Repha'im have also been considered the residents of the Netherworld (
Sheol in the Hebrew Bible) in more recent scholarship. Possible examples of this usage appear as "
shades", "spirits", or "dead" in various translations of the Bible. See: , , ; ; , , ; , and possibly , where ''Repha'im
may be read as "dead ancestors" or "weakeners", as opposed to Rophe'im'', "doctors". The Heb. root רפא means "heal", and thus the masculine plural nominalized form of this root may indicate that these "deceased ancestors" could be invoked for ritual purposes that would benefit the living. Various ancient
Northwest Semitic texts are also replete with references to terms evidently cognate with
Rephaim as the dead or dead kings. Lewis (1989) undertakes a detailed study of several enigmatic funerary ritual texts from the ancient coastal city of
Ugarit. Lewis concludes that the
"Ugaritic Funerary Text" provides important evidence for understanding Ugarit's
cult of the dead, wherein beings called ''rapi'uma
, the long dead, and malakuma
, recently dead kings, were invoked in a funeral liturgy, presented with food/drink offerings, and asked to provide blessings for the reign of the current king. The many references to repha'im'' in the
Hebrew Bible in contexts involving Sheol and dead spirits strongly suggests that many ancient
Israelites imagined the spirits of the dead as playing an active and important role in securing blessings, healing, or other benefits in the lives of the living. In 2021, a new theory regarding the identity of the Rephaim was published by J. Yogev, which suggests that the Rephaim were systematically eradicated from biblical texts as an agenda to eliminate their memory according to monotheistic belief systems in biblical times. The divine status of the Rephaim is evident from "The Rephaim," where they are called "gods" and "divine ones," but also from the end of "Baal" in
Stories from Ancient Canaan: Sun rules the Rephaim, Sun rules the divine ones: Your company are the gods, see, the dead are your company. == See also ==