Thayer's
STRONGS NT 3434: ΜολόχΜολόχ,
ὁ (Hebrew
מֹלֶך,
מִלְכֹּם, also
מַלְכָּם; cf. Gesenius, Thesaurus, ii., p. 794f), indeclinable,
Moloch, name of the idol-god of the Ammonites, to which human victims, particularly young children, were offered in sacrifice. According to the description in the Jalkut ((Rashi (
Vulg. Jarchi)) on
Jeremiah 7:(31)), its image was a hollow brazen figure, with the head of an ox, and outstretched human arms. It was heated red-hot by fire from within, and the little ones placed in its arms to be slowly burned, while to prevent their parents from hearing their dying cries the sacrificing-priests beat drums (see
γηννα):
Acts 7:43 from
Amos 5:26 the
Sept., where Hebrew
מַלְכְּכֶם, which ought to have been translated
βασιλέως ὑμῶν, i. e. of your idol. Cf.
Winers RWB, under the word, Moloch; J. G. Müller in
Herzog ix. 714f; Merx in
Schenkel see 194f; (
BB. DD. under the words Molech, Moloch;
Winers Grammar, Robertson Smith in Encyc. Brit. edition 9, under the word; Baudissin, Jahve et Moloch etc. and especially in
Herzog 2 vol. 10:168-178).