פָּלִיט
a refugee
Definition
The Hebrew noun פָּלִיט (pâlîyṭ) primarily means 'a fugitive' or 'a refugee'—someone who has escaped from danger, destruction, or judgment. It describes a survivor of a military defeat, as seen when a man escapes from the battle of the kings to tell Abram (Genesis 14:13), or a remnant spared from divine wrath, such as the 'fugitives' of Moab in Isaiah 15:5. The word can also carry a sense of a scattered survivor, as in the 'escaped' of the nations who come to worship in Isaiah 66:19. In all cases, it denotes one who has narrowly avoided a catastrophic fate.
Biblical Usage
פָּלִיט is used 22 times in the Old Testament, often in contexts of warfare and divine judgment. It appears in historical narratives describing survivors of battles (e.g., Joshua 8:22; 2 Kings 9:15) and in prophetic oracles pronouncing judgment on nations, where the 'fugitive' is a remnant of the destroyed (e.g., Numbers 21:29; Isaiah 15:5; Jeremiah 44:14). The word is distributed across the Pentateuch, Historical Books, and Prophets, emphasizing the theme of escape from overwhelming disaster.
Etymology
The noun פָּלִיט derives from the root פָּלַט (pālaṭ, H6403), meaning 'to escape, to deliver, to slip out.' This root conveys the core idea of a narrow escape or deliverance from tight constraints. Related forms include the verbs for 'to deliver' (הִפְלִיט) and the noun for 'escape' (פְּלֵטָה). The semantic range moves from the physical act of slipping away to the state of being a survivor.
Semantic Range
פָּלִיט is theologically significant as it often represents the concept of a remnant—those spared by God's mercy amidst judgment. In prophetic literature, the 'fugitive' or 'escaped one' can be a witness to God's power (Isaiah 45:20) or a bearer of news (Genesis 14:13). Understanding this term enriches the reading of God's justice, where destruction is not always total, and His sovereignty in preserving individuals for His purposes, pointing toward themes of grace and testimony after calamity.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, a פָּלִיט was not merely a random survivor but often the sole witness to a catastrophic event, such as a lost battle or a fallen city. This person carried crucial information and served as a living testimony to the power of the victor or the severity of divine judgment. The social role of the fugitive was significant, as their report could confirm prophecies or trigger responses from other communities, differing from a modern refugee who may flee without a specific testimonial role.
שָׂרִיד (śārîḏ, H8300) — a survivor or remnant, often with a focus on what is left over after destruction. פְּלֵטָה (pəlēṭâ, H6413) — the act or fact of escape, or an escaped portion. מַלְט (malṭ, H4422) — a rare term for an escaped one or fugitive.
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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