מִשְׁעֵן
a support (concretely), i.e. (figuratively) a protector or sustenance
Definition
The Hebrew noun מִשְׁעֵן (mishʻên) refers to a physical support or stay, something that provides stability and prevents collapse. In its three biblical occurrences, it is used both literally and figuratively. In 2 Samuel 22:19 and Psalm 18:18, it describes God as a 'support' who rescues David from his enemies, portraying divine deliverance in tangible terms. In Isaiah 3:1, the word takes on a more concrete societal meaning, referring to the 'stay' of bread and water—the essential provisions that uphold a nation—which God threatens to remove as judgment.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only three times in the Old Testament, appearing in poetic and prophetic contexts. In the parallel passages of 2 Samuel 22:19 and Psalm 18:18 (both part of David's song of deliverance), it is used figuratively for God as the protector who supports the psalmist in crisis. In Isaiah 3:1, it is used more concretely within a prophecy of judgment, listing the 'stay' of bread and water among the supports of society that God will remove from Jerusalem and Judah. The usage thus shifts from a personal metaphor for God's help to a collective term for societal sustenance.
Etymology
The noun מִשְׁעֵן derives from the root שָׁעַן (shāʻan, H8172), meaning 'to lean, support, rely upon.' This root conveys the idea of depending on something for stability. The noun form indicates the object or person that provides that support. Cognate words include מִשְׁעֶנֶת (mishʻeneth, H4938), a staff or rod for physical leaning, showing the semantic range from literal props to metaphorical reliance.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it vividly portrays God's role as the reliable supporter of His people. In the Psalms, it personalizes salvation, depicting God not as a distant force but as a present, stabilizing foundation in times of distress. In Isaiah, it connects divine judgment to the removal of basic, life-sustaining provisions, highlighting God's sovereignty over all societal stability. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by emphasizing that trust in God is akin to leaning on a solid, unwavering support.
In ancient Near Eastern culture, a 'support' or 'stay' was not an abstract concept but a tangible, vital necessity. In an agrarian society, the 'stay of bread and water' (Isaiah 3:1) represented the very pillars of survival—the failure of which meant famine and societal collapse. The metaphor of God as a 'support' would evoke images of architectural buttresses or a strong staff, objects one physically relies on for safety and mobility, making the spiritual truth concrete and immediate.
מִשְׁעֶנֶת (mishʻeneth, H4938) — A staff or rod for physical leaning, more concrete. מַעֲמָד (maʻămād, H4613) — A station or place to stand, emphasizing firm footing rather than leaning support. סֶמֶךְ (semekh, H5564) — A prop or support, used in Leviticus for a physical bolster.
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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