הוֹלֵלוּת
folly
Definition
הוֹלֵלוּת refers to a state of extreme folly or madness, characterized by reckless, senseless behavior that leads to ruin. It describes not just simple foolishness but a kind of wild, boastful, or deranged conduct that is destructive. The word appears only in Ecclesiastes 10:13, where it is the culmination of a fool's speech, beginning with folly and ending in 'wicked madness.' This progression suggests הוֹלֵלוּת is an advanced, dangerous form of foolishness.
Biblical Usage
This noun is used only once in the Old Testament, in Ecclesiastes 10:13. It is used in a wisdom context to describe the endpoint of a fool's words. The verse contrasts the 'beginning' of a fool's speech as 'folly' (סִכְלוּת, sikluth, H5531) with its 'end' as this 'wicked madness' (הוֹלֵלוּת רָעָה, hôwlêlûwth raʿah). The usage highlights a pattern of escalating irrationality in speech that is morally corrupt and harmful.
Etymology
Derived from the active participle (הוֹלֵל, hôlêl) of the root הָלַל (halal, H1984), which primarily means 'to praise' but in certain stems (like the Hiphil) can mean 'to act madly' or 'to boast foolishly.' Thus, הוֹלֵלוּת comes from a concept of raving, wild behavior, distinct from the root's more common positive sense of 'praise.' It shares a conceptual connection with madness or frenzy.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it captures the biblical wisdom theme that foolishness is not merely intellectual error but a moral and spiritual condition with destructive consequences. In Ecclesiastes 10:13, it illustrates the dangerous trajectory of ungodly speech, linking folly to a kind of madness that opposes divine wisdom. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by showing the serious, active ruin that foolish talk can produce, a key concern in wisdom literature.
In ancient Israelite wisdom tradition, folly was often contrasted with the fear of the Lord. הוֹלֵלוּת, with its connotations of raving madness, would have been understood as a public, disruptive state beyond mere silliness—akin to the behavior of a raving prophet or a boastful fool. This differs from a modern psychological view of madness, emphasizing instead its moral cause and social destructiveness.
סִכְלוּת (sikluth, H5531) — simple folly or foolishness, often the starting point. כְּסִילוּת (kesiluth, H3689) — foolishness associated with the stubborn fool (kesil). אִוֶּלֶת (ivveleth, H200) — general folly or senselessness, often moral or spiritual.
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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