שֵׁשַׁךְ
Sheshak, a symbolic name of Babylon
Definition
Shêshak is a symbolic name for Babylon used in the book of Jeremiah. It is an example of a biblical 'atbash' cipher, where the letters of the Hebrew alphabet are systematically reversed (e.g., the first letter, aleph, is replaced by the last, tav). Applying this cipher to 'Babel' (בבל) produces 'Shêshak' (ששך). The term appears exclusively in prophetic oracles of judgment, specifically in Jeremiah 25:26 and Jeremiah 51:41, where it poetically signifies the great empire destined for divine punishment. Its use adds a layer of cryptic emphasis to the prophecies against this enemy nation.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only twice in the Old Testament, both times in the book of Jeremiah. It appears in contexts of universal judgment against the nations. In Jeremiah 25:26, it is listed among the kingdoms that will drink the 'cup of the wine of wrath' from God. In Jeremiah 51:41, it is used in a taunt song proclaiming Babylon's (Sheshak's) capture, emphasizing the completeness of its downfall. The pattern is exclusively prophetic and judgmental.
Etymology
The etymology is not from a standard Hebrew root but is a cryptographic device. 'Shêshak' is derived from the 'atbash' cipher applied to the Hebrew consonants for Babel (B-B-L, בבל). In this cipher, the first letter of the alphabet (א, aleph) is substituted with the last (ת, tav), the second (ב, bet) with the second-to-last (ש, shin), and so on. Thus, Babel (בבל) becomes Shêshak (ששך). Its meaning is entirely symbolic and tied to its referent, Babylon.
Semantic Range
This word matters theologically as it underscores God's sovereignty over powerful, hostile empires and the certainty of his prophetic word. The use of a cipher may have served to veil the prophecy's target from casual readers initially, or to add a solemn, mysterious weight to the pronouncement of doom. Understanding this Hebrew device enriches reading by revealing the literary artistry and coded defiance within Jeremiah's prophecies, highlighting that no nation, no matter how mighty (like Babylon), is beyond God's judgment and deciphering.
In its original setting, the atbash cipher was a known cryptographic technique. Using it for 'Babylon' in a prophetic judgment oracle could be seen as an act of literary subversion—a coded insult or a way to speak boldly about a powerful enemy in a veiled manner. It reflects a cultural context where such wordplay was appreciated and understood by the intended audience, adding a layer of meaning distinct from a plain declaration.
Babel (Bâbel, H894) — The standard, non-coded name for the city and empire of Babylon.
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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