Meaning
See PARADISE.
Such gardens are still common throughout the Levant. They are usually situated on the outskirts of a city (compare Joh 18:1, Joh 18:26, Joh 19:41), except in the case of the more pretentious estates of rich pashas or of the government seats (compare 2Ki 21:18, Est 1:5, Est 7:7, Est 7:8, Neh 3:15, 2Ki 25:4, Jer 39:4, Jer 52:7). They are enclosed with walls of mud blocks, as in Damascus, or stone walls capped with thorns, or with hedges of thorny bushes (compare La 2:6 the American Revised Version, margin), or prickly pear. In nearly treeless countries, where there is no rain during 4 or 5 months, at least, of the year, the gardens are often the only spots where trees and other vegetation can flourish, and here the existence of vegetation depends upon the water supply, brought in canals from streams, or raised from wells by more or less crude lifting machines (compare Nu 24:7). Such references as Gen 2:10, Num 24:6, Deu 11:10, Isa 1:30, Isa 58:11, Son 4:15 indicate that in ancient times they were as dependent upon irrigation in Biblical lands as at present. The planning of their gardens so as to utilize the water supplies has become instinctive with the inhabitants of Palestine and Syria. The writer has seen a group of young Arab boys modeling a garden out of mud and conducting water to irrigate it by channels from a nearby canal, in a manner that a modern engineer would admire. Gardens are cultivated, not only for their fruits and herbs (compare Son 6:11, Isa 1:8, 1Ki 21:2) and shade (compare Son 6:11, Luk 13:19), but they are planned to serve as dwelling-places during the summer time when the houses are hot and stuffy. That this was an ancient practice is indicated by Son 5:2, Son 6:2, Son 8:13. A shaded garden, the air laden with the ethereal perfumes of fruits and flowers, accompanied by the music of running water, a couch on which to sit or recline, suggest a condition of bliss dear to the Oriental. Only one who has traveled for days in a dry, glaring desert country and has come upon a spot like the gardens of such a city as Damascus, can realize how near like paradise these gardens can appear. Mohammed pictured such a place as the future abode of his followers
No doubt the remembrances of his visit to Damascus were fresh in his mind when he wrote. El-Jannah is used by the Moslems to signify the "paradise of the faithful."
Gardens were used as places of sacrifice, especially in heathen worship (Isa 1:29, Isa 65:3, Isa 66:17). They sometimes contained burial places (2Ki 21:18, 2Ki 21:26, Joh 19:41).
Figurative: The destruction of gardens typified desolation (Am 4:9); on the other hand, fruitful gardens figured prosperity (Num 24:6, Job 8:16, Isa 51:3, Isa 58:11, Isa 61:11, Jer 29:5, Jer 29:28, Jer 31:12, Amo 9:14).
James A. Patch