Catholic Encyclopedia: Beelzebub

 1. Old Testament 

Beelzebub, or Baalzebub, the Philistine god of Accaron (Ekron), scarcely 25 miles west 
of Jerusalem, whose oracle King Ochozias (Ahaziah) attempted to consult in his last 
illness, IV (II) Kings, i, 2.  It is only as an oracle that the god is known to us; no other 
mention of him occurs in the Old Testament.  The name is commonly translated "the 
lord of the flies", and the god is supposed to be so called either because as a sun god he 
brings the flies, though the Ba'al was probably not a sun god, or more likely because he 
is invoked to drive away the flies from the sacrifice, like the Zeus Apomuios, who 
drove them from Olympia, or the hero Myiagros in Arcadia.  Halevy and Winckler 
interpret the name, according to the analogy of very many names compounded with 
<baal>, as "the lord of Zebub", supposed to be a locality in Accaron; there is no proof, 
however, for the existence of such a locality, and besides Beelzebub is called the god of 
Accaron.  Cheyne thinks the original form of the name is Ba'al Zebul,  "the lord of the 
mansion," or high house, which would refer to the god's temple or to the mountain on 
which the gods dwelt, or rather, in his opinion, to both.  But the textual evidence, as 
Lagrange objects, is entirely in favour of <Zebub>.  Cheyne, admitting this, holds that 
the title "lord of the high house", which would suggest to the writer of Kings a  
reference to Yahweh's temple or to His heavenly dwelling place, would be considered 
offensive, and would induce him, in contempt, to change it to <Ba'al Zebub>, the lord 
of flies.  The tradition of the true name, lingering on, accounts for its presence in the 
Gospels (Zeboul).  This conjecture, which has a certain plausibility, leaves unexplained 
why the contempt should lead to the particular form, <Baal Zebub>, a name without 
parallel in Semitic religions. It seems more reasonable, then, to regard <Baalzebub> as 
the original form and to interpret it as "lord of the Flies".

 2. New Testament 

In the New Testament, there is question of an evil spirit, Beelzeboul.  On account of the 
great similarity of names, he is usually identified with Baalzebub, <beel> being the 
Aramaic form of <baal>, and the change from the final   to <l> such as might easily 
occur.  But there were numberless names for demons at that time, and this one may 
have been newly invented, having no relation to the other; the fact that one element of 
the compound is Aramaic and the other Hebrew would not disprove this.  The 
meaning of the term is "lord of the mansion" or dwelling, and it would be supposed by 
the Jews of this time to refer to the nether regions, and so be an appropriate name for 
the prince of that realm.  Beelzeboul (Beelzebub) is used, then, merely as another name 
for Satan (Matt., xii, 24-29; Luke, xi, 15-22) by whom the enemies of Our Lord accused 
Him of being possessed and by whom they claimed He cast out demons.  Their charge 
seems to have been that the good Our Lord did was wrought by the Evil One in order 
to deceive, which Jesus showed to be absurd and a wilful blindness.  If the New 
Testament name be considered a transformation of the old, the question arises as to 
how the god of the little town of Accaron came to give a name to the Prince of 
Darkness.  The mission on which Ochozias sent his followers seems to show that 
Beelzebub already had a wide renown in Palestine.  The narrative (IV Kings, i) was a 
very striking one, well known to the contemporaries of Our Lord (Luke, ix, 54); from it 
might easily be derived the idea of Beelzebub as the special adversary of God, and the 
change in the final letter of the name which took place (<ex hypothesi>) would lead the 
Jews to regard it as designating the prince of the lower regions.  With him was 
naturally connected the idea of demoniacal possession; and there is no need of 
Cheyne's conjecture that Beelzebub's "name naturally rose to Jewish lips when 
demoniacal possession was spoken of, because of the demoniacal origin assumed for 
heathen oracles".  How can we account for the idea of Beelzebub exorcizing the 
demons?  On the assumption that he is to be identified with the Philistine god, 
Lagrange thinks the idea is derived from the special prerogative of Beelzebub as fly-
chaser (<chasse-mouche>).  In the Babylonian epic of the deluge, "the gods gather over 
the sacrificer like flies" (see Driver, Genesis, 105).  It was easy for the heathen Semites, 
according to Lagrange, to come to conceive of the flies troubling the sacrifice as images 
of spirits hovering around with no right to be there; and so Beelzebub, the god who 
drove away the flies, became the prince of demons in whose name the devils were 
exorcised from the bodies of the possessed.  Others think the idea naturally arose that 
the lord of the demons had power to command them to leave the possessed.  It seems 
much more reasonable, however, to regard this faculty of Beelzebub not as a tradition, 
but simply as a change invented by Our Lord's enemies to throw discredit on his 
exorcisms.  His other miracles were probably accounted for by ascribing them to 
Beelzebub and so these likewise.  Allen (Comm. on Matt., 107, 134) has endeavored to 
simplify the problem by the use of higher criticism.  According to him, the role of 
Beelzebub as arch-demon and exorcist was not a Palestinian belief; in Mark's Gospel, 
Beelzebub is simply the demon said to possess Our Lord. Matthew and Luke by 
mistake fuse together two independent clauses of Mark, iii, 22 and identify Beelzebub 
and Satan, to whom the faculty of exorcism is ascribed.  The fusion, however, seems to 
be justified by the next verse of Mark, which is more naturally interpreted in the sense 
of Matthew and Luke, though Allen's interpretation may be admitted as possible.  
Beelzebub does not appear in the Jewish literature of the period; there we usually find 
Beliar (Belial) as an alternative name for Satan.

JOHN F. FENLON

Transcribed by Janet Grayson

Taken from the New Advent Web Page (www.knight.org/advent).

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