תָּפַר
to sew
Definition
The Hebrew verb תָּפַר (tâphar) means 'to sew' or 'to stitch together.' It describes the physical act of joining materials, most famously when Adam and Eve sewed fig leaves together to make coverings for themselves (Genesis 3:7). In a metaphorical sense, it can represent the act of crafting or assembling something, as in Job 16:15 where Job describes sewing sackcloth onto his skin as a symbol of deep, ingrained mourning. The word also appears in a list of divinely appointed times in Ecclesiastes 3:7 ('a time to tear, and a time to sew'), contrasting acts of destruction and repair.
Biblical Usage
This verb is used only four times in the Old Testament. It appears in narrative (Genesis 3:7), poetry (Job 16:15, Ecclesiastes 3:7), and prophetic judgment (Ezekiel 13:18). In Ezekiel, it is used literally for women sewing magic bands onto wrists. The usage spans from describing simple, practical action to conveying profound metaphorical imagery of attachment and preparation.
Etymology
תָּפַר is a primitive root, meaning its origin is not derived from another Hebrew word. It is related to the Akkadian word 'tapāru,' which also means 'to sew' or 'to attach,' indicating a common Semitic root for this basic manual activity.
Semantic Range
This word is significant in the foundational narrative of the Fall in Genesis 3:7. Humanity's first act after disobeying God was to 'sew' fig leaves, representing a futile, self-reliant attempt to cover shame and sin, which only God can properly atone for and cover. In Ecclesiastes 3:7, its pairing with 'a time to tear' presents it as part of God's sovereign order over human experience, representing seasons of mending and restoration.
Sewing was a vital, everyday skill in the ancient Near East, primarily associated with women's domestic work (as seen in Ezekiel 13:18). The materials used, like fig leaves in Genesis or sackcloth in Job, were readily available and carried their own cultural meanings—fig leaves for improvised covering, and coarse sackcloth for mourning and repentance.
חָבַר (chāvar, H2266) — to unite, join, or ally, often used for forming leagues or bonds, less specific to stitching materials.
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.
Full methodology & sources →