הֶגֶה
a muttering (in sighing, thought, or as thunder)
Definition
The Hebrew word הֶגֶה (hegeh) refers to a low, murmuring sound, often expressing deep internal processes. It can describe the quiet muttering of someone sighing in sorrow or meditating in thought, as seen in Psalm 90:9 where it refers to the 'mourning' or sighing of a life under God's wrath. In Job 37:2, the meaning shifts to describe the powerful, rumbling 'sound' of God's thunder, portraying divine majesty. In Ezekiel 2:10, it appears as a 'tale of lamentation,' connecting the sound to a written message of woe.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only three times in the Old Testament, each in a distinct poetic or prophetic context. In Job 37:2, it describes the awe-inspiring sound of thunder from God's voice. In Psalm 90:9, it refers to the internal sighing or mourning of people under divine judgment. In Ezekiel 2:10, it is part of a written scroll containing 'lamentation and mourning and woe,' showing its use for audible grief tied to a prophetic message. The usage spans from natural phenomena (thunder) to deep human and divine emotion.
Etymology
הֶגֶה (hegeh) is a noun derived from the root הָגָה (hagah, H1897), which means 'to murmur,' 'to meditate,' or 'to utter.' This root is often associated with low, repetitive sounds, like the cooing of a dove or the quiet speaking involved in deep thought. Cognates in other Semitic languages support meanings related to sound and speech. The noun form hegeh carries the sense of the product or instance of such murmuring—whether it's a sigh, a rumble, or a spoken lament.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it bridges human experience and divine revelation. In Job 37:2, the 'hegeh' of thunder reveals God's power and voice in creation, prompting reverence. In Psalm 90:9, it reflects human mortality and the sobering reality of life under God's righteous judgment, enriching prayers of repentance. In Ezekiel, it is part of a prophetic scroll, showing how God's word can encompass human grief. Understanding hegeh highlights how the Bible uses sound—from internal sighing to cosmic thunder—to communicate spiritual truths about God's nature and our response to Him.
In ancient Israelite culture, low murmuring or sighing (hegeh) was a recognized expression of deep emotion, whether in personal grief or penitential prayer. Thunder was often perceived not merely as a weather event but as the audible voice of God (theophany), as seen in storm theophanies common in Ancient Near Eastern literature. The connection between a sigh and a written 'tale' in Ezekiel reflects a culture where oral lament and written prophecy were intertwined. Modern readers might separate these concepts, but hegeh shows their original unity as expressions of profound reality.
הָגָה (hagah, H1897) — the root verb meaning to murmur, meditate, or utter; often a quieter, more repetitive action. אָנַח (anach, H584) — to sigh or groan, focusing more on the physical breath of lament. רַעַם (ra'am, H7481) — thunder or roaring, specifically for loud, majestic sounds like God's voice.
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 →