קֶצֶב
shape (as if cut out); base (as if there cut off)
Definition
The Hebrew noun קֶצֶב (qetseb) refers to something that has been shaped or formed by cutting, often implying a defined outline or base. In its three biblical occurrences, it describes the 'base' or 'pedestal' of the bronze stands in Solomon's Temple (1 Kings 7:37), the 'size' or 'proportions' of the second cherub in the temple's inner sanctuary (1 Kings 6:25), and the 'roots' or 'foundations' of the mountains at the bottom of the sea in Jonah's prayer (Jonah 2:6). The core idea is of a distinct, measured form resulting from a cutting or delimiting action.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only three times in the Old Testament, all in narrative contexts describing constructed or natural foundations. In 1 Kings 6:25 and 7:37, it is a technical architectural term for the defined base or proportions of temple furnishings. In Jonah 2:6, it is used poetically and metaphorically for the very roots or foundations of the mountains, describing the depths of the sea. There is a clear pattern moving from literal, manufactured bases to a metaphorical, cosmic foundation.
Etymology
קֶצֶב (qetseb) is a noun derived from the root verb קָצַב (qatsav, H7094), meaning 'to cut off, to shape by cutting.' This etymological connection directly informs its meaning, as the noun describes something that has been given form or boundary through a cutting action. The concept is related to measuring or defining a limit.
Semantic Range
While not a central theological term, קֶצֶב enriches our reading by connecting human craftsmanship in worship (the temple) with God's foundational work in creation (the mountains). In 1 Kings, it highlights the precision and order mandated for God's dwelling place. In Jonah 2:6, it poetically underscores God's sovereign authority even over the most remote and seemingly inaccessible parts of creation—the very 'bottoms of the mountains' are under His purview, from which He can deliver.
In its architectural uses, the word reflects the advanced craftsmanship and intentional design of Solomon's Temple, where every element had a specified form and measurement. The concept of shaping by cutting would be familiar from stone masonry and metalworking. The metaphorical use in Jonah draws on the ancient Near Eastern cosmological view of mountains having foundations rooted in the underworld or the deep, making Jonah's descent to the 'roots' a picture of reaching the domain of death.
יְסוֹד (yesod, H3247) — a more common term for 'foundation,' emphasizing a base of support rather than a shaped form. מִדָּה (middah, H4060) — 'measurement' or 'proportion,' focusing on dimension rather than the resulting shape. כֵּן (ken, H3653) — 'base' or 'stand,' a functional stand for an object, less focused on its cut-out form.
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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