שָׁאָה
to stun, i.e. (intransitively) be astonished
Definition
The Hebrew verb שָׁאָה (shâʼâh) means to be stunned, astonished, or overwhelmed to the point of speechless wonder. It describes a state of profound, often disorienting, amazement, typically triggered by an unexpected or supernatural event. In its single biblical occurrence, it depicts a person being utterly captivated and mentally arrested by what they are witnessing. The word conveys more than simple surprise; it implies being emotionally and cognitively overwhelmed.
Biblical Usage
This verb is used only once in the Old Testament, in Genesis 24:21. It describes the servant of Abraham's reaction as he watches Rebekah at the well, silently wondering whether God had made his journey successful. The context is one of divine guidance and answered prayer, where the servant is stunned into a state of contemplative awe as he observes the unfolding fulfillment of his specific request to God.
Etymology
שָׁאָה is a primitive root, considered identical with שָׁאָה (H7582), which means 'to rush' or 'to crash' (as in a storm). The core idea connects whirling, crashing force with the resulting state of mental disorientation or giddiness. Thus, the meaning developed from a physical tumult to an internal, psychological experience of being stunned or astonished.
Semantic Range
Though used only once, this word captures a significant human response to divine providence. It describes the moment when a believer witnesses the hand of God aligning circumstances in answer to prayer, leading to a stunned, worshipful recognition of His sovereignty. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by highlighting that the servant's reaction in Genesis 24:21 was not casual observation but a profound, awe-filled pause that acknowledged God's active guidance in everyday life.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, travel and finding a bride for a patriarch's heir were matters of immense importance, laden with cultural and familial duty. A servant's successful mission secured the family line. The stunned wonder (שָׁאָה) expressed here would resonate as the proper, overwhelmed response to seeing a potentially life-altering, covenantal promise begin to unfold through seemingly ordinary events, understood as direct divine orchestration.
תָּמַהּ (tāmah, H8539) — a more common term for wonder or astonishment, often with less intensity. פָּלָא (pālā', H6381) — to be marvelous or extraordinary, focusing on the wondrous nature of the act itself rather than the stunned reaction to it.
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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