יְקֵדָא
a conflagration
Definition
The Aramaic noun יְקֵדָא (yᵉqêdâʼ) refers to a large, intense, and destructive fire, specifically a conflagration or a burning. It describes a fire of significant magnitude, often implying a consuming or devouring blaze. In its sole biblical occurrence in Daniel 7:11, it is the fire used to destroy the beast's body in the divine judgment scene. The term carries a sense of finality and complete consumption, not merely a small flame.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the entire Old Testament, in the Aramaic portion of the book of Daniel. It appears in Daniel 7:11, describing the fire that destroys the body of the fourth beast in a prophetic vision of divine judgment. The context is a heavenly courtroom scene where the beast is slain and its body given over to be burned with fire (יְקֵדָא). Its usage is therefore highly specific to a scene of eschatological judgment and destruction.
Etymology
Derived from the Aramaic root יְקַד (yᵉqad, H3345), meaning 'to burn' or 'to be kindled.' This root is the Aramaic cognate of the Hebrew root קדד (qdd), which relates to burning. יְקֵדָא is the noun form, meaning 'a burning' or 'conflagration,' directly expressing the result or product of the verbal action.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it is central to the imagery of divine judgment in Daniel's prophecy. The 'burning fire' (יְקֵדָא) in Daniel 7:11 represents God's final and utter destruction of oppressive, anti-God kingdoms. It underscores the certainty and completeness of God's judgment against evil, a theme that connects to New Testament concepts of the lake of fire (Revelation 20:14-15). Understanding this specific term highlights the intentional choice of language to depict total, irreversible consumption in a judicial context.
In the ancient Near East, fire was a common metaphor for judgment and purification among various cultures. A 'conflagration' (יְקֵדָא) would have been understood as an unstoppable, catastrophic event, much like a city-consuming wildfire. In the context of Daniel, which engages with Babylonian and Persian imperial imagery, this fire represents a divine action that surpasses and ends all human empires.
אֵשׁ (ʼêsh, H784) — The common Hebrew word for 'fire'; a broader, more general term. יְקֵדָא specifies a large, destructive blaze. שְׂרֵפָה (śᵉrēphâ, H8316) — A Hebrew noun for a 'burning' or 'consuming fire,' often used for burnt offerings or destructive fires; similar in sense but from a different language root (Hebrew vs. Aramaic).
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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