- HELEB fatness, one of David’s warriors (2 Samuel 23:29).
- HELED this world, (1 Chronicles 11:30); called Heleb (2 Samuel 23:29).
- HELEK a portion, (Joshua 17:2), descended from Manasseh.
- HELEM a stroke, great-grandson of Asher (1 Chronicles 7:35).
- HELEPH exchange, a city on the north border of Naphtali (Joshua 19:33).
- HELEZ strong, or loin (?) (1.) One of Judah’s posterity (1 Chronicles
2:39).
(2.) One of David’s warriors (2 Samuel 23:26).
- HELI elevation, father of Joseph in the line of our Lord’s ancestry (Luke
3:23). - HELKAI smooth-tongued, one of the chief priests in the time of Joiakim
(Nehemiah 12:15). - HELKATH smoothness, a town of Asher, on the east border (Joshua
19:25; 21:31); called also Hukok (1 Chronicles 6:75). - HELKATH-HAZZURIM plot of the sharp blades, or the field of heroes,
(2 Samuel 2:16). After the battle of Gilboa, so fatal to Saul and his house,
David, as divinely directed, took up his residence in Hebron, and was there
anointed king over Judah. Among the fugitives from Gilboa was
Ish-bosheth, the only surviving son of Saul, whom Abner, Saul’s uncle,
took across the Jordan to Mahanaim, and there had him proclaimed king.
Abner gathered all the forces at his command and marched to Gibeon, with
the object of wresting Judah from David. Joab had the command of
David’s army of trained men, who encamped on the south of the pool,
which was on the east of the hill on which the town of Gibeon was built,
while Abner’s army lay on the north of the pool. Abner proposed that the
conflict should be decided by twelve young men engaging in personal
combat on either side. So fiercely did they encounter each other that “they
caught every man his fellow by the head, and thrust his sword in his
fellow’s side; so they fell down together: wherefore that place was called
Helkath-hazzurim.” The combat of the champions was thus indecisive, and
there followed a severe general engagement between the two armies, ending
in the total rout of the Israelites under Abner. The general result of this