גְּרָר
Gerar, a Philistine city
Definition
Gerar is a Philistine city located in the southwestern region of Canaan, often associated with the Negev or the borderlands. In the biblical narrative, it serves as a significant location for the patriarchs Abraham (Genesis 20:1-2) and Isaac (Genesis 26:1, 6), where they both sojourned and faced similar tests concerning their wives. The city is also referenced as part of the territory of the Canaanites in Genesis 10:19 and is the site of disputes over water wells between Isaac's servants and the local herdsmen (Genesis 26:17-20).
Biblical Usage
The word 'Gerar' is used exclusively as a proper noun for a geographical location, appearing ten times in the Old Testament, all within the book of Genesis. Its usage is concentrated in the patriarchal narratives, specifically in the stories of Abraham (Genesis 20) and Isaac (Genesis 26). The pattern shows it as a place of temporary residence, divine encounter (Genesis 26:24), and conflict over resources, establishing it as a key Philistine settlement during the patriarchal era.
Etymology
The name Gerar (גְּרָר) is likely derived from the Hebrew root גָּרַר (gārar, H1641), meaning 'to drag,' 'to drag away,' or 'to roll.' This suggests an etymology related to a 'rolling' or 'dragging' terrain, possibly describing its geographical features as a 'rolling country' or region. This root connection implies a landscape of hills or valleys.
Semantic Range
Gerar is theologically significant as a stage for God's faithfulness and protection of the covenant promises outside the Promised Land's core. The repeated narratives there—involving deception about wives (Genesis 20, 26) and God's subsequent intervention—highlight themes of divine sovereignty, the vulnerability of the chosen line, and God's blessing even among foreign peoples (Genesis 26:12-14). Understanding its location enriches the reading of the patriarchs' journeys as acts of faith and God's providential care in uncertain territories.
As a Philistine city, Gerar represented a major urban and political center of a foreign, often antagonistic, people group during the patriarchal and later periods. Its mention places the biblical narratives in a real historical and cultural setting, showing interactions between the semi-nomadic Hebrews and settled Canaanite/Philistine populations. The conflicts over wells (Genesis 26) underscore the critical importance of water rights and land use in the arid region, a central aspect of ancient Near Eastern life and law.
None directly applicable as a proper noun. For the region, one might consider: פְּלִשְׁתִּים (Pᵉlishtîm, H6430) — the Philistines, the people group inhabiting Gerar and the coastal plain.
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.
Full methodology & sources →