עוּץ
Uts, a son of Aram, also a Seirite, and the regions settled by them.
Definition
The proper noun עוּץ (Uts) refers primarily to a geographical region and its associated people in the Old Testament. It is identified as both a territory named after a descendant of Aram (Genesis 10:23, 1 Chronicles 1:17) and a region connected to the descendants of Seir the Horite (Genesis 36:28, 1 Chronicles 1:42). Most significantly, Uts is the homeland of Job, described as a land east of Palestine (Job 1:1). In the prophetic books, it appears in lists of nations facing judgment (Jeremiah 25:20, Lamentations 4:21), indicating its place among the known peoples surrounding Israel.
Biblical Usage
The name Uts is used eight times in the Old Testament, appearing in genealogical, historical, and prophetic contexts. In Genesis and 1 Chronicles, it functions genealogically, identifying a person and his descendants. Its most famous usage is in the book of Job, where it establishes the setting for the narrative (Job 1:1). Later, the prophets Jeremiah and Lamentations use it in oracles of judgment against foreign nations (Jeremiah 25:20, Lamentations 4:21), showing its recognition as a distinct territory.
Etymology
The name עוּץ (Uts) is apparently derived from the root verb עוּץ (ʻûts, H5779), meaning 'to counsel' or 'to consult.' As a proper noun, it likely carries a sense of 'counsel' or 'consultation,' possibly describing a characteristic of the region's founder or people. This connection suggests the name was understood to imply wisdom or deliberation.
Semantic Range
Uts is theologically significant primarily as the setting for the book of Job, a profound exploration of human suffering, divine sovereignty, and wisdom. Its location outside the covenant land of Israel underscores the universal scope of God's authority and concern. The inclusion of Uts in prophetic judgments (Jeremiah 25:20) also highlights God's lordship over all nations, not just Israel.
In the ancient Near Eastern context, Uts was understood as a real, though distant, territory associated with wisdom traditions (due to Job) and nomadic or semi-nomadic peoples (Edomites/Arameans). Its exact location is debated but is generally placed east or southeast of Palestine, in the area of Edom or northern Arabia. This differs from a modern understanding of a fixed national border, representing instead a tribal region.
אֲרָם (ʼĂrâm, H758) — Aram, the ancestral father of Uts, representing a different but related Aramean lineage. שֵׂעִיר (Śêʻîyr, H8165) — Seir, the mountainous region closely associated with the Horite/Ed omite lineage of Uts.
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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