What does the word Pesach Mean?

By Tim Hegg

As we approach the coming of Passover, we are preparing our homes and our hearts to celebrate this annual festival of our redemption, זְמַן‭ ‬חְרוּתֵינוּ, z’man ch’ruteinu,” the time of our freedom.” As we consider the rich history of this appointed time, we recognize that the primary focus of our celebration is the awesome power and faithfulness of God, Who brought about our redemption from Egypt, an event that would forever stand as a model and demonstration of how God effects redemption, not only historically but also eternally.

Interestingly, the English word “Passover” has become so commonplace that many people never stop to ask what the word actually conveys. Most people when asked what the word “Passover” means have this idea: that as God went throughout Egypt taking the life of the firstborn in each household, He “skipped” or “passed over” the houses of the Israelites marked by the blood upon the doorposts. For many people, the word “Passover” means to “pass by” or “skip.” But is this really what the Hebrew verb and its corresponding noun mean? While there is some debate about the range of meaning these Hebrew words convey, when we look at the various contexts in which the words are used, we discover some important and interesting facts.

The Hebrew verb (פָּסַח, pasach) from which we derive the noun (פֶּסָחpesach ,“passover,) appears to convey “to limp,” “to stagger, “to jump” or “move with an uneven gate” or even to “perform a hobbling dance‭.‬“ Note the following examples all of which employ words derived form the root pasach:

For no one who has a defect shall approach: a blind man, or a lame man, (פִּסֵּח ‬ piseich), or he who has a disfigured face, or any deformed limb. (Lev 21:18)

Now Jonathan, Saul’s son, had a son crippled in his feet. He was five years old when the report of Saul and Jonathan came from Jezreel, and his nurse took him up and fled. And it happened that in her hurry to flee, he fell and became lame
(וַיִּפָּסֵחַ, vayipaseiach).

Then they took the ox which was given them and they prepared it and called on the name of Baal from morning until noon saying, “O Baal, answer us.” But there was no voice and no one answered. And they leaped וַיְפַסְּחוּ‭ ‬,‬, (vayephas’chu)about the altar which they made. (1Kings 18:26)

Indeed, throughout the Tanach, the Hebrew word that most often stands behind our English word “lame” is פִּסֵחַ (piseiach), based upon the verb פָּסַח (pasach) from which the noun פֶּסַח (pesach) is derived.

Given these data, one wonders why the verb pasach and the derived noun pesach would have been used in connection with the Exodus and the subsequent festival that commemorates it. The fact that the early English translators coined the word “Passover” tells us how they understood the Hebrew word: God “passed by” or “skipped” the Israelites homes as He went about enacting the final plague against the first born of Egypt. But it seems strange that a Hebrew word so often associated with lameness, stumbling, or an uneven gait would be used in this way. Perhaps there is another explanation.

When we look at the Exodus text that describes the events of Israel’s redemption from Egypt, we discover that two different verbs are used: עָבַר (‘avar), “to pass by, cross over” and פָּסַח (pasach), the verb we are studying.

For I will go through (‭,‬עָבַרְתִּ avarti)the land of Egypt on that night, and will strike down all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgments—I am the LORD. (Ex 12:12)

For the LORD will pass through (עָבַר, ‘avar) to smite the Egyptians; and when He sees the blood on the lintel and on the two doorposts, the LORD will pass over (עָבַר, Pasach) the door and will not allow the destroyer to come in to your houses to smite you. (Ex 12:23)

Here we find very interesting language! Adonai is the One Who is going throughout the land of Egypt to strike down the firstborn, yet when He sees the blood upon the doorposts of the Israelite homes, He “passes over the door,” the result of which is that He “will not allow the destroyer” to come into the house.

There are two other texts which utilize the verb פָּסַח (pasach) which may shed light on the meaning of pasach as it is used in connection with the exodus from Egypt and the Passover festival that commemorates that momentous event. These are 1Kings 18:21 and Isaiah 31:5. In 1Kings 18:21, Elijah is admonishing the people of Israel to put their complete faith in Adonai. He commands them to stop “wavering” between two options (trusting Adonai or trusting Ba’al):

Elijah came near to all the people and said, “How long will you hesitate between two opinions? If the LORD is God, follow Him; but if Baal, follow him.” But the people did not answer him a word. (1 Kings 18:21)

Of interest to us is the phrase “How long will you hesitate between two opinions?” The Hebrew is עַד–מָתַי‭ ‬אַתֶּם‭ ‬פֹּסְחִים‭ ‬עַל–שְׁתֵּי‭ ‬הַסְּעִפִּים. The Hebrew word translated “hesitate” is our word pasach. We could say it this way: “How long will you keep on pasaching between two opinions?” Since the Hebrew lexicons suggest that the meaning “to limp/to wobble” is most often the basic sense of the verb, the English translators took it to mean “How long will you stumble around without making up your mind?” Note the KJV: “How long halt ye between two opinions?” and the JPS: “How long will you keep hopping between two opinions?” But there are other factors that raise questions about how to translate this verse. First, the word translated “opinions” is from a cluster of Hebrew nouns (all based on the root סָעַף, sa‘aph) which most likely means “branches” or even the “Y” of a branch. Note the following: Is 17:6; 27:10, “branch” (סָעִיף); Is 10:33, “trim branches” (מְסָעֵף); Ezek 31:6, 8, “slender branch” (סְעַפָּה). Second, the preposition translated “between” is actually עַל (‘al, usually meaning “upon” or “against”) which does not really convey the sense of “between.” If that had been the meaning intended, we would expect the preposition בֵּין (bein, “between,” “among”) to be used. Given these facts, we have good cause to seek a better translation.

