גֶּתֶר
Gether, a son of Aram, and the region settled by him
Definition
Gether is a proper noun referring to both a person and a region in the Table of Nations. In Genesis 10:23, Gether is listed as one of the sons of Aram, who was a son of Shem. This places Gether within the Semitic lineage. In 1 Chronicles 1:17, the name is repeated in a genealogical list, confirming his place in the ancestral record. The name is also understood to refer to the people group or territory descended from this patriarch, though the specific location remains uncertain.
Biblical Usage
The word is used exclusively in two Old Testament genealogical contexts. It appears in the foundational Table of Nations in Genesis 10:23, which traces the spread of peoples after the flood. It is repeated in the Chronicler's genealogical record in 1 Chronicles 1:17. In both instances, its usage is strictly for lineage identification, linking the person Gether to his father Aram and his broader Semitic ancestry. There is no narrative or descriptive usage beyond these lists.
Etymology
The etymology of גֶּתֶר (Gether) is uncertain. It does not have a clear derivation from a known Hebrew root. Scholars have proposed possible connections to other Semitic languages or place names, but no consensus exists. The name's meaning is lost, and it is treated as a proper name without a transparent semantic meaning in Hebrew.
Semantic Range
Gether's primary theological significance lies in his inclusion in the biblical genealogies, particularly the Table of Nations (Genesis 10). This list demonstrates God's sovereign ordering of the nations and peoples of the earth, tracing them all back to Noah's sons after the flood. Understanding Gether as part of this lineage reinforces the biblical theme of God's concern for all peoples and sets the stage for the eventual call of Abraham, through whom all nations would be blessed. It highlights the interconnectedness of humanity in the biblical worldview.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, genealogies like the one featuring Gether were not merely family trees but were claims about political, ethnic, and territorial relationships. Listing Gether as a son of Aram (associated with the Arameans or Syrians) would have communicated to the original audience a perceived ethnic or geographical connection between the Getherites and the Aramean peoples. The name likely represented a known clan or region in the author's time, though its precise identity is now lost to history.
Aram (H758) — Gether's father and the eponymous ancestor of the Arameans. Uz (H5780) — Another son of Aram listed alongside Gether in Genesis 10:23, representing a different related people group.
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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