Elis´abeth, wife of Zacharias, and mother of John the Baptist (Luk 1:5). The name in this precise shape does not occur in the Old Testament, where the names of few females are given. But it is a Hebrew name, the same in fact as Elisheba, which see.
A devout woman, "of the daughters of Aaron," the wife of Zacharias, and mother of John the Baptist, Luk 1:5-25,36,39 -80.\par
Elis’abeth. (the oath of God). The wife of Zacharias, and mother of John the Baptist. She was herself of the priestly family, and a relation, Luk 1:36, of the mother of our Lord.
Hebrew: ELISHEBA
1. (Aaron’s wife) "swearing by God" (Exo 6:23).
2. Zacharias’ wife; John the Baptist’s mother. Of the daughters of Aaron; related ("cousin") to the Virgin Mary (Luk 1:5; Luk 1:36). The first to bless Mary as "the mother of her Lord" (Luk 1:40-45). Thus, our Lord, though not of the priestly tribe, was related to it; He fulfilled it, in His distinct priesthood of the Melchizedek order. Like her husband, Elisabeth was "righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless."
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Elisabeth (e-lĭz’a-bĕth, God her oath, that is, worshipper of God. The wife of Zacharias, and mother of John the Baptist. She was of a priestly family, and also the cousin of the virgin Mary. She is described as being, with her husband, a person of piety, "walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless." Luk 1:5-66.
[Elis’abeth]
A righteous woman, of the tribe of Aaron, wife of Zacharias, and mother of John the Baptist. On being visited by Mary, she was filled with the Holy Spirit, and hailed Mary as ’the mother of my Lord.’ She said, "Blessed is she that believed: for there shall be a performance of those things which were told her from the Lord." Luk 1:5-57. She was one of the God-fearing remnant, of which a glimpse is obtained in the early chapters of Luke’s gospel.
ELISABETH.—The NT notice of Elisabeth is confined to the Third Gospel, and its brief record concerning her may well be due to St. Luke’s acquaintance with Mary the mother of our Lord. It is interesting to know that she was a kinswoman (
Between the promise and the birth of this child she was visited by Mary (Luk 1:39), who remained with her for a period of three months (Luk 1:56), and to whom she was made a proof of the Almighty’s power (Luk 1:36-38). On Mary’s appearance she received a special inspiration of the Holy Spirit, which even enabled her to recognize in her kinswoman the mother of her ‘Lord’ (Luk 1:41 ff.), and in Mary’s Child a fulfilment of the promise of Jehovah Himself (Luk 1:45). Herein she unconsciously illustrated the meaning of her own name, which in its Hebrew form signifies ‘God is an oath.’
On the theory (upheld by Burkitt, Harnack, et al.) that the Magnificat ought to be attributed to Elisabeth and not to Mary, see artt. Birth of Christ, p. 203b note, and Magnificat.
H. Bisseker.
