מוֹרַג
a threshing sledge
Definition
מוֹרַג (môwrag) refers to a threshing sledge, a heavy agricultural tool used in ancient Israel to separate grain from chaff. It was typically a wooden board or platform embedded with sharp stones or metal pieces, dragged over harvested grain by animals to crush the stalks and release the kernels. In its three biblical occurrences, the word consistently denotes this implement, used literally in agricultural contexts (2 Samuel 24:22, 1 Chronicles 21:23) and metaphorically in Isaiah 41:15, where God promises to make Israel a 'new, sharp threshing sledge' to thresh mountains—symbolizing divine empowerment for victory over obstacles.
Biblical Usage
The word appears three times in the Old Testament, always as a noun meaning 'threshing sledge.' In 2 Samuel 24:22 and its parallel in 1 Chronicles 21:23, it is used in a straightforward, literal sense when Araunah offers his threshing sledge and oxen to King David for sacrifice. In Isaiah 41:15, it is used metaphorically: God tells Israel, 'I will make you a threshing sledge, new and sharp, with many teeth.' Here, it symbolizes a tool of divine judgment and power, used to 'thresh' and crush enemy nations (pictured as mountains and hills).
Etymology
The noun מוֹרַג (môwrag) or its variant מֹרַג likely derives from an unused Hebrew root meaning 'to triturate' or 'to crush,' which fits its function as a crushing threshing tool. It is related to the concept of threshing (as in דּוּשׁ, dûsh, H1758) but specifies the sled-like implement. Cognates in other Semitic languages, like Ugaritic, also point to tools for grinding or threshing.
Semantic Range
Theologically, מוֹרַג is significant primarily in its metaphorical use in Isaiah 41:15. Here, it illustrates God's transformative power: He takes a common agricultural tool and repurposes it as an instrument of His sovereign judgment and deliverance. This imagery enriches the understanding of Israel's role as God's chosen instrument to execute His purposes, often through surprising means. It underscores themes of divine empowerment, judgment against opposition, and the holiness of being set apart for God's use, even in contexts of struggle.
In ancient Near Eastern agriculture, a threshing sledge was a vital tool, typically made of wooden planks with flint or metal teeth fastened underneath. Oxen would pull it over harvested grain spread on a hard, open threshing floor. The process separated valuable grain from worthless chaff, a common biblical metaphor for judgment (e.g., Matthew 3:12). Understanding this tool's crushing, thorough action illuminates the force of the metaphor in Isaiah 41:15, where Israel is not a gentle tool but a powerful, destructive instrument in God's hands.
חֶרֶב (chereb, H2719) — a sword; a weapon of cutting/slashing, whereas מוֹרַג is a crushing, grinding tool. דּוּשׁ (dûsh, H1758) — to thresh; the verbal action, while מוֹרַג is the specific implement used.
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.
Full methodology & sources →