Teraphim in the Hebrew Bible: From Household Objects to Condemned Idolatry
Teraphim in the Hebrew Bible: From Household Objects to Condemned Idolatry The teraphim are among the most intriguing and understudied objects in the Hebrew Bible. Often translated as “household gods,” “idols,” or simply left untranslated as teraphim, these objects appear in narratives spanning domestic family life, tribal religion, royal households, and prophetic critique. Their function shifts across the biblical timeline—from ambiguous domestic ritual objects possibly tied to ancestry and inheritance, to explicitly condemned instruments of idolatry and divination. A close reading of every Old Testament reference shows a gradual theological and cultural transition rather than a single fixed meaning. Rachel and the Domestic Origins of Teraphim (Including Inheritance Symbolism) Genesis 31:19, 31:30–35 The first appearance of the teraphim occurs in the household of Laban: “Rachel stole her father’s household gods (teraphim).” — Genesis 31:19 When Laban confronts Jacob’s family, he...