Hebrew Word Study – Meditate – Hagah הגה Hei Gimmel Hei
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What Is Meditation On God’s Word
Psalms 1:2: “But his delight [is] in the law of the LORD, and in his law doth he meditates day and night.”
Years ago I recall talking with a friend who practices something I call meditative prayer. There are a lot of tears while she is meditating and praying. I then thought about a time I met with a group of men from church for a morning prayer time. We spent most of our time just sharing our experiences with God. Again there was much weeping. You know the word in Hebrew for I weep is baki. This word is spelled Beth which has a numerical value of 2, Kap whose value is 20, and Yod with a value of 10. This equals 32. The word for heart is lav which is spelled Lamed which has a value of 20 and Beth with a value of 2, this also equals 32. The ancient sages taught that when two words in Hebrew have the same numerical value you are to look for a relationship between these two words. I believe the relationship is that weeping is an expression of the heart. There is something so cleansing when you have a time of weeping before the Lord.
I have noticed that myself when I meditate on the Word of God, I often end up weeping, sometimes weeping because I have entered God’s heart and experienced his sadness over a lost world. Other times I am just weeping out of pure joy. I really understand why David meditated on the law day and night because there is something so cleansing and joyful in meditation and when it ends in tears you know you have tapped into your heart and God’s heart as well.
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The word in Hebrew for meditate is hagah which has many usages. It is sometimes rendered as to moan, growl, utter, muse devise, plot roar, and imagine. I can see imagine and muse as meditation but what is this moaning or roaring business? I remember a prayer meeting that I attended where a woman was really getting into prayer and it sounded as if she were moaning or growling. She was just so intense in her prayer that she actually started moaning. Have you ever gone to a gym to work out? You will hear a lot of grunting and groaning because the exercise room is filled with people who are putting their whole heart and soul into their workout. They are focusing all their concentration on lifting those weights, every part of their body, and all their thoughts are focused on lifting that weight. When you get that intense you let out a groan or moan.
Have you ever gotten so intense in your meditation that you actually started moaning and groaning? I recall hearing an Art History professor tell how he met an elderly curator at a Paris museum. The curator shared how he met Monet a great impressionist painter when he was just a small child. It was like 20 degrees below zero and the Rhine River was frozen over. His father took him for a walk along the Rhine River and he said; “I bet you we will meet Monet today. Sure enough, they came upon an elderly man sitting on a stool before an easel in the middle of the frozen Rhine River intensely focused on his work. I am not sure whether it was the color or shapes that he was concentrating on in that scene. I asked an art historian once if he was unsure what was in the mind of Monet only that whatever it was he was putting his whole heart and soul into that painting. Whatever it was that Monet was studying, he was very intense in that study. As they came upon Monet, he stood up and removed his hat. This curator said that even as a young child he was impressed with the fact that in sub-zero weather when Monet removed his hat steam rose from his head. He was sweating in twenty below zero weather. He was so intense in his concentration that he was working up a sweat.
Meditation is more than just musing over something, it is intense concentration, focusing all your attention on the Word of God, concentrating, and thinking as if you were preparing for a final exam. I used to teach a class in college on speed reading. When you speed read through a book you have to focus all your attention, you must have no distractions. One distraction and you will overlook some important word that ties everything together. I found the biggest reason a student could not pick up speed reading was because of his inability to focus. This is not natural for most people and is something you must train your mind to do.
Meditation involves focus, it involves intense concentration. My friend who practices meditative prayer mentioned that when she meditates it is like eating or ingesting the Word of God. Rabbi Samson Hirsch the linguist and Hebrew master relates the word hagah meditate to the word for encircling or surround. That is the same idea as eating. You encircle the Word of God, surround it, and ingest it, and once ingested, like eating food, it becomes a part of your body bringing you nourishment and energy.
This is what David did with the Word of God, he ingested it, encircled it, and let it become a part of him to nourish him and give him energy. When something becomes that much a part of you you just cannot wait to sit down with the Word of God and dive into it. It is like looking forward to a three-course dinner of your favorite foods.
