סֶלַע
Sela, the rock-city of Idumaea
Definition
The Hebrew word סֶלַע (Çelaʻ) primarily refers to 'Sela,' a specific fortified rock-city in Edom (Idumaea). In 2 Kings 14:7, King Amaziah of Judah captures this stronghold, renaming it Joktheel, highlighting its strategic military importance. The name itself means 'rock' or 'cliff,' directly describing its formidable, elevated geography. While the word is a proper noun for this location, its root meaning as 'rock' connects it to broader biblical imagery of God as a refuge (e.g., Psalm 18:2 uses the related common noun סֶלַע, H5553).
Biblical Usage
This proper noun is used exclusively in historical and prophetic contexts concerning Edom. It appears in the historical record of 2 Kings 14:7, detailing a military conquest. It also appears in the prophetic oracle of Isaiah 16:1, where the prophet instructs that tribute be sent from Sela, the rock-city, through the wilderness, symbolizing Edom's subjugation. Its usage is geographically specific and tied to narratives of judgment, conflict, and sovereignty over this region.
Etymology
The word is identical to the common Hebrew noun סֶלַע (çelaʻ, H5553), meaning 'rock,' 'crag,' or 'cliff.' It is a primary noun, not derived from a verbal root, describing a solid, rocky mass. As a place name, 'Sela' is therefore a descriptive toponym, meaning 'The Rock,' highlighting the city's defining physical characteristic. Cognates exist in other Semitic languages, like Ugaritic and Aramaic, with similar meanings.
Semantic Range
As a place name, 'Sela' itself is not a direct theological term. However, its meaning—'the rock'—connects it to a significant biblical metaphor. Understanding that this fortress-city's name means 'rock' enriches readings of passages about Edom's pride and judgment (e.g., Obadiah 3-4), contrasting the false security of a human 'rock' with the true security found in God, who is often called Israel's 'rock' (צוּר, H6697) and refuge. Its capture and renaming in 2 Kings 14:7 also demonstrate God's sovereign control over the nations.
In the ancient Near East, cities built on and into rocky cliffs (like Petra, often identified with Sela) were highly defensible natural fortresses. Naming a city 'The Rock' immediately communicated its impregnability and strategic value. For the Edomites, Sela represented a core stronghold and symbol of national security. Its capture by Judah was not just a military victory but a profound humiliation and demonstration of superior power, shattering the Edomites' sense of safety in their terrain.
צוּר (tsûr, H6697) — A more general term for 'rock,' often used metaphorically for God as a firm foundation or refuge. סֶלַע (çelaʻ, H5553) — The identical common noun meaning 'rock' or 'crag,' from which the place name is derived. כֵּף (kêph, H3710) — A 'rock' or 'cliff,' sometimes used for a specific rocky mass or as part of place names.
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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