Abarim

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("the borderland" or "regions beyond")

The mountainous region "before Nebo" in Moab, overlooking the Dead Sea and the Jordan Valley, where the Israelites camped before entering the promised land. From here Moses could catch a glimpse of the promised land, but he was not permitted to approach any nearer.

Concordance
Num 27:12; 33:47-48. Deut 32:49. Jer 22:20


Abarim (ăb'ərĭm), in the Bible, general term for the country E of the Jordan.


Abarim (Hebrew: הָרֵי הָעֲבָרִים, Har Ha-'Avarim, Harei Ha-'Avarim; Septuagint to oros to Abarim, en to peran tou Iordanou, mountain Abarim, mountains of Abarim) is a mountain range across Jordan, to the east and south-east of the Dead Sea, extending from Mount Nebo — its highest point — in the north, perhaps to the Arabian desert in the south. The Vulgate (Deuteronomy 32:49) gives its etymological meaning as passages. Its northern part was called Phasga (or Pisgah), and the highest peak of Phasga was Mount Nebo (Numbers 23:14; 27:12; 21:20; 32:47; Deuteronomy 3:27; 34:1; 32:49). From "the top of Pisgah," i.e., Mount Nebo, an area which belonged to Moab, Moses surveyed the Promised Land (Deuteronomy 3:27; 32:49), and there he died (34:1,5). Balaam blessed Israel the second time from the top of Mount Phasga (Numbers 23:14); and here Jeremias hid the ark (II Maccabees 2:4-5). The Israelites had one of their encampments in the mountains of Abarim (Num. 33:47,48) after crossing the Arnon. Jeremiah couples it with Bashan and Lebanon as locations from which the people cry in vain to God for rescue (Jeremiah 22:20).

References

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Coordinates: 31°45′14″N 35°42′55″E / 31.7539°N 35.7152°E / 31.7539; 35.7152


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Ije-abarim (place – in the Old Testament)