מַפֻּחַ
the bellows (i.e. blower) of aforge
Definition
The Hebrew noun מַפֻּחַ (mappuach) refers specifically to a bellows, a tool used to blow air onto a fire to intensify its heat. In its sole biblical occurrence in Jeremiah 6:29, it is used metaphorically within a metallurgical image: the prophet describes God's refining judgment upon Judah, where the bellows blow fiercely, but the lead (representing impurity) is not consumed, indicating the people's stubborn wickedness. The word derives from the action of blowing (נָפַח, naphach), emphasizing its function as an instrument for forced air. While its literal sense is a forge tool, its theological application is as a symbol of divine testing and purification.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the Old Testament, in Jeremiah 6:29. It appears in a prophetic oracle of judgment, embedded in an extended metaphor comparing God's disciplinary action to a refiner's process. The context is entirely figurative, describing the failed attempt to purify the people of Judah. There is no narrative or literal usage of the word for a physical bellows elsewhere in the biblical text.
Etymology
מַפֻּחַ (mappuach) is a noun derived from the root נָפַח (naphach, H5301), meaning 'to blow,' 'to breathe,' or 'to puff.' It is an instrumental noun, meaning 'a blower' or 'that which blows.' Cognate words in Semitic languages carry similar meanings related to blowing or bellows. The development is straightforward: from the action of blowing comes the name for the tool that performs that action.
Semantic Range
Though a mundane object, its single metaphorical use in Jeremiah 6:29 gives it theological significance. It represents God's intense, purifying judgment aimed at removing sin from His people. The image underscores that even the most severe divine discipline (the blazing fire and fierce bellows) can be ineffective if the human heart remains impenitent. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches the reading of this passage by highlighting the deliberate choice of a refiner's tool to illustrate both God's active effort to purify and the tragedy of a resistant people.
In the ancient Near East, bellows were essential tools in metallurgy, typically made from animal skins with tubes to direct air. They were used by blacksmiths and metal refiners to achieve the high temperatures needed to melt and work metals like silver, lead, and iron. Jeremiah's audience would have been familiar with this process, making the metaphor of God as a refiner and His judgment as a bellows-stoked fire immediately vivid and understandable.
אַבְנֵט (avnet, H73) — a belt or girdle, not related. There are no direct Hebrew synonyms for 'bellows' in the biblical text. The concept is uniquely captured by מַפֻּחַ.
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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