גָּעַשׁ
to agitate violently
Definition
The Hebrew verb גָּעַשׁ (gâʻash) fundamentally means to shake, tremble, or quake violently. It describes powerful, often chaotic, agitation, primarily of the earth or mountains, as seen when God's presence causes the earth to shake (2 Samuel 22:8, Psalm 18:7). The word can also describe the tumultuous, staggering movement of people, such as drunkards reeling from God's cup of wrath (Jeremiah 25:16). In Job 34:20, it is used metaphorically for the sudden, catastrophic overthrow of the mighty, emphasizing a violent and decisive removal.
Biblical Usage
This verb is used seven times in the Old Testament, predominantly in poetic and prophetic books. Its primary context is theophanic—describing the earth's violent shaking in response to God's majestic presence or anger (2 Samuel 22:8, Psalm 18:7, Jeremiah 46:8). It is also used in prophetic oracles of judgment, where nations are made to 'reel' or 'stagger' like drunkards under divine wrath (Jeremiah 25:16, 46:7). The usage in Job 34:20 applies the concept to the sudden fall of powerful people.
Etymology
גָּעַשׁ is a primitive root. Its core meaning relates to quaking or agitation. Cognates exist in other Semitic languages, like Arabic and Aramaic, with similar meanings of shaking or trembling. The Hebrew word focuses on a violent, often uncontrolled, motion.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it vividly portrays God's power and intervention in creation. The earth's shaking is a classic response to God's theophany, marking His judgment, salvation, or sovereign rule (Psalm 18:7). It underscores that all creation, even the seemingly solid earth, is subject to and reacts to its Creator. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by highlighting the physical and metaphorical instability that accompanies divine action in the world.
In the ancient Near Eastern worldview, earthquakes and tremors were often understood as direct manifestations of divine activity or displeasure. The use of גָּעַשׁ to describe both geological events and the staggering of nations would have resonated with this perspective, seeing a direct link between cosmic disorder and God's judgment or presence.
רָגַז (rāgaz, H7264) — often 'to be agitated' or 'angry,' with a stronger emotional or inner turmoil component. רָעַשׁ (rāʻash, H7493) — a close synonym meaning 'to quake' or 'tremble,' frequently used for the shaking of the earth or nations.
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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