רֶתַח
a boiling
Definition
רֶתַח (rethach) refers specifically to a state of boiling or seething, describing liquid brought to a high temperature. In its sole biblical occurrence in Ezekiel 24:5, it denotes a pot set to boil, used metaphorically for Jerusalem under God's judgment. The word conveys the imagery of intense, bubbling heat, often associated with cooking or purification processes in the ancient world. It is derived from the verb רָתַח (rathach), meaning 'to boil' or 'to be hot,' emphasizing the action that produces this state.
Biblical Usage
This word appears only once in the Old Testament, in Ezekiel 24:5. Here, the prophet Ezekiel uses it in a symbolic vision: Jerusalem is depicted as a cooking pot set on a blazing fire, with the 'boiling' (רֶתַח) representing the intense judgment and turmoil God brings upon the city. The usage is entirely metaphorical within a prophetic context, emphasizing destruction and purification through heat.
Etymology
רֶתַח is a noun derived from the root verb רָתַח (rathach, H7570), which means 'to boil,' 'to be hot,' or 'to seethe.' This root is also related to other Semitic languages with similar words for boiling or heat. The noun form specifically denotes the result or state of that action—the boiling itself—highlighting a process of intense thermal activity.
Semantic Range
Though used only once, רֶתַח carries theological weight in Ezekiel's prophecy. It symbolizes God's purifying judgment on Jerusalem, portraying divine wrath not as arbitrary but as a deliberate, heated process to address corruption. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches the reading of Ezekiel 24 by emphasizing the imagery of God as a refiner, using intense 'boiling' to confront sin, which connects to broader biblical themes of judgment and purification found in passages like Malachi 3:2-3.
In ancient Israelite culture, boiling was a common method for cooking meat and preparing meals, often done in large pots over fires. The 'boiling' in Ezekiel 24:5 would have been immediately understood by the original audience as a metaphor for crisis and upheaval, akin to a pot boiling over. This differs from a modern, more controlled understanding of boiling, as it conveyed a sense of uncontrollable, dangerous heat in a domestic setting.
רְתִיחָה (rethichah, H7572) — a synonym also meaning 'boiling,' used in Job 41:23 to describe the turbulent, frothing sea, emphasizing a more chaotic or foamy boiling compared to רֶתַח's general state of heat.
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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