צֹהַר
a light (i.e. window); dual double light, i.e. noon
Definition
The Hebrew noun צֹהַר (tsôhar) primarily means 'light' or 'aperture for light,' most concretely referring to a 'window' (Genesis 6:16). In its dual form, צָהֳרַיִם (tsahorayim), it signifies 'double light' and became the standard term for 'midday' or 'noon,' the brightest part of the day (Genesis 43:16, 2 Samuel 4:5). This dual usage connects the physical opening that admits light with the specific time of day characterized by peak sunlight.
Biblical Usage
The word is used in two main contexts. As 'window,' it appears in architectural descriptions, most notably the window Noah was commanded to make in the ark (Genesis 6:16). As 'noon,' it is used frequently in narrative to indicate a specific time of day, often for dramatic or prophetic events, such as the prophets of Baal crying out at noon during the contest on Mount Carmel (1 Kings 18:26-27, 29). It also appears in poetic or prophetic contexts describing misfortune, like stumbling at noon as a curse (Deuteronomy 28:29).
Etymology
Derived from the root צָהַר (tsahar, H6671), meaning 'to shine' or 'to be dazzling.' The noun צֹהַר originally denoted the source or place of shining light. The development to 'noon' (dual form) is a natural semantic shift, referring to the time of 'double' or greatest light intensity.
Semantic Range
The dual meaning of צֹהַר connects God's provision of order and safety with the revelation of His power. The 'window' in Noah's ark was a divinely ordained source of light and ventilation for preservation during judgment. The 'noon' setting is often a backdrop for God's decisive interventions, contrasting human activity with divine timing, as seen on Mount Carmel where the true God answered by fire not at the prophets' chosen hour but according to His sovereign schedule.
In the ancient Near East, 'noon' was not just a clock time but a potent cultural concept. It was the time of peak heat and blinding light, often associated with danger, vulnerability (as in Deuteronomy 28:29), or the cessation of activity. A 'window' was a vital architectural feature for light and air in a climate with intense sun, making its specification for the ark (Genesis 6:16) a practical, life-sustaining detail.
חַלּוֹן (challon, H2474) — The more common, general term for 'window.' אֹר (or, H216) — The primary word for 'light' as illumination, whereas צֹהַר focuses on the aperture or time of light.
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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