κάρφος
a dry stalk, chip of wood
Definition
κάρφος refers to a small, dry, and often insignificant piece of material, such as a splinter, chip of wood, straw, or speck of chaff. In its biblical usage, it consistently denotes a minor fault or irritation, particularly when contrasted with a much larger problem. This contrast is central to its meaning in the Gospels, where Jesus uses it metaphorically to describe a trivial fault in another person compared to one's own major fault, which is likened to a large beam or log (Matthew 7:3-5, Luke 6:41-42). The word never appears in a purely literal, physical sense in the New Testament; its meaning is always figurative, highlighting hypocrisy in judgment.
Biblical Usage
This word is used exclusively in the teachings of Jesus within the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew and Luke), specifically in the context of his Sermon on the Mount/Plain. All five occurrences (Matthew 7:3, 4, 5; Luke 6:41, 42) are found in the same parabolic saying. The pattern is consistent: Jesus contrasts the 'κάρφος' (speck) in a brother's eye with the 'δοκός' (log/beam) in one's own eye, critiquing the hypocrisy of focusing on minor faults in others while ignoring major sins in oneself.
Etymology
Derived from the Greek verb κάρφω (karphō), meaning 'to dry up' or 'to wither.' This root connection emphasizes the word's inherent meaning of something dry, brittle, and insubstantial. Cognates and related words in Greek often carry the sense of dryness or small, shriveled pieces, which aligns perfectly with its biblical sense of a tiny, worthless fragment.
Semantic Range
κάρφος is theologically significant as the centerpiece of Jesus' teaching on judgment, self-examination, and hypocrisy. It illustrates the principle that believers must address their own major sins ('logs') before attempting to correct the minor faults ('specks') of others (Matthew 7:5). Understanding this Greek term enriches reading by clarifying that Jesus is not condemning all correction but is instead emphasizing the proper, humble order of dealing with sin—starting with profound self-awareness and repentance. It connects to key doctrines of sin, grace, and the posture required for church discipline.
In the agricultural setting of first-century Palestine, small pieces of chaff, straw, or wood splinters were common, minor irritants. A speck in the eye was a familiar, painful nuisance, making Jesus' metaphor immediately relatable. The hyperbolic contrast with a large timber beam (δοκός) would have been understood as a humorous yet piercing exaggeration, driving home the absurdity of the critic's hypocrisy. The cultural understanding underscores that the 'speck' represents a real, but relatively small, fault.
χόρτος (chortos, G5528) — 'grass, hay'; generally refers to vegetation as fodder or in a field, not a small fragment. κόνις (konis, G2868) — 'dust'; fine powder, often associated with mourning or shaking off as a sign of rejection, not a specific splinter.
Word Details
How this works
Definitions are from the Dodson Greek-English Lexicon, a concise public-domain resource suitable for introductory word study. Brief glosses are supplemented by STEPBible TBESG data (CC BY 4.0). For advanced research, standard scholarly references include BDAG (Danker, 3rd ed.) and LSJ.
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