עַוָּתָה
oppression
Definition
The Hebrew noun עַוָּתָה (ʻavvâthâh) refers to a specific type of wrongdoing characterized by oppression, injustice, or a perversion of justice. It describes a deliberate act of twisting or distorting what is right, resulting in harm to another person. In its single biblical occurrence in Lamentations 3:59, the prophet Jeremiah uses it to appeal to God as a witness to the 'wrong' or 'perversion of justice' he has suffered from his enemies. The term implies a corrupt action that subverts proper legal or moral order.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the Old Testament, in Lamentations 3:59. It appears in a context of legal appeal, where Jeremiah calls upon God to see and judge the specific 'wrong' (עַוָּתָה) done to him. The usage is in a poetic book of lament, within a personal plea for divine justice against oppressive adversaries. The singular occurrence suggests it was a specialized term for a grievous, unjust act.
Etymology
The noun עַוָּתָה is derived from the root verb עָוַת (ʻāvath, H5791), which means 'to bend,' 'to twist,' or 'to make crooked.' This root conveys the core idea of distorting something from its proper, straight state. The noun form thus carries the sense of a 'twisting' of justice or a 'perversion' of what is right. It is related to other words in the semantic field of iniquity and crookedness.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it captures the biblical concept of injustice as a perversion of God's created order. It portrays sin not merely as a mistake but as an active twisting of truth and righteousness. In Lamentations 3:59, it underscores that God is the ultimate judge who sees and weighs every act of moral distortion. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches the reading of lament and imprecatory prayers, highlighting the biblical plea for God to rectify corrupted human justice with His perfect justice.
In ancient Israel's cultural and legal context, עַוָּתָה would have been understood as a serious violation within the community, a subversion of the covenant law that governed right relationships. It implies a breach of the shalom (peace/wholeness) that God intended. The act of bringing such a 'wrong' before God as a witness reflects the deep cultural and religious practice of seeking divine adjudication where human justice failed or was corrupt.
עָוֶל (ʻāvel, H5766) — a broader term for injustice or iniquity. עֹשֶׁק (ʻōsheq, H6233) — oppression or extortion, often economic. שֶׁקֶר (sheqer, H8267) — falsehood or deception, a twisting of truth.
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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