דַּיָּן
a judge or advocate
Definition
The Hebrew noun דַּיָּן (dayân) refers specifically to a judge or advocate who renders a legal decision or pleads a case. It denotes a person in a position of authority who administers justice, often in a formal legal setting. In its two biblical occurrences, it carries the sense of one who judges righteously, as seen in Psalm 68:5, where God is celebrated as a 'father of the fatherless and a judge (דַּיָּן) of the widows,' emphasizing His role as protector and righteous arbiter for the vulnerable. In 1 Samuel 24:15, David appeals to the Lord to be his judge (דַּיָּן) in his dispute with King Saul, invoking God as the ultimate legal advocate and decision-maker.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only twice in the Old Testament, in two distinct contexts. In 1 Samuel 24:15, it is used in a personal, legal appeal where David calls upon the Lord to judge between him and Saul, framing God as the supreme adjudicator in a human conflict. In Psalm 68:5, it is used in a hymn of praise, describing God's character as the judge who defends specific vulnerable classes—the fatherless and widows. This places the word in contexts of both personal litigation and divine attribute.
Etymology
Derived from the root דִּין (dîn, H1777), meaning 'to judge,' 'contend,' or 'plead a case.' The noun דַּיָּן is a participial form indicating 'one who judges.' It is cognate with words like מִשְׁפָּט (mishpāṭ, H4941), meaning 'judgment' or 'justice,' and shares a semantic field with legal and judicial proceedings. The root conveys the idea of bringing a matter to a decisive conclusion through a ruling.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it portrays God not merely as a distant lawgiver but as an active, personal judge and advocate for His people, especially the oppressed. It enriches the understanding of God's justice (צְדָקָה, tsedāqâ) as interventionist and compassionate. In Psalm 68:5, it connects God's judicial role directly to His care for the marginalized, a key theme in biblical law and prophecy. Understanding דַּיָּן highlights that divine judgment in Scripture is often an act of salvation and defense for the weak.
In ancient Israelite society, a judge (דַּיָּן) was a crucial figure in the gate, the place of legal proceedings, responsible for resolving disputes and upholding covenant law. This role differed from a modern judge in that it often involved advocacy and active intervention on behalf of the wronged party, not just neutral arbitration. The term, especially when applied to God, reflects a cultural ideal of justice that was personal, relational, and oriented toward restoring right order, particularly for those without a human protector.
שֹׁפֵט (shōphēṭ, H8199) — A more common general term for 'judge,' often used for human leaders and deliverers (e.g., the Book of Judges). דַּיָּן can carry a more specific nuance of a legal advocate or arbiter in a dispute. מִשְׁפָּט (mishpāṭ, H4941) — Refers to the act of judgment, the justice administered, or the legal case itself, rather than the person judging.
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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