Here it is, it does not happen naturally, at least to most people, it is something that takes discipline and time, but soon you acquire a taste for the Word of God, and then before long like hunger, you develop a craving and like starvation you cannot concentration on anything until you have eaten, so too with the Word of God, you cannot concentration on anything until you have the chance to feed on the Word of God.
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Thanks & Blessings, it means a lot to me!
Thank you for sharing this study.
For a personal growth I would encourage everyone to do an in depth study on ‘the groanings of Jesus’ and be blessed.
One time when talking with The Lord, he said to me, “Tears are a Special Language that he calls Liquid Words. Only He can read them because they come straight from the Heart of the person.”
Much Love to all.
Glory be to God.
Thank you so much Chaim. Your word studies are a much cherished part of my day! The particular discomfort of being ravenous for The Word so beautifully described. Makes me smile.
I never thought of meditation as deep as this. It would make a huge difference in we study the word of God. Meditation is a powerful tool we can implement when reading God’s Word. Thank you, sir, for sharing you knowledge with others, like myself, who want to get closer to God. God bless you.
Eternal truth. Feasting on the richness of our Father and His Word and His very being is deeply satisfying. This meditation triggered me to crystallize another deep satisfying experience of time spent in the Word.
Ephesians 5:26 Experiencing the washing of the Word like a deep cleansing bath coming in from the cold.
Relaxing in this warm love releases a deep sigh of contentment.
Experiencing the warm Father heart.
Thank Chaim for removing the veil from my eyes. I’ve always perceived meditation as something deep but never got to experience that depth. But thanks to God that as I read your article I got the experience. A door is being opened for me that will enhance my walk and time with the Lord God Almighty.
Years ago, I learned, that we should not just ‘read’ the scriptures, but ‘ponder’ them in our ‘hearts’, and THEN take our result to the LORD and ASK (PRAY) if OUR understanding is correct. – If the answer is yes, the HOLY GHOST (SHEKINAH) will let our hearts burn as a confirmation, else we shall get a ‘stupor of thought’.
In your article, you use Hagah = meditate, where I was told to ‘ponder it in my heart’, this is the same thing, only yours is more direct. You mention ‘weep’ (baki) having a value of 32, but then you say ‘heart’ (lav) Lamed=20 + Beth=2 and say that has a value of 32 when it is 22.
If we truly see the beauty of G’s wisdom in the scripture, we will indeed weep. So I see the wisdom of contemplating on words with the same numerical value, even if they are opposites, as then it is a warning not to choose the wrong but the right.
However, the fact that ‘heart’ has the value of 22, is very interesting, as the number of letters in the Hebrew alphabet is 22, and there are TWO circulatory systems for the body, i.e. the greater system which goes around the extremities, and the lesser system that goes to the lungs, there is a third system, the angina system which circulates around the heart. These can be likened unto the HOLY TRINITY, i.e. Jesus became corporeal and lived with us, and his words nourish our bodies, which he created (See Hebrews 1), Heavenly Father is our spirit guide, and created the Saviour. And the Holy Spirit testifies to our hearts. – Hence Heavenly father is the all encompassing greater light, his son our Saviour, the lesser light to guide us in dark times, and the spirit to guide our hearts when our hearts fail us.
I said it was interesting the value of 22, as it is only when we have come full circle, i.e. not just ‘read’ the scriptures, but ‘lived’ the scriptures, for it is then, and only then, that we gain a deeper understanding of their meaning, and can appreciate G’s mercy. – We wouldn’t have been able to do that as spiritual beings, without coming to earth and gain a physical experience, when we return to spirit, we will have the opportunity to review our lives, and share it with others in spirit, and TRULY preach the GOSPEL to those in SPIRIT PRISON, i.e. those who are suffering from what they have done to others. We shall have to help them repent, so that we can have the TEMPLE ORDINANCES done for them here on earth (See 1 Cor. 15:29), so they too can experience G’s mercy.
Thank you for all your thought provoking articles.