בְּעֵרָה
a burning
Definition
The noun בְּעֵרָה (bᵉʻêrâh) refers specifically to a 'burning' or 'fire.' It denotes the destructive force of a fire that consumes property, as seen in its sole biblical occurrence in Exodus 22:6 (verse 5 in some English versions). The word carries the sense of a conflagration or blaze that causes loss, rather than a controlled or ritual fire. It is a concrete term for the physical phenomenon of combustion resulting in damage.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the entire Old Testament, in Exodus 22:6. It appears in the legal context of the Book of the Covenant, specifically in a law concerning restitution for negligence. The verse discusses a scenario where a fire spreads from one person's land and burns (בְּעֵרָה) another's harvested grain or standing crop. Its usage is strictly confined to describing an accidental, damaging agricultural fire within a civil law.
Etymology
בְּעֵרָה is a feminine noun derived directly from the root בָּעַר (bāʿar, H1197), which means 'to burn, consume, or kindle.' This root is common in Biblical Hebrew and is used for various types of burning, including the burning of sacrifices (Leviticus 1:9), the burning of cities (Joshua 6:24), and metaphorical burning like anger (Psalm 89:46). בְּעֵרָה is a nominal form that concretizes the action of the verb into the resulting event or state—the 'burning' itself.
Semantic Range
In the agrarian society of ancient Israel, a fire destroying a grain field or harvest (as in Exodus 22:6) was a significant economic catastrophe. This law protected farmers from financial ruin due to a neighbor's carelessness. The cultural understanding emphasizes communal responsibility and the high value placed on agricultural produce, which was essential for survival. The law ensured that such a damaging event was not treated as a mere accident but required full restitution, highlighting the importance of stewardship and protecting another's livelihood.
אֵשׁ (ʼēsh, H784) — The common, general word for 'fire,' used in hundreds of contexts (e.g., Genesis 19:24). בְּעֵרָה is a more specific term for a damaging blaze. שְׂרֵפָה (śᵉrēp̄â, H8316) — Also means 'a burning,' but often implies something burned as an offering or a burning fever (e.g., Leviticus 10:16, Deuteronomy 29:23).
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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