Dec 1, 2018 - 00:00
Dec 1, 2018 - 00:00
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Fire Usage Number: 1
Strong's Number: H784
Original Word: ’esh

Usage Notes: "fire." Cognates of this word occur in Ugaritic, Akkadian, Aramaic, and Ethiopic. The 378 occurrences of this word in biblical Hebrew are scattered throughout its periods. In its first biblical appearance this word, ’esh, represents God's presence as "a torch of fire": "And it came to pass, that, when the sun went down, and it was dark, behold a smoking furnace, and a [flaming torch]…" (Gen 15:17). "Fire" was the instrument by which an offering was transformed into smoke, whose ascending heavenward symbolized God's reception of the offering (Lev 9:24). God also consumed people with the "fire of judgment" (Num 11:1; Psa 89:46). Various things were to be burnt as a sign of total destruction and divine judgment (Exod 32:20). "Fire" often attended God's presence in theophanies (Exod 3:2). Thus He is sometimes called a "consuming fire" (Exod 24:17). The noun ’ishsheh, meaning "an offering made by fire," is derived from ’esh.

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