Awl [E,I,N,B] Bible Dictionaries

Dictionaries :: Awl

Easton's Bible Dictionary

Awl:

an instrument only referred to in connection with the custom of boring the ear of a slave (Exd 21:6; Deu 15:17), in token of his volunteering perpetual service when he might be free. (Psa 40:6; Isa 50:5).

International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia

Awl:

ol martsea‘: "Bore his ear through with an awl" (Ex 21:6; De 15:17). The ear was pierced as being the organ of hearing, thus signifying the servant's promise of obedience.

Nave's Topical Bible

Awl: A Tool

Exd 21:6; Deu 15:17

Smith's Bible Dictionary

Awl:

a tool of which we do not know the ancient form. The only notice of it is in connection with the custom of boring the ear of the slave (Exodus 21:6; 15:17).

Bore:

bor: According to the Book of the Covenant (Ex 20:20-23:33) a slave whom his master had purchased was to be released after six years. Should he choose to remain in his master's service a religious ceremony was necessary to ratify his decision. "Then his master shall bring him unto God" (better than "unto the judges" of the King James Version), "and shall bring him to the door, or unto the doorpost; and his master shall bore his ear through with an awl" (Ex 21:6). It is highly improbable that "unto God" means "to a sanctuary"; for there was no special reason for performing this ceremony near the door of a sanctuary. On the other hand the entrance to a private house was a sacred spot. According to primitive thinking near the door dwelt the household gods whose function it was to guard the house and its occupants, e.g. against the entry of disease. It was natural that the ceremony of attaching the slave permanently to the master's household should be performed in the presence of the household gods. "The boring of the ear of slaves was a common practice in antiquity, possibly to symbolize the duty of obedience, as the ear was the organ of hearing" (Bennett). The Deuteronomist (De 15:17) rejects the religious aspect of the ceremony-probably as a relic of Canaanite religion-and looks upon it as a secular and symbolical operation. According to his view, the awl was thrust through the ear of the slave to the door. The slave in question was permanently attached to the household.

Written by Thomas Lewis

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