שִׂיב
Definition
The Aramaic noun שׄיב (sîyb) refers specifically to an 'elder' or 'old man,' denoting a person of advanced age and, by extension, a leader or official within a community. In the biblical context of Ezra, it consistently refers to the Jewish community leaders who held positions of administrative and legal authority under Persian rule. The term does not carry a different meaning across its occurrences; it uniformly identifies the governing body responsible for the community's affairs and the rebuilding of the temple. These elders are addressed directly by Persian officials (Ezra 5:5, 9) and are the recipients of royal decrees (Ezra 6:7-8, 14).
Biblical Usage
This word is used exclusively in the Aramaic portions of the book of Ezra (chapters 4-7). All five occurrences (Ezra 5:5, 5:9, 6:7, 6:8, 6:14) appear in official correspondence between Persian authorities and the Jewish community in Jerusalem. The usage pattern shows the 'elders' functioning as the recognized leadership cadre, consulted for information and entrusted with implementing imperial commands related to the temple's reconstruction.
Etymology
שׄיב (sîyb) is the direct Aramaic cognate of the Hebrew שׄיב (sîyb, H7867), both meaning 'to be gray-haired' or 'old.' The Aramaic form is used in the biblical text because these passages in Ezra are written in Imperial Aramaic, the administrative language of the Persian Empire. The semantic development from the physical attribute of age to the social role of leadership is common across Semitic languages.
Semantic Range
This term highlights the structure of God's people during the post-exilic period, showing how leadership and community governance continued under foreign dominion. The elders' role in facilitating the temple's rebuilding connects them to the fulfillment of God's promises and the restoration of worship. Understanding this Aramaic term enriches reading by emphasizing the continuity of divinely sanctioned community leadership, even in a politically subjugated context, as they obediently execute the work of God (Ezra 6:14).
In the ancient Near East, advanced age was closely associated with wisdom, experience, and authority. The 'elders' (שׄיב) formed a governing council responsible for local justice, administration, and representing the community to higher authorities. In the Persian context of Ezra, these were not merely familial patriarchs but official leaders recognized by the imperial government to manage Jewish affairs and civic projects like temple construction.
זקן (zāqēn, H2205) — The more common Hebrew term for 'elder,' also denoting age and office, used throughout the OT for Israelite leaders.
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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