מוֹסָד
a foundation
Definition
The Hebrew noun מוֹסָד (môwçâd) refers to a foundation, specifically the established, fixed, or appointed base upon which something is built or set. In its two biblical occurrences, it describes the foundational principles of justice in Psalm 82:5, where the 'foundations of the earth' are shaken metaphorically due to unjust judgment. In Proverbs 8:29, it refers to the physical, fixed boundaries God set for the sea at creation, emphasizing stability and divine order. Thus, the word carries both a concrete sense of a physical base and an abstract sense of fundamental, governing principles.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only twice in the Old Testament, both in poetic or wisdom literature. In Psalm 82:5, it is used metaphorically within a divine courtroom scene to describe how injustice undermines the very foundations of societal order. In Proverbs 8:29, part of Wisdom's speech, it describes the literal, fixed limits God decreed for the sea during creation, highlighting the theme of God's sovereign establishment of the world's order.
Etymology
Derived from the root verb יָסַד (yâsad, H3245), meaning 'to found, establish, or lay a foundation.' This root conveys the action of setting something firmly in place. מוֹסָד is the noun form indicating the result of that action—the established foundation itself. Cognates in other Semitic languages carry similar meanings of founding or fixing.
Semantic Range
Though used only twice, מוֹסָד is theologically significant as it connects God's creative ordering of the physical world (Proverbs 8:29) with the moral and judicial order of human society (Psalm 82:5). It underscores that both the natural world and societal justice are founded on divine principles. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by revealing that a breakdown in justice is portrayed as a cataclysmic shaking of the very foundations God established, highlighting the profound link between cosmic order and human ethics.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, the concept of a 'foundation' was crucial for architecture and cosmology. Buildings, city walls, and temples required solid, carefully laid foundations for stability and permanence. Cosmologically, the idea of fixed foundations for the earth or sea was a common motif, expressing a world ordered and secured by divine power against chaos. The metaphorical use in Psalm 82:5 would resonate with an audience familiar with the instability that comes from societal collapse.
יְסוֹד (yesôd, H3248) — a very close synonym, also meaning 'foundation,' but used more frequently (e.g., Ezra 3:6, 3:10-12). שָׁת (shâth, H7896) — a poetic term for foundation or base, often of the earth (e.g., Job 38:4). מַדָּחָה (maddâchâh, H4098) — refers more specifically to a sinking or sliding foundation, implying instability (Micah 1:4).
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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