephod to David (1 Samuel 22:20-23; 1 Samuel 23:6).
The Transition: When Saul killed the priests at Nob, the "Institutional Tabernacle" became a hollow shell. The true inquiry system (Urim and Thummim) moved to the wilderness with David and Abiathar.
Yahusha's Point: When the Pharisees challenged Him on the Sabbath, Yahusha pointed to the "Days of Abiathar"—a time when the Anointed King and the Outcast Priest were forced to bypass ritual law (eating the Bread of the Presence) to sustain the life of the kingdom
11.2. The Link to the House of Eli and Jeremiah
Jeremiah’s lineage provides the deeper spiritual layer.
· The Rejected Line: Abiathar was the last High Priest
of the House of Eli. His exile to Anathoth fulfils
the curse that "stripped the arm" of Eli's house.
· The Jeremiah Connection: Jeremiah (the priest
of Anathoth) was a descendant of this "cut-off" line. He was the
voice crying out that the Temple would become like Shiloh (Eli's
home).
· Yahusha’s Identification: By quoting Abiathar,
Yahusha is identifying with the line of the rejected. He is showing
the Pharisees that, just as in the days of Abiathar, the religious elite (the
Zadokite types of His day) are about to lose the "Ephod" because they
are hunting the King.
11.3. The Shift in Authority (The
"Melchizedek" Hint)
Yahusha uses the Abiathar incident to prove that Human
Need and Divine Purpose override ritualism.
The King as Priest: David, as the "Anointed," had a special authority that allowed him to eat the bread meant only for priests.
The Greater David: Yahusha is the ADON of the Sabbath (Mark 2:28). By invoking Abiathar—the priest who shared David’s suffering—He is announcing that the New Covenant (prophesied by the "Eli-descendant" Jeremiah) is now active.
When Yahusha invokes Abiathar, He is not just naming a priest. He is invoking a moment in Israel’s history where:
|
Then (Abiathar era) |
Now (Yahusha’s time) |
|
Saul = ruling but rejected |
Leaders = ruling but resisting |
|
David = anointed but opposed |
Yahusha = anointed but opposed |
|
Abiathar = priest with David |
Authority aligns outside establishment |
|
Priestly system collapsing |
Temple system under critique |
12. Priesthood making the way to the King of Kings
John the Baptist was a Zadokite by lineage, yet he functioned like an "Eli/Abiathar" outcast by choice and divine commission.
Here is how his lineage and his location (the wilderness) create the final "bridge" between the Old and New Priesthoods:
12.1. John’s Elite Zadokite Pedigree
Unlike Jeremiah (who was from the "displaced" house of Eli in Anathoth), John the Baptist came from the top tier of the priestly establishment.
The Scripture: Luke 1:5 states that his father, Zechariah, was of the "course of Abijah" (one of the 16 divisions of Eleazar/Zadok) and his mother, Elizabeth, was of the "daughters of Aaron."
The Status: John was a "pure-bred" priest. He had every legal right to the highest offices in the Yerushalayim Temple. He was the "Golden Child" of the Zadokite elite.
12.2. The Great Defection: From Temple to Wilderness
Instead of taking up his "arm" (office) in the Temple, John abandoned the institution.
The Reason: The Temple priesthood in John’s Day (led by Annas and Caiaphas) was notoriously corrupt. They were political appointees of Rome, not spiritual leaders.
The Prophetic Shift: By going to the wilderness (Luke 1:80), John was repeating the "Abiathar Pattern."
Abiathar took the Ephod and fled to the wilderness to be
with the Anointed King (David).
John took the Priesthood and went to the wilderness to prepare the way for the Anointed King (Yahusha).
12.3. Was John an "Eli" Figure?
While John was a Zadokite by blood, he carried the "Jeremiah Spirit."
· The Anathoth Connection: We noted that the "House of Eli" (Jeremiah) was the voice of the outcast. John, though a Zadokite, chose the "outcast" lifestyle (locusts and wild honey) to signal that the Institutional Priesthood was finished.
· The "Transfer of the Ephod": In the Jordan River, the High Priest’s son (John) baptized the King (Yahusha). This was the legal hand-off. The Zadokite line (represented by John) was voluntarily laying down its authority at the feet of the Melchizedek King.
12.4. The Final "Abiathar" Parallel
When Yahusha quoted Abiathar to the Pharisees, He was showing them the two types of priests:
1. The Sauls: Those in the building (Caiaphas/The
Sanhedrin) who have the "office" but no "revelation" (no
Urim/Thummim).
2. The Abiathars/Johns: Those in the wilderness who
have the "Bread of the Presence" and the "Living
Word."
The priests who have fled/crossed over to Exile to the
True King.
12.5. Summary:
· Jeremiah (House of Eli/Ithamar): A displaced priest
forced out by judgment.
· John the Baptist (House of Zadok/Eleazar): A
legitimate priest who walked out by choice.
· The Merger: Both met in the Wilderness. John (the "True Zadokite") and the spirit of Jeremiah (the "True Eli-Remnant") both testified that the Temple of Stones was being replaced by the Temple of the Body (the Etsem / Bones).
John the Baptist was the "last of the
Zadokites" to hold divine approval, and he used that approval to point
away from himself and toward Yahusha—the El Elohe YasharEL