גֹּב
a pit (for wild animals) (as cut out)
Definition
The Hebrew noun גֹּב (gôb) refers specifically to a pit or den used for containing wild animals, particularly lions. In the biblical context, it describes a man-made excavation or enclosure designed to trap or hold dangerous creatures. Its usage is almost exclusively found in the Aramaic portions of the Book of Daniel, where it denotes the lion's den into which Daniel was thrown as a form of capital punishment (Daniel 6:7, 16-17). The word emphasizes the pit as a place of confinement and imminent death, contrasting with natural caves or shelters.
Biblical Usage
This word is used eight times, all within Daniel 6. It appears in the decree of King Darius (Daniel 6:7, 12), in the narrative of Daniel's punishment (Daniel 6:16-17), and in the accounts of his rescue and the fate of his accusers (Daniel 6:19-20, 23-24). Its usage is consistent, referring solely to the engineered pit for lions that serves as an instrument of execution and divine deliverance within the Persian legal context.
Etymology
גֹּב (gôb) is an Aramaic word used in the Hebrew Bible. It derives from a root corresponding to the Hebrew גּוּב (gûv, H1461), which means 'to dig' or 'to hollow out.' This etymological connection highlights the pit's nature as something deliberately cut or excavated from the earth, rather than a natural formation.
Semantic Range
This word is central to the story of God's miraculous deliverance in Daniel 6. The 'den' represents a place of ultimate mortal danger and judicial condemnation, from which God sovereignly rescues His faithful servant. Understanding it as a purpose-built execution chamber, not just a cave, heightens the perception of Daniel's helplessness and the magnitude of God's intervention. It underscores themes of divine protection, the vindication of the righteous, and the futility of human decrees against God's purposes.
In the Persian Empire, as depicted in Daniel, throwing criminals to lions was a known form of execution. The גֹּב was likely a deep, stone-lined pit with a narrow opening, sealed with a stone and the king's seal (Daniel 6:17) to prevent tampering. This was a secure, state-sanctioned method of capital punishment, making Daniel's survival a public and undeniable miracle that challenged the king's absolute authority and demonstrated the supremacy of Daniel's God.
בּוֹר (bôr, H953) — a general term for a pit, cistern, or well, often used for water storage or as a trap. שַׁחַת (shachath, H7845) — a pit or ditch, frequently metaphorical for destruction, corruption, or the grave.
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 →