לָבַט
to overthrow; intransposed, to fall
Definition
The Hebrew verb לָבַט (lâbaṭ) carries the core meaning of 'to fall' or 'to be overthrown.' In its three biblical occurrences, it describes a sudden, often disastrous, collapse. In Proverbs 10:8 and 10:10, it refers to the moral and social downfall of the wicked, who stumble and fall due to their own foolish actions. In Hosea 4:14, the meaning shifts slightly to describe people 'stumbling' or 'falling away' into idolatry and sexual immorality, depicting a spiritual collapse.
Biblical Usage
This verb is used only three times, exclusively in wisdom and prophetic literature. It appears twice in Proverbs (10:8, 10:10) to illustrate the inevitable ruin that comes from foolishness, wickedness, and deceptive speech. In Hosea 4:14, it is used metaphorically to describe Israel's spiritual apostasy, where the people 'stumble' or 'fall' into idolatrous practices. The usage consistently portrays a negative, destructive falling, whether moral, social, or spiritual.
Etymology
לָבַט is considered a primitive root. Its exact derivation is uncertain, but it is related to concepts of slipping, stumbling, or being overthrown. Cognates in other Semitic languages support the sense of a sudden fall or collapse.
Semantic Range
לָבַט is theologically significant as it vividly portrays the consequences of sin and rebellion against God. In Proverbs, it underscores the biblical principle that wickedness inherently leads to ruin (Proverbs 10:8). In Hosea, it captures the tragic result of spiritual infidelity—a nation stumbling away from its covenant God (Hosea 4:14). Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by highlighting that moral and spiritual failure is not a passive accident but an active 'falling' from a right state.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, a public 'fall' was a profound image of shame, defeat, and loss of standing. For the Israelites, stability and uprightness were signs of God's blessing, while being 'overthrown' signaled covenant curse and judgment. The use in Hosea would have evoked the powerful cultural shame associated with a community collectively falling into disgrace through idolatry.
נָפַל (nāphal, H5307) — A more general, common term for 'to fall.' לָבַט implies a more specific, disastrous, or morally culpable collapse. כָּשַׁל (kāšal, H3782) — 'to stumble, stagger, fail'; focuses on the initial misstep leading to a fall, often used metaphorically for moral or spiritual failure.
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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