יְסֻד
a foundation (figuratively, i.e. beginning)
Definition
The noun יְסֻד (yᵉçud) refers to a foundation, but in its single biblical occurrence, it is used figuratively to denote a beginning or starting point. Derived from the verb יָסַד (yāsad, H3245), meaning 'to found, establish, or lay a foundation,' this word carries the sense of something being initiated or set in motion. In Ezra 7:9, it describes the commencement of a journey from Babylon to Jerusalem, emphasizing the foundational moment of this important return. While the literal sense of a physical foundation is implied by its root, the biblical usage highlights a temporal beginning rather than a structural base.
Biblical Usage
This word appears only once in the Old Testament, in Ezra 7:9, where it specifies the start of the journey from Babylon: 'For on the first day of the first month began he to go up from Babylon...' (KJV). The context is the return of Ezra and the exiles to Jerusalem, marking a pivotal moment of restoration. Its usage here is entirely figurative, focusing on the inception of an event rather than a physical structure, which aligns with the root's broader semantic range of establishing something new.
Etymology
יְסֻד comes from the root verb יָסַד (yāsad, H3245), meaning 'to found, establish, or lay a foundation.' This root is common in Hebrew, often used for laying the foundations of buildings (e.g., 1 Kings 5:17) or cities (e.g., Joshua 6:26), as well as figuratively for establishing the earth (e.g., Psalm 24:2). The noun form יְסֻד specifically denotes the result or state of being founded, though in Ezra 7:9, it emphasizes the beginning phase of an action, showing a development from physical to temporal foundations.
Semantic Range
Though used only once, יְסֻד connects to the theological theme of God's foundational acts in history, such as establishing creation or initiating redemption. In Ezra 7:9, it marks the start of a journey that fulfills God's promises of restoration, highlighting divine timing and new beginnings. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches Bible reading by emphasizing how biblical narratives often frame key events as divinely ordained foundations, encouraging believers to see God's hand in the inception of His plans.
In ancient Near Eastern culture, foundations were not just physical but symbolic, often associated with rituals or inscriptions to dedicate a building. While יְסֻד in Ezra 7:9 refers to a journey's start, it echoes this cultural emphasis on beginnings as significant, ordained moments. The journey from Babylon was a communal act of renewal, and using a term rooted in 'foundation' would have resonated with listeners as a fresh, God-established undertaking, differing from modern casual views of beginnings.
יְסוֹד (yᵉsôd, H3248) — a more common noun for a physical or figurative foundation, used in contexts like Proverbs 10:25. מוֹסָד (môsād, H4144) — a foundation or establishment, often of the earth or institutions, as in Psalm 82:5. תְּחִלָּה (tᵉḥillâ, H8462) — a beginning or commencement, used more broadly for starts of events, as in Genesis 1:1.
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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