אָבַק
to bedust, i.e. grapple
Definition
The Hebrew verb אָבַק (ʼâbaq) means 'to wrestle' or 'to grapple.' It specifically describes the physical act of wrestling, involving close combat where opponents grasp and struggle with each other. In its only biblical occurrences, it depicts the intense, prolonged wrestling match between Jacob and a divine being at the Jabbok River (Genesis 32:24-25). The term conveys not just a casual struggle but a determined, bodily contest for dominance that lasts through the night.
Biblical Usage
This verb is used exclusively in the narrative of Genesis 32:24 and 32:25, describing Jacob's encounter. It is used in a finite verbal form ('and a man wrestled with him') and as an infinitive construct ('until the breaking of the day'). Its usage is highly specific, confined to this single, pivotal event of personal confrontation and transformation within the patriarchal history.
Etymology
אָבַק is a primitive root, but its basic meaning is uncertain. It is often considered a denominative verb derived from the noun אָבָק (H80, 'ābāq), meaning 'dust.' The connection suggests the idea of 'to dust' or 'to make dusty,' picturing wrestlers grappling so closely on the ground that they raise dust. This vivid imagery evolved to denote the act of wrestling itself.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it names the central action in Jacob's transformative encounter with God at Peniel (Genesis 32:30). The wrestling represents Jacob's persistent striving for blessing and his struggle with divine purposes. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches the reading by highlighting the physical, exhausting, and deeply personal nature of Jacob's faith journey, which results in his new identity as Israel ('he struggles with God').
In the ancient Near East, wrestling was a known form of physical combat and sport. The biblical account uses this familiar, visceral image of a night-long match to convey a profound spiritual struggle. The cultural understanding of wrestling as a test of strength, endurance, and willpower directly informs the narrative's power, differentiating it from a mere metaphor or vision; it was experienced as a real, physical event.
לָחַם (lāḥam, H3898) — to fight, do battle (a broader term for warfare, not specifically hand-to-hand grappling). שָׂרָה (śārâ, H8280) — to strive, contend (used of Jacob's name 'Israel,' emphasizing persistent struggle, often in a non-physical or legal context).
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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