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BDB / Strong's (1906 / 1890)H6790noun

צִן

Tsin[tseen]

Tsin, a part of the Desert

Definition

Tsin (or Zin) is the name of a specific desert region in the southern part of the Promised Land, forming part of the larger Wilderness of Paran. It is most notably the location where Moses struck the rock at Meribah (Numbers 20:1-13) and where the Israelites spent a significant portion of their wilderness wanderings. The desert served as a southern boundary marker for the tribes of Judah (Joshua 15:1) and for the entire nation of Israel (Numbers 34:3-4). It is distinguished from the Wilderness of Sin, being a more specific, arid territory associated with key events of testing and judgment.

Biblical Usage

The word is used exclusively as a proper noun for a geographical location, appearing 9 times in the Old Testament, primarily in the books of Numbers and Joshua. It is used in two main contexts: as a stage in the itinerary of the Israelite wilderness journey (e.g., Numbers 33:36) and as a definitive boundary line for the tribal allotment of Judah and the land of Canaan (Numbers 34:3-4, Joshua 15:1). Its usage consistently places it in the southern Negev region.

Etymology

Derived from an unused Hebrew root meaning 'to prick' or 'to be sharp,' likely referring to a crag or a sharp, rocky terrain. This root sense aptly describes the harsh, jagged landscape of the desert region. The name reflects the physical character of the land itself.

Semantic Range

The Wilderness of Tsin is theologically significant as the setting for the pivotal event at Meribah, where Moses disobeyed God by striking the rock, resulting in him being barred from entering the Promised Land (Numbers 20:12-13, Deuteronomy 32:51). This location is therefore permanently associated with the themes of divine provision, human failure, leadership testing, and the severe consequences of dishonoring God's holiness. Understanding this place name enriches reading by connecting geography directly to a major narrative of sin and judgment.

In the ancient Near Eastern context, deserts like Tsin were not just empty spaces but were understood as liminal zones—places of danger, testing, divine encounter, and transition. They were the opposite of the settled, fertile 'Promised Land.' For the Israelites, the Wilderness of Tsin represented a prolonged period of dependency on God and a barrier to be traversed before receiving their inheritance.

Midbar (H4057) — The general Hebrew word for 'wilderness' or 'desert'; Tsin is a specific region within a midbar. Paran (H6290) — The name of the larger wilderness area of which Tsin may have been a part (Numbers 13:21).

Word Details

Strong's NumberH6790
Part of Speechnoun
Hebrewצִן
TransliterationTsin
Pronunciationtseen
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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