Ozem
Ozem is a biblical personal name borne by at least two men in Old Testament genealogies, including a son of Jesse and a descendant of Jerahmeel.
Ozem is a biblical personal name borne by at least two men in Old Testament genealogies, including a son of Jesse and a descendant of Jerahmeel.
A Hebrew personal name found in Judah’s genealogical records.
Ozem is a biblical personal name used for more than one individual in the Old Testament. The best-known Ozem is listed among the sons of Jesse, and therefore among David’s brothers. Another Ozem appears in the genealogy of Jerahmeel within the Judahite family records. The references are brief and primarily serve genealogical purposes, so the entry is historical and lexical rather than theological in nature. As a result, the term should be published as a biblical person/name entry rather than retained as a theological category.
Ozem appears in the genealogical material that traces Judah’s family lines. These lists preserve covenant history and help identify households, tribal connections, and the human setting of David’s lineage.
Genealogies in the Old Testament often functioned as public records of family descent, inheritance, and tribal identity. Ozem’s appearances belong to that historical setting and do not indicate a larger narrative role.
In ancient Israel, genealogical records were significant for preserving family identity and covenant lineages. Names like Ozem were not merely labels but markers of belonging within the people of Israel.
Hebrew personal name rendered as Ozem in English translations; the precise etymology is not certain in this entry.
Ozem has no major doctrinal content of its own, but the entry illustrates how Scripture preserves ordinary people within God’s covenant history and genealogical record.
The entry is an example of how a proper name can be historically meaningful without carrying a theological concept. Its value lies in identification and biblical chronology, not abstract doctrine.
Do not treat Ozem as a doctrine, symbol, or theological term. The references are genealogical and should be read in context. Because more than one person bears the name, the entry should be understood as a shared name rather than a single fully developed biography.
There is no meaningful doctrinal controversy about Ozem; the main issue is simple identification within the genealogies.
This entry should remain descriptive and historical. It should not be expanded into speculative symbolism, typology, or doctrinal teaching beyond the ordinary significance of biblical genealogies.
Even brief names in Scripture remind readers that God’s Word preserves real people and family lines. The entry can also help readers navigate genealogical passages without confusion.