גַּלָּב
a barber
Definition
The Hebrew noun גַּלָּב (gallâb) refers specifically to a barber, a person whose occupation is cutting hair and shaving beards. In the Old Testament, it appears only in Ezekiel 5:1, where the prophet is commanded to take a sharp sword and use it 'as a barber's razor' upon his head and beard. The word carries the straightforward sense of a professional who performs shaving, which in the ancient context was often done with a razor. There are no other biblical occurrences or extended metaphorical meanings recorded for this term.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the entire Old Testament, in Ezekiel 5:1. The context is a symbolic prophetic act, where Ezekiel is instructed to use a sword like a barber's razor to shave his head and beard. The usage is literal in describing the tool (a barber's razor) but is employed within a dramatic object lesson concerning God's judgment on Jerusalem. No other books or patterns of usage exist for this term.
Etymology
The noun גַּלָּב (gallâb) is derived from an unused Hebrew root believed to mean 'to shave' or 'to shear'. It is a professional noun form, indicating one who performs the action. Cognates exist in other Semitic languages, such as Arabic 'jalaba' (to shave), pointing to a shared linguistic heritage for this specific occupation.
Semantic Range
While the word itself is a common occupational term, its single biblical use in Ezekiel 5:1 is theologically significant. The act of shaving by a 'barber's razor' is a powerful symbol of God's thorough, humiliating, and complete judgment. In ancient Near Eastern culture, shaving often signified mourning, disgrace, or cleansing. Here, it visually portrays the removal of pride and the severe punishment God will enact against Jerusalem. Understanding this cultural weight behind the mundane term 'barber' deepens the impact of Ezekiel's prophetic sign-act.
In ancient Israel, barbers (גַּלָּב) were skilled tradesmen. Shaving was not merely for grooming; it held ritual and social significance. Priests underwent shaving for consecration (Leviticus 14:8-9, Numbers 8:7), and it was a common sign of mourning (Job 1:20). A razor could also symbolize humiliation and defeat, as cutting the beard was a profound insult (2 Samuel 10:4-5). Thus, the barber's tool in Ezekiel 5:1 would have immediately conveyed ideas of ritual cleansing, mourning, and enforced shame to the original audience.
There are no direct synonyms for this occupational noun. Related concepts include: מוֹרָה (môrâ, H4177) — a razor, the tool itself; and גָּזַז (gāzaz) — the verb 'to shear' (as sheep).
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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