עָמֵק
deep (literally or figuratively)
Definition
The Hebrew noun עָמֵק (ʻâmêq) primarily means 'deep' or 'depth,' describing both physical and metaphorical depth. Literally, it can refer to a deep or profound place, as in the 'deep things' of God in Ezekiel 3:5-6, which are difficult to access or understand. Figuratively, it describes profound, mysterious, or inscrutable matters, such as the 'deep things' of the adulterous woman in Proverbs 9:18, which lead to death, or the 'deep speech' of a foreign people in Isaiah 33:19, which is unintelligible.
Biblical Usage
This word appears only four times in the Old Testament, always in poetic or prophetic books. It is used to describe profound, often inaccessible, realities. In Proverbs 9:18, it metaphorically describes the seductive but deadly 'deep things' of folly. In Isaiah 33:19, it refers to the 'deep speech' of an obscure, foreign nation. In Ezekiel 3:5-6, it is used twice for the 'deep' or profound speech of God, which the prophet, unlike the foreign nations, can understand because he is sent to Israel.
Etymology
The noun עָמֵק (ʻâmêq) is derived from the root verb עָמַק (ʻāmaq, H6009), meaning 'to be deep.' This root conveys the idea of being deep, profound, or inscrutable. Cognate words in other Semitic languages share this sense of physical and metaphorical depth, confirming the core meaning of something that is not superficial or easily grasped.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it often describes the profound and mysterious nature of divine revelation and human experience. In Ezekiel, it highlights that God's words, though 'deep,' are understandable to His prophet and people, contrasting with the unintelligible 'deep speech' of foreign nations in Isaiah. It underscores themes of divine communication, the danger of spiritual mysteries that lead away from God (Proverbs), and the accessibility of God's truth to those He calls.
In the ancient Near East, 'depth' was associated with mystery, the unknown, and the realm of the divine or the underworld. A 'deep' saying or language implied something obscure, profound, or esoteric, potentially beyond ordinary understanding. This contrasts with a modern view where 'depth' might be seen more neutrally as intellectual complexity.
תְּהוֹם (tehôm, H8415) — refers specifically to the primordial deep or abyss, often the chaotic waters. מֶצַע (metsaʻ, H4699) — depth as a measured dimension. שָׁאוֹל (sheʼôl, H7585) — the underworld or grave, a deep place of the dead.
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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