חֵקֶק
an enactment, a resolution
Definition
The Hebrew noun חֵקֶק (chêqeq) refers to a formal, authoritative enactment or resolution, often carrying the weight of a decree or statute. In its two biblical occurrences, it denotes a deliberate, established decision. In Judges 5:15, it describes the 'resolutions' or 'decrees' of the leaders of Issachar, likely referring to their wise counsel or binding decisions in a military context. In Isaiah 10:1, the word is used in a negative sense for 'wicked decrees' or unjust laws enacted by corrupt rulers, highlighting its application to human legal proclamations.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only twice in the Old Testament, appearing in both historical narrative (Judges) and prophetic literature (Isaiah). In Judges 5:15, it is used positively for the wise and decisive resolutions of tribal leaders. In Isaiah 10:1, it is used critically for unjust human decrees that oppress the poor, contrasting them with God's righteous law. The pattern shows it applies to human enactments, which can be either commendable or condemnable based on their alignment with justice.
Etymology
The noun חֵקֶק (chêqeq) is derived from the root verb חָקַק (ḥāqaq, H2710), which means 'to engrave,' 'to inscribe,' or 'to decree.' This root conveys the idea of making something permanent and authoritative, like carving words into stone. The noun form thus inherits the sense of something formally established and recorded, moving from the physical act of engraving to the conceptual result of a binding statute or resolution.
Semantic Range
חֵקֶק highlights the human capacity to establish authority and law, a responsibility that must be exercised under God's ultimate sovereignty. The contrast in Isaiah 10:1 between 'wicked decrees' and God's justice underscores a key biblical theme: human authority is legitimate only when it reflects divine righteousness. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by clarifying the serious, established nature of these enactments and the moral accountability of those who make them.
In ancient Israelite culture, laws and decrees were not merely informal opinions but were often publicly proclaimed and recorded, giving them lasting authority. The concept of 'engraving' (from its root) suggests a formal, tangible record, perhaps on stone or clay, which was a common practice for treaties, laws, and royal pronouncements in the ancient Near East. This contrasts with modern, more transient forms of legislation.
חֹק (ḥōq, H2706) — a more common term for a statute or ordinance, often used for divine laws. מִשְׁפָּט (mishpāṭ, H4941) — judgment, justice, or legal case, focusing on the act of deciding or a judicial ruling. דָּת (dāt, H1881) — a decree or law, often used in later biblical books (like Esther) for royal Persian law.
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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