נִיסָן
Nisan, the first month of the Jewish sacred year
Definition
Nisan is the first month of the Jewish sacred calendar, corresponding to March-April in the modern Gregorian calendar. It is the month in which the Passover and Feast of Unleavened Bread occur, marking Israel's deliverance from Egypt (Exodus 12:1-2, 18). In the post-exilic period, the name 'Nisan' replaced the earlier Canaanite name 'Abib' (Exodus 13:4) for this month. The two biblical references to Nisan both come from this later period, situating significant events: the Persian king Artaxerxes granted Nehemiah permission to rebuild Jerusalem's walls (Nehemiah 2:1), and the lots (Purim) were cast in the court of King Ahasuerus (Esther 3:7).
Biblical Usage
The word Nisan is used only twice in the Old Testament, both times in post-exilic historical books to specify a month during the Persian period. In Nehemiah 2:1, it dates the pivotal moment when Nehemiah received royal authority to rebuild Jerusalem. In Esther 3:7, it identifies the month when Haman cast lots (Pur) to determine a date for the genocide of the Jews, which ironically became the month of their deliverance. The usage is strictly as a proper noun for calendrical dating within imperial administrative contexts.
Etymology
The name 'Nisan' is of Akkadian (Babylonian) origin, derived from 'nisannu,' meaning 'first fruits' or 'beginning.' It was adopted into Hebrew during the Babylonian exile, replacing the older Canaanite agricultural name 'Abib,' which meant 'ears of grain.' This linguistic shift reflects the influence of the Babylonian calendar system on the Jewish people after their captivity.
Semantic Range
Nisan is theologically significant as the divinely appointed 'beginning of months' (Exodus 12:2), establishing God's redemptive calendar. It commemorates the Exodus, the foundational act of salvation in the Old Testament. The events dated in Nisan in Scripture—Nehemiah's rebuilding mission and the origin of Purim—continue this theme of God's preservation and restoration of His people. For Christians, Nisan is the month of Christ's crucifixion and resurrection, directly linking the Passover lamb to Jesus as the ultimate sacrifice (1 Corinthians 5:7).
In its original setting, Nisan marked the beginning of the barley harvest and the start of the religious year, though the civil year began in the autumn month of Tishri. The adoption of the Babylonian name 'Nisan' after the exile signifies a major cultural shift, as Israel's timekeeping became integrated with the imperial systems of the day, yet it was reinterpreted to serve Israel's sacred memory of the Exodus.
Abib (ʼÂbîyb, H24) — The original Canaanite name for the same month, used in pre-exilic texts and emphasizing the agricultural stage of 'ripe grain.'
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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