תָּמַם
to complete, in a good or a bad sense, literal, or figurative, transitive or intransitive
Definition
The verb תָּמַם (tâmam) fundamentally means 'to be complete' or 'to come to an end,' describing a state of wholeness or finality. It can have positive connotations, such as being morally upright (Job 1:1, 1:8) or a process reaching its intended, perfect conclusion (Psalm 19:14). Conversely, it often carries a negative sense of being finished or consumed, especially in contexts of judgment, like a period of wandering being completed (Numbers 14:33) or resources being utterly spent (Genesis 47:15, 18). The word applies to both literal completion and figurative or moral perfection.
Biblical Usage
תָּמַם is used 61 times across the Pentateuch, historical books, wisdom literature, and prophets. In narrative, it frequently describes the exhaustion of resources (Genesis 47:15, 18) or the completion of a divinely appointed duration, such as the 40 years of wilderness wandering (Numbers 14:33, 35). In poetic and wisdom contexts, it describes moral integrity and blamelessness, as with Job (Job 1:1, 8). It also appears in legal settings regarding the finality of a property transaction (Leviticus 25:29) and in prophetic oracles of judgment to signify total consumption (Leviticus 26:20).
Etymology
תָּמַם is a primitive root. It is related to the adjective תָּם (tam, H8535), meaning 'complete,' 'blameless,' or 'perfect,' and the noun תֹּם (tom, H8537), meaning 'integrity' or 'completeness.' The core idea is of something reaching its full measure or inherent limit, whether in quantity, time, or quality.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it touches on themes of divine judgment, covenant faithfulness, and human integrity. It describes the certainty and completeness of God's judgments (e.g., the completed wilderness sentence in Numbers 14:35) and the ideal of moral wholeness before God, exemplified by Job. Understanding תָּמַם enriches reading by highlighting the biblical concept of completeness—whether of sin's consequence, a faithful life, or God's perfect work—adding depth to passages about fulfillment and finality.
In its ancient context, the idea of something being 'complete' or 'finished' was closely tied to concepts of wholeness, soundness, and fulfilling an obligation or natural cycle. The use regarding property in Leviticus 25:29 reflects legal finality. The description of a person as 'blameless' (תָּם) or having actions that are 'complete' (תָּמַם) would have conveyed a sense of social and ritual integrity, not merely an internal feeling.
כָּלָה (kâlâh, H3615) — emphasizes a complete end, often consumption or destruction; שָׁלֵם (shâlêm, H7999) — focuses on wholeness, peace, and completion in a restorative sense; תָּם (tam, H8535) — the adjectival form describing a state of blameless completeness.
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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