יֶלֶק
a devourer; specifically, the young locust
Definition
The Hebrew word יֶלֶק (yeleq) refers to a type of insect, specifically a stage in the life cycle of the locust. It is best understood as the 'young locust' or 'hopping locust,' a nymph that has not yet developed wings. In the Bible, it is consistently depicted as a voracious agricultural pest, a 'devourer' of vegetation. While it is often grouped with other terms for locusts (as in Joel 1:4 and Nahum 3:15-16), its specific nuance highlights the destructive power of the locust in its immature, ground-based stage.
Biblical Usage
יֶלֶק is used exclusively in poetic and prophetic contexts to symbolize devastating judgment, often from God. It appears seven times, primarily in the prophets Jeremiah, Joel, and Nahum. It is frequently listed alongside other locust terms (like 'arbeh, gazam, and chasil) to emphasize the totality of destruction (Joel 1:4, Nahum 3:15-16). In Psalm 105:34, it is the agent of God's plague against Egypt, and in Jeremiah 51:14, 27, it serves as a metaphor for the armies that will destroy Babylon.
Etymology
Derived from an unused Hebrew root meaning 'to lick up' or 'to devour.' This root concept directly informs its meaning, painting the yeleq as an insect that licks up or consumes all vegetation in its path. The name captures its primary characteristic as a devouring creature.
Semantic Range
יֶלֶק is a powerful symbol of divine judgment in the Old Testament. Its use in the Exodus plague (Psalm 105:34) establishes it as an instrument of God's power against oppressors. The prophets employ it to warn of coming devastation for covenant disobedience (Joel 1:4) or against enemy nations (Nahum, Jeremiah). In Joel 2:25, God's promise to restore what the 'yeleq' has eaten becomes a profound image of redemption and restoration after judgment, enriching the reader's understanding of God's justice and mercy.
In an agrarian society, a locust plague was a catastrophic event that could lead to famine and economic ruin. The specific identification of the yeleq as a wingless nymph would have been familiar to ancient Israelites, who observed these insects destroying crops from the ground up. This stage was particularly menacing as it could not be blown away by the wind and would systematically strip a field.
אַרְבֶּה (ʼarbeh, H0697) — the common, swarming locust, often the general term. גָּזָם (gazam, H1501) — the 'palmerworm' or gnawing locust. חָסִיל (chasil, H2625) — the consuming locust, often the final, stripping stage.
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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