חֹרֶשׁ
a forest (perhaps as furnishing the material for fabric)
Definition
The Hebrew noun חֹרֶשׁ (chôresh) primarily refers to a forest or wooded area, often dense and providing cover. In most biblical occurrences, it denotes a literal forest, such as the forest of Hareth where David hid from Saul (1 Samuel 23:15-19). However, the word can also carry a more specific nuance of a forest that supplies material, as implied in its etymology, possibly for construction or craft, like the 'forest' cities of 2 Chronicles 27:4. In poetic contexts, such as Ezekiel 31:3, it is used figuratively to describe the majestic, sheltering boughs of a great tree, extending its sense beyond mere geography.
Biblical Usage
חֹרֶשׁ is used seven times in the Old Testament, predominantly in the historical narrative of 1 Samuel 23, where it refers to the specific forest of Hareth as a place of refuge and secret meeting (1 Samuel 23:15-19). It appears once in Chronicles regarding fortified cities in the forests (2 Chronicles 27:4), and in prophetic books like Isaiah 17:9 and Ezekiel 31:3. In Isaiah, it describes abandoned idolatrous high places becoming like 'forests,' and in Ezekiel, it poetically depicts the Assyrian empire as a cedar with boughs like a forest, showing a metaphorical use for grandeur and shelter.
Etymology
Derived from the root חָרַשׁ (ḥārash, H2790), which means to cut in, engrave, or devise. This root is associated with skilled craftwork, like that of a craftsman or plowman. Thus, חֹרֶשׁ likely developed from the concept of a wooded area that furnishes material (wood) for such skilled work, connecting the forest to productivity and resource.
Semantic Range
While primarily a geographical term, חֹרֶשׁ gains theological resonance in narratives of divine providence and refuge, as seen in David's deliverance in the forest of Hareth (1 Samuel 23). Its poetic use in Ezekiel 31:3, within an oracle of judgment against proud nations, contrasts human arrogance with God's sovereignty over creation. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by highlighting how even a 'forest' can be a setting for God's protection or a metaphor for temporal power destined for humbling.
In ancient Israel, forests were not just natural features but often seen as remote, wild places offering concealment and danger, distinct from cultivated land. They were also vital economic resources for timber, fuel, and hunting. The 'forest of Hareth' was a known locale, likely in the Judean wilderness, reflecting how such areas served as practical hideouts. The association with material (from its root) underscores the cultural view of forests as sources of raw material for construction and craft.
יַעַר (ya'ar, H3293) — a more common general term for forest or wooded hill country. עֵץ (ʿēts, H6086) — means tree or wood, the material itself, not the collective wooded area.
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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