Parosh
Parosh is a biblical family or clan listed among the returned exiles in the postexilic restoration period.
Parosh is a biblical family or clan listed among the returned exiles in the postexilic restoration period.
Biblical family/clan name associated with the return from Babylonian exile.
Parosh is a biblical family name associated with the postexilic community that returned from Babylon to Judah. The descendants of Parosh are counted in the returnee lists and appear again in records concerning offerings, settlement, and covenant commitments in the days of Ezra and Nehemiah. Scripture presents the name as part of the historical restoration of God’s people after exile, showing the continuity of Israel’s families and the seriousness of rebuilding worship and community life. Because Parosh is a proper name rather than a theological concept, it belongs with biblical family or proper-name entries rather than with doctrinal terms.
Ezra and Nehemiah preserve lists of families who returned from captivity and participated in the restoration of Jerusalem and Judah. Parosh appears in those lists as one of the families represented among the returned exiles.
The name belongs to the Persian-period restoration after the Babylonian exile, when returned Judeans resettled the land, rebuilt the temple community, and renewed covenant life.
In ancient Israel, family and clan identity helped preserve tribal memory, inheritance, and covenant continuity. Lists such as the one naming Parosh served important historical and communal functions.
Parosh is a transliterated Hebrew family name. Its significance in Scripture is genealogical and historical rather than doctrinal.
Parosh illustrates God’s preservation of His people through exile and restoration. Even ordinary family names in Scripture bear witness to covenant continuity, faithful return, and the rebuilding of worship among the remnant.
Proper names in Scripture function as historical markers. They anchor the biblical account in real people, real families, and real events rather than abstract ideas.
Do not turn this family name into a doctrine or allegorical symbol. Its main significance is historical and genealogical, not theological in the narrow sense.
There is little interpretive dispute about Parosh itself. Bible readers generally agree it identifies a postexilic family or clan named in Ezra-Nehemiah.
Parosh does not establish doctrine on its own. Any theological use should remain subordinate to the larger biblical teaching on exile, restoration, and covenant faithfulness.
Parosh reminds readers that God notices families, names, and records. The restoration narrative encourages faithfulness in ordinary service, communal responsibility, and continuity of worship.