יָפוֹ
Japho, a place in Palestine
Definition
Japho (modern Jaffa) is a significant ancient port city on the Mediterranean coast of Palestine. In the Old Testament, it is referenced as a border town of the tribe of Dan (Joshua 19:46), a port for receiving cedar logs from Lebanon for Solomon's Temple (2 Chronicles 2:16), and the same port used for imports during the rebuilding of the Second Temple (Ezra 3:7). Most famously, it is the port from which the prophet Jonah embarked on his ill-fated voyage to Tarshish, attempting to flee from God's command (Jonah 1:3).
Biblical Usage
The word יָפוֹ is used exclusively as a proper noun for the port city. It appears in historical books (Joshua, 2 Chronicles, Ezra) in contexts of geography and construction logistics. Its most theologically significant usage is in the narrative of Jonah, where it serves as the tangible starting point for his rebellion and God's subsequent pursuit. The spelling יָפוֹא in Ezra 3:7 is a variant form of the same name.
Etymology
The name derives from the Hebrew root יָפָה (yāp̄â, H3302), meaning 'to be beautiful.' Thus, יָפוֹ likely means 'the beautiful one' or 'beauty,' a fitting name for a scenic coastal city. This connection to beauty is preserved in the modern Arabic name for the city, Yafa.
Semantic Range
Joppa is a location of profound theological narrative significance. In the story of Jonah, it represents the point of human departure from God's will, setting the stage for a dramatic lesson on God's sovereignty, mercy, and the universality of His call to repentance. Its later New Testament significance (Acts 9:36-43; 10:5-23) as the site of Peter's visions and ministry bridges the Old and New Covenants, marking it as a place where God's message expands beyond Israel to the Gentiles.
As one of the oldest functioning ports in the world, Joppa was a vital economic and cultural gateway. It connected inland Israel to the wider Mediterranean world, facilitating trade, communication, and cultural exchange. Its mention in logistical contexts for temple building highlights its practical importance in national projects. For a prophet like Jonah, boarding a ship there was the most direct way to flee 'away from the presence of the LORD' toward the distant western sea.
No direct Hebrew synonyms as a proper place name. Geographically, it is associated with terms for port or city: עִיר (ʿîr, H5892) — a general term for city; נָמֵל (nāmēl, H3220) — a harbor or port.
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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