The Hebrew Bible describes the Jebusites as dwelling in the mountains beside Jerusalem in
Numbers 13:29 and
Joshua 11:3. In the narration of the
burning bush in Exodus 3:18, the "good and large land, flowing with milk and honey" that was promised to
Moses as the future home of the oppressed
Hebrews included the land of the Jebusites. According to
Joshua 10,
Adonizedek led a confederation of Jebusites and the tribes from the neighbouring cities of
Jarmuth,
Lachish,
Eglon and
Hebron against Joshua but was soundly defeated and killed. However,
Joshua 15:63 states the
Judahites could not dislodge the Jebusites, who were living in Jerusalem ("to this day the Jebusites live there with the people of Judah"). portrays the Jebusites as continuing to dwell at Jerusalem, within the territory otherwise occupied by the
Tribe of Benjamin. According to 2 Samuel, the Jebusites still controlled Jerusalem at the time of King David, but David wished to take control of the city. Understandably, the Jebusites contest his attempt to do this, and since Jebus was the strongest fortress in Canaan, they gloat that even the "blind and lame" could withstand David's siege.
1 Kings 9:20-21 states that
Solomon forced the surviving Jebusites to become
serfs. Another Jebusite,
Araunah (referred to as
Ornan by the
Books of Chronicles) is described by the
Books of Samuel as having sold his
threshing floor to King David, which David then constructed an altar on, the implication being that the altar became the core of the
Solomon's Temple.
Araunah means "the lord" in Hurrian and was loaned into Hittite, and so most scholars, since they consider the Jebusites to have been Hittites, have argued that Araunah may have been another king of Jerusalem; some scholars additionally believe that
Adonijah is a disguised reference to Araunah, the
ר (r) having been corrupted to
ד (d). At many periods the letters are virtually indistinguishable. The argument originated from Cheyne, who proposed the reverse. The narrative is considered by some scholars to be
aetiological and of dubious
historicity. It is unknown what ultimately became of these
Jebusites. According to the "Jebusite hypothesis", however, the Jebusites persisted as inhabitants of Jerusalem and comprised an important faction in the
Kingdom of Judah, including such notables as
Zadok the priest,
Nathan the prophet, and
Bathsheba, queen and mother of the next monarch,
Solomon. According to this hypothesis, after the disgrace of a rival Elide faction of priests in the struggle for succession to David, the
Zadokites became the sole authorized
priests, so a Jebusite family monopolized the Jerusalem clergy for many centuries before becoming sufficiently attenuated to be indistinguishable from other
Judeans or Judahites. Elsewhere in the Bible, the Jebusites are described in a manner that suggests that they worshipped the same God,
Elyon, as the Israelites (e.g.,
Melchizedek). Further support for this theory comes from the fact that other Jebusites resident in pre-Israelite Jerusalem bore names invoking the principle or god Zedek (Tzedek) (e.g., Melchizedek and
Adonizedek). Under this theory the
Aaronic lineage ascribed to Zadok is a later, anachronistic interpolation. A Jebusite is mentioned in the
Acts of Barnabas as accompanying his martyrdom. ==Classical rabbinical perspectives==