בּוּזִי
a Buzite or descendant of Buz
Definition
בּוּזִי (Bûwzîy) is a Hebrew patronymic noun meaning 'a Buzite' or 'descendant of Buz.' It specifically identifies individuals belonging to the clan or lineage of Buz, a name found in the genealogies of the ancient Near East. In the Bible, it is used exclusively to describe Elihu, the friend who speaks to Job in Job 32:2 and Job 32:6. The term does not carry additional semantic senses beyond this ethnic or familial designation, serving purely as an identifier of origin.
Biblical Usage
This word appears only twice in the Old Testament, both in the Book of Job. It is used as an ethnic descriptor for Elihu, one of Job's interlocutors, identifying him as 'Elihu the son of Barachel the Buzite' (Job 32:2, 32:6). The usage is consistent and straightforward, providing his lineage without further narrative elaboration. Its occurrence is limited to this poetic wisdom book, highlighting Elihu's background from the clan of Buz, which is associated with the descendants of Nahor (Abraham's brother) in Genesis 22:21.
Etymology
The word derives from the masculine proper noun בּוּז (Bûz, H938), meaning 'Buz,' through the addition of the patronymic suffix ־ִי (-iy), which indicates 'belonging to' or 'descendant of.' Buz itself is a personal name in Semitic contexts, possibly related to a root meaning 'contempt' or 'disdain,' though as a proper name its etymological meaning is obscure. The formation follows a common Hebrew pattern for indicating familial or tribal affiliation.
Semantic Range
While the word itself is primarily a genealogical marker, its theological significance emerges from its context in Job. Elihu the Buzite is a pivotal figure who speaks after Job's three friends and before God's response. His Buzite lineage, possibly connecting him to Abraham's kin (Genesis 22:21), may subtly underscore his role as a wisdom figure from a respected ancestral line, emphasizing that divine insight can come from outside the main covenant community. Understanding this enriches the reading of Job by highlighting the international scope of the wisdom dialogue.
In the ancient Near East, patronymics like 'Buzite' were crucial for identifying a person's tribal, clan, or geographic origin, which conveyed social standing and heritage. Buz is listed as a son of Nahor (Abraham's brother) and Milcah in Genesis 22:21, suggesting the Buzites were an Aramean clan. This cultural context helps modern readers see Elihu not as an anonymous figure but as someone with a specific ancestral identity, which would have been meaningful to the original audience in establishing his credibility in the debate.
אֲרַמִּי (ʼArammîy, H761) — an Aramean, a broader ethnic term possibly related as Buz was an Aramean clan; בְּנֵי־נָחוֹר (bənê-Nāḥôr) — descendants of Nahor, the familial group to which Buz belonged.
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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