Hebrew Word Study – Consider/Look
Psalms 25:19: “Consider mine enemies; for they are many; and they hate me with cruel hatred.”
I am now sure how many of us can relate to this Psalm when reading it at its face value. I mean I really don’t know if I have any enemies that hate me with a cruel hate. I daresay that many of you reading this also cannot point to an enemy that hates you with a cruel hate.
If the Psalmist is indeed David then as a king he would have had enemies that hated him with a cruel hate. You cannot assume a leadership role, particularly as the leader of a nation without someone being offended by your decisions and even jealous of your position such that they grow to hate you. That just comes with the territory.
There has not been a president of this country who has not been hated by someone or some group. They hate the president because he does not represent their values or their political desires. More than likely their hatred stems from the fact that their candidate did not get elected and all the things he hoped his candidate would do will not be done with the one who did win. Of course they will not say that. That would be childish and no one wants to appear childish. They will just say that the president is not good for our country. To them, the president was not good for the country because he would not do what this person wanted him to do.
Would you like Chaim Bentorah as your personal Hebrew teacher?
|
|
Hatred comes when someone offends you or does not do what you want them to do. But what is hatred really? Our English word carries various degrees of hatred. However, the Hebrew word used for hatred in Psalms 25:19 is sane’ which your lexicon tells you means hate. Rabbi Samson Hirsch, however, a nineteenth-century linguist and Hebrew scholar points out that sane’ also means to reject or distance yourself. He also shows that it can mean to weaken. If someone rejects you or distances themselves from you they will weaken you in the sense you no longer have their support. The more support you have the stronger you are. If you are in the hospital and no one visits you it is much harder to recover than if you have a string of visitors encouraging you and supporting you. The word sane’ which we translate as hate could then be applied to you if you show no support for a friend or relative when they are in need. In the Biblical sense, you are showing hatred to that person who needs you and your support. By sane’ withdrawing and rejecting someone you have a responsibility to is hating that person and you are weakening that person.
It was a really hot day today and I preferred to just stay in my air-conditioned bus as much as possible. But someone comes out to get on my bus who is in a weakened condition, I need to get out to open the door and help them into the bus and get their seat belt buckled. I did not want to help certain people onto my bus today, but I did. Two reasons really, it is my job. The second reason is that they need my help and to refuse to help someone who needed my help would fit the definition of sane’ which we translate as hate.
Now I don’t consider myself an enemy of that person if I don’t help them, but then again let’s look at the word for enemy. It is the word oyev. It sounds a little like the Yiddish word Oy vey which means oh woe and has a Germanic origin rather than Semitic. However, there are Orthodox Rabbis who will argue that Ov vey is not of a Germanic origin but of Hebrew origin. Oy is Hebrew for woe and vey is Aramaic word for woe. Regardless, the word for enemy does carry the idea of woe or dismay. An oyev enemy is someone who brings you misery or woe. If I just sat in my air-conditioned bus and let that weak person struggle to climb onto the bus and fumble with the seat belt, I am bringing the person oyev, woe, and dismay.
Let’s say you have a friend or relative in the hospital and you stay away and do not visit that person, you are bringing woe and dismay to that person and you fit the Biblical definition of an enemy oyev. By doing this you are distancing yourself or rejecting that person which is sane’ the Biblical definition of hatred. That person can lay in his hospital bed and believe that you are his enemy who hates him with a cruel hate.
But let’s make this more personal. Maybe you feel you cannot relate to this verse because you do not feel you have enemies who hate you with a cruel hate. Note the word cruel is chamas which is a damaging sane’ rejection and distancing. You may have people who bring you sadness and woe because they distance themselves from you. If so they are the Biblical equivalent of a sane’ enemy who damages you with a damaging rejection that just weakens you spiritually. They may be the last to admit that they are your enemy and hate you with a cruel hate but by the specific Hebrew words used here, they do.
Having said this I think we all can now relate to this study verse on some level. We have all had people who brought us woe (enemy, oyev) and distanced themselves from us when we really needed them (hate, sane’) and it really did damage (chamas cruel) us. So what do we ask God to do? The Psalmist is not asking God to destroy them, let them know how cruel they are and punish them. He only asks that God consider them
That word consider is a word already used in this Psalm which was rendered as look. It is the word ra’ah which means to see with physical and/or spiritual eyes. The Psalmist is indicating where he wants God to direct His attention and that is to those who are bringing him sorrow by their rejection which is damaging his peace of mind.
If you are a pastor you may relate very well to this. There are people in your church who will just criticize you for everything you do. You cannot sneeze without that person talking about it, discussing the reasons behind it, the style and probably saying he could do it better. Of course they will never admit to being your enemy and hating you with a cruel hate, but such people will weaken you. What is your cry to God? To destroy them, humiliate them? The Psalmist only wanted God to focus on what they were doing to him and how they were weakening him.
From the previous verses we learn that the Psalmist knows what it is that will deliver him from those who are weakening him with their criticism. That is the panah, the presence of God. The presence of God in our lives does solve a lot of problems.
Hi there! Thank you for reading this Daily Word Study. Can I ask a favor? Share this Daily Word Study with your friends on Facebook and Twitter by clicking one of the icons below.
Thanks & Blessings, it means a lot to me!
From the previous verses we learn that the Psalmist knows what it is that will deliver him from those who are weakening him with their criticism. That is the panah, the presence of God. The presence of God in our lives does solve a lot of problems.
The presence of God is brings Peace beyond any comprehension. Thank you for another Powerful Testimony of God’s Redemption power.
I lay odds that the people who read your word studies just roll their eyes at what goes on in the political arena. There are many of us that are just barely hanging in there both physically and financially in these end times without any support or help from our grown children. David Wilkerson prophesied years ago that the chidren would turn against their parents. This has happened to many seniors. When your children distance themselves from you, it really weakens you. This word study really fit what we are going through.
Dear Laura,
In the last paragraph you use the word – panah- which could mean as in Strongs 6437 , turn or look; whereas strongs 6440 – panim or paneh means face as in presence of God. The latter is taken from the former, various online lexicons.
Hello Tim, actually Chaim wrote this study. However, I along with Chaim, teach Hebrew and understand how to research words. It can also mean “the presence of God” as Chaim wrote. Consider joining us ob All Access Learning Channel where we can show you hoe to go beyond the lexicon in understanding Biblical Hebrew. http://www.HebrewWordStudy.com
Hello Tim, It’s actually Chaim who wrote this and it does also mean “The Presence Of God” as well and I know this because I also teach along with Chaim on the All Access Learning Channel Why don’t you consider joining us there and we can show you how to go beyond the Lexicon to get a fuller and richer understanding of the Words of scripture. http://www.HebrewWordStudy.com