Boundaries of the Promised Land: Geographic Chains and Appositional Syntax in Deuteronomy 4:48

Deuteronomy 4:48

מֵעֲרֹעֵ֞ר אֲשֶׁ֨ר עַל־שְׂפַת־נַ֧חַל אַרְנֹ֛ן וְעַד־הַ֥ר שִׂיאֹ֖ן ה֥וּא חֶרְמֹֽון׃

Starting Point: מֵעֲרֹעֵר


מֵעֲרֹעֵר (“from ʿAroʿer”) begins the description of the land’s extent. מִן (“from”) is contracted as מֵ before a guttural letter. עֲרֹעֵר is a known settlement east of the Jordan River, marking the southern starting point of the boundary.

Relative Description: אֲשֶׁר עַל־שְׂפַת־נַחַל אַרְנֹן


אֲשֶׁר (“which”) introduces a relative clause describing עֲרֹעֵר. עַל־שְׂפַת־נַחַל אַרְנֹן (“upon the bank of the Arnon brook”) specifies the location:

  • עַל — “upon”
  • שְׂפַת — “edge, bank” (construct of שָׂפָה)
  • נַחַל — “wadi, stream” (construct relationship: “bank of the wadi”)
  • אַרְנֹן — the specific wadi/river name

The construct chain packs geographic precision into a compact phrase, vividly situating the starting point.

Ending Point: וְעַד־הַר שִׂיאֹן הוּא חֶרְמֹון


וְעַד (“and until”) introduces the northern terminus. הַר שִׂיאֹן (“Mount Sion”) is immediately clarified with הוּא חֶרְמֹון (“that is Hermon”). The pronoun הוּא (“he/it”) serves in an appositional explanatory construction, identifying two names for the same mountain — important for ancient and later readers unfamiliar with alternate names.

Parsing Table: Key Forms in Deuteronomy 4:48


Hebrew Word Root Form Function
מֵעֲרֹעֵר ע־ר־ע Preposition + proper noun “From ʿAroʿer” — starting point of the boundary
אֲשֶׁר א־שׁ־ר Relative pronoun Introduces relative clause about location
נַחַל נ־ח־ל Noun (ms) “Wadi, stream” — locational element
הוּא ה־ו־י Pronoun (3ms) Apposition marker: “that is Hermon”

The Grammar of Geography


In Deuteronomy 4:48, Hebrew grammar crafts a boundary — not with dry coordinates, but with layered constructs, relative clauses, and appositional explanation. Names, features, and movements are tied grammatically together, making geography a living narrative that roots Israel’s covenant promises into physical space. Grammar becomes a map where memory, land, and destiny converge.

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