Jehoshaphat, Valley Of
(valley of the judgment of Jehovah), a valley mentioned by Joel only, as the spot in which, after the return of Judah and
Jerusalem from captivity, Jehovah would gather all the heathen, (Joel 3:2) and would there sit to judge them for their misdeeds to Israel. ch. (Joel 3:12) The scene of “Jehovah’s judgment” as been localized, and the name has come down to us attached to that deep ravine which
separates Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives, through which at one time the Kedron forced its stream. At what period the name
“valley of Jehoshaphat” was first applied to this spot is unknown. It is not mentioned in the Bible or Josephus, but is first
encountered in the middle of the fourth century. Both Moslems and Jews believe that the last judgment is to take place there.
The steep sides of the ravine, wherever a level strip affords the opportunity, are crowded—in places almost paved— by the
sepulchres of the Moslems, or the simpler slabs of the Jewish tombs, alike awaiting the assembly of the last judgment. The
name is generally confined by travellers to the upper part of the glen. (Others suppose that the name is only an imaginary
one, “the valley of the judgment of Jehovah” referring to some great victories of God’s people in which judgment was executed
upon the heathen; or perhaps, as Keil, etc., to the end of the world.—ED.)