It may be that the use of the verb pasach in Is 31:5 offers an important clue, not only to the proper understanding of 1Kings 18:21, but also to the use of the verb pasach in the exodus narrative:

Like the birds that fly, even so will the LORD of Hosts shield Jerusalem, shielding and saving, protecting (פָּסֹח, pasoach) rescuing. (Is 31:5)

In this text Isaiah is describing the saving work of Adonai in regard to Jerusalem, and he does so by using the metaphor of a bird. When a mother bird is protecting her young in the nest, she may flutter above them to warn off predators. What is striking in the Is 31:5 text is that our verb pasach is used together with the verbs נָגַן, nagan, “to defend,” נָצַל, natzal, “to save, deliver,” and מָלַט, malat, “to rescue.” Isaiah pictures Adonai as a bird hovering over her nest to defend, save, protect, and rescue Jerusalem. Here, our verb pasach clearly means “to protect,” not “to pass by” or “to skip over.”

Could this same metaphor, of a fluttering bird, be at work in 1Ki 18:21 and help explain the use of the verb pasach there? It seems quite likely that it is. When we remember that the Hebrew word translated “opinions” could well mean “branches,” the picture comes into focus. This is what Elijah is telling the people of Israel: “Stop being like a bird fluttering over two branches, unable to decide upon which one to perch. Land already!”

Thus, from the basic sense of “limp” or “wobble,” the verb also was used to mean “go back and forth” and could describe the actions of a bird hovering or fluttering over branches or over the nest. Given this extended semantic range, Isaiah chooses pasach to describe how a bird might protect its young within the nest and applies this to the purpose of God to shield, save, protect, and rescue Jerusalem.

Now this meaning of the verb fits the context of Exodus 12:28 perfectly. Adonai Himself “pasachs” over the door of the Israelite homes to protect them from the destroyer. But this raises another question: is Adonai the destroyer in the 10th plague or is it someone else? As I noted above, Ex 12:12 makes it clear that it was Adonai Who was going throughout the land of Egypt to smite the firstborn of the Egyptians, but in v. 23 Adonai is the One who “hovers over” the door to protect the Israelite house from “the destroyer.” What is going on here? There appears to be two individuals at work in this verse, Adonai and “the destroyer.”

In the traditional Pesach haggadah, it is emphasized that Adonai, not an angel, was the One Who smote the firstborn of Egypt. Introducing the enumeration of the 10 plagues, the haggadah recites Ex 12:12 with added commentary:

‘And the LORD brought us out of Egypt”— Not through an angel, and not through a seraph, and not through an intermediary, but the Holy One, blessed be He, in His glory and with His own Being, as it is said, “I will pass through the land of Egypt on this night, and will kill every firstborn of man and beast, and will execute judgments against all the gods of Egypt: I am the LORD.” (Ex 12:12)

“I will pass through the land of Egypt…” — I and no angel; “I will kill every firstborn…” — I and no seraph; “I will execute judgment…” — I and no intermediary; “I am the LORD” — it is I and no other.

Yet how are we to explain the fact that Adonai is both the One Who destroys and the One Who protects the Israelite homes from “the destroyer?” Once again, we see clear evidence of multiplicity in the Godhead. “The Destroyer” takes the lives of the firstborn of Egypt, yet Adonai is the One Who protects, Who “hovers over” the doors marked by the blood and protects the Israelite homes from “The Destroyer.”

Does it not seem quite evident that it was Yeshua Himself Who protected the home from the very wrath of the Almighty as it was poured out upon the Egyptians? Yes, and in precisely the same way as the homes marked by the blood were protected by Adonai Himself, so the sinner who has come to faith in Messiah is protected from the wrath of God by the very One Who was slain for their sins.

Thus, when Ex 12:23 states that “Adonai will pass over (pasach) the door,” it means that Adonai Himself will (as it were) “hover” over the door to protect all who are within. He did not “skip” the house or “pass over” the house. Instead, He actively protected the house with His very presence. This Pesach, as you celebrate the great deliverance Israel was given through the mighty hand of God, consider that “Pesach” means “to protect” and rejoice! For in the same way that the Israelites were protected from the wrath of “The Destroyer,” so we who are “in Yeshua” are protected by His “hovering over us,” having applied His own blood to the “doorposts” of our lives so that we are saved, redeemed, delivered, and protected from the wrath of God. Indeed, because of what Yeshua our Messiah has accomplished for us, it is truly “the time of our freedom!”

Tim Hegg

Tim Hegg

President / Instructor

Tim graduated from Cedarville University in 1973 with a Bachelor’s Degree in Music and Bible, with a minor in Philosophy. He entered Northwest Baptist Seminary (Tacoma, WA) in 1973, completing his M.Div. (summa cum laude) in 1976. He completed his Th.M. (summa cum laude) in 1978, also from NWBS. His Master’s Thesis was titled: “The Abrahamic Covenant and the Covenant of Grant in the Ancient Near East”. Tim taught Biblical Hebrew and Hebrew Exegesis for three years as an adjunct faculty member at Corban University School of Ministry when the school was located in Tacoma. Corban University School of Ministry is now in Salem, OR. Tim is a member of the Evangelical Theological Society and the Society of Biblical Literature, and has contributed papers at the annual meetings of both societies. Since 1990, Tim has served as one of the Overseers at Beit Hallel in Tacoma, WA. He and his wife, Paulette, have four children, nine grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.