חֶרֶשׂ
a piece of pottery
Definition
The Hebrew noun חֶרֶשׂ (cheres) primarily refers to a piece of pottery, specifically a potsherd or fragment of a broken earthenware vessel. In Leviticus, it often denotes a specific type of vessel used in ritual contexts, such as the earthenware pot for boiling the sin offering (Leviticus 6:28) or for holding water in purification rites (Leviticus 14:5, 50). In other contexts, it refers to the broken fragments themselves, as seen when Job scrapes his sores with a potsherd (Job 2:8) or in the description of Leviathan's impenetrable scales being like 'shards of pottery' (Job 41:30).
Biblical Usage
חֶרֶשׂ appears 16 times, predominantly in the priestly laws of Leviticus (10 times) and Numbers (once), where it specifies the use of earthenware vessels for rituals involving sin offerings, purification from skin diseases, and handling unclean items (e.g., Leviticus 11:33, 15:12). The word also appears in the poetic book of Job, where it describes a broken piece used for scraping (Job 2:8) and as a metaphor for hardness (Job 41:30). This pattern shows a dual usage: for functional, often sacred, containers in legal texts, and for worthless fragments or metaphors in wisdom literature.
Etymology
The word חֶרֶשׂ is considered a collateral form mediating between חֶרֶס (cheres, H2775), meaning 'sun' or 'pottery' (as clay is sun-baked), and חֶרֶשׁ (cheresh, H2791), meaning 'deaf' or 'silent'. It derives from a root concept of dryness or hardness, fitting for baked clay. Cognates in other Semitic languages also refer to pottery or clay, emphasizing the material's commonality in the ancient Near East.
Semantic Range
This word holds theological significance as it is intimately connected to the concepts of ritual purity, sacrifice, and human frailty in the Bible. The use of an earthenware (חֶרֶשׂ) vessel for the sin offering (Leviticus 6:28) underscores the humility and accessibility of the ritual—common, breakable pottery points to the mortal, fragile state of the worshipper. When broken, the vessel must be destroyed (Leviticus 11:33), symbolizing the seriousness of contamination and the need for complete removal of sin. In Job, the potsherd (Job 2:8) becomes an image of utter debasement and suffering, yet also of resourcefulness in despair. Understanding חֶרֶשׂ enriches reading by highlighting how God uses ordinary, fragile materials in His sacred purposes and how human brokenness is a recurring biblical theme.
In ancient Israel, pottery was ubiquitous, inexpensive, and essential for daily life—used for cooking, storage, and carrying water. Unlike metal or stone vessels, earthenware was porous and could absorb liquids, making it ritually susceptible to impurity (Leviticus 11:33). Once cracked or broken, a potsherd was virtually worthless, often used as a makeshift tool (like a scraping implement) or discarded. This cultural reality informs its biblical usage: pottery symbolizes both everyday utility and profound fragility.
חֶרֶס (cheres, H2775) — Often used interchangeably for pottery or earthenware, but can also mean 'sun'. כְּלִי (keli, H3627) — A general term for 'vessel' or 'utensil', which can be made of various materials, not specifically pottery. יוֹצֵר (yotser, H3335) — The 'potter' or one who shapes the clay, highlighting the maker rather than the product.
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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