Thayer's
STRONGS NT 896: ΒάαλΒάαλ (so accented also by
Pape (Eigenn. under the word), Kuenen and Cobet (Rom. as below); but
L T (yet the name of the month,
1 Kings 6:5 (38),
Βάαλ)
Tr WH etc.
Βάαλ; so
Etym. Magn. 194, 19;
Suidas 1746 a. etc. Dindorf in
Stephanus' Thesaurus, under the word
Βάαλ or
Βάαλ),
ὁ,
ἡ, an indeclinable noun (Hebrew
בַּעַל, Chaldean
בּל contracted from
בְּעֵל),
lord:
Romans 11:4. This was the name of the supreme heavenly divinity worshipped by the Shemitic nations (the Phoenicians, Canaanites, Babylonians, Assyrians), often also by the Israelites themselves, and represented by the Sun:
τῇ Βάαλ,
Romans 11:4. Cf.
Winers RWB (and
BB. DD.) under the word and J. G. Müller in
Herzog i., p. 637ff; Merx in
Schenkel i., 322ff; Schlottmann in
Riehm, p. 126f. Since in this form the supreme power of nature generating all things, and consequently a male deity, was worshipped, with which the female deity Astarte was associated, it is hard to explain why the
Sept. in some places say
ὁ Βάαλ (
Numbers 22:41;
Judges 2:13;
1 Kings 16:1;
1 Kings 19:18, etc.), in others
ἡ Βάαλ (
Hosea 2:8;
1 Samuel 7:4, etc. (yet see Dillmann, as below, p. 617)). Among the various conjectures on tiffs subject the easiest is this: that the
Sept. called the deity
ἡ Βάαλ in derision, as weak and impotent, just as the Arabs call idols goddesses and the rabbis
אֱלֹהות; so Gesenius in Rosenmüller's Repert. i., p. 139 and Tholuck on Romans, the passage cited; (yet cf. Dillmann, as below, p. 602; for other opinions and references see Meyer at the passage; cf.
Winer's Grammar, § 27, 6 N. 1. But Prof. Dillmann shows (in the Monatsbericht d. Akad. zu Berlin, 16 Juni 1881, p. 601ff), that the Jews (just as they abstained from pronouncing the word Jehovah) avoided uttering the abhorred name of
Βάαλ (
Exodus 23:13). As a substitute in Aramaic they read
טעות,
דחלא or
פתכרא, and in Greek
αἰσχύνη (cf.
1 Kings 18:19, 25). This substitute in Greek was suggested by the use of the feminine article. Hence, we find in the
Sept.,
ἡ Βάαλ everywhere in the prophetic books Jeremiah, Zephaniah, Hosea, etc., while in the Pentateuch it does not prevail, nor even in Judges, Samuel, Kings (except
1 Samuel 7:4;
2 Kings 21:3). It disappears, too (when the worship of Baal had died out) in the later versions of
Aq.,
Symm., etc. The apostle's use in Romans, the passage cited accords with the sacred custom; cf. the substitution of the Hebrew
בֹּשֶׁת in Ish-bosheth, Mephi-bosheth, etc.
2 Samuel 2:8, 10;
2 Samuel 4:4 with
1 Chronicles 8:33, 34, also
2 Samuel 11:21 with
Judges 6:32; etc.)