Harden

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

King James Dictionary [1]

H`ARDEN, h`ardn. To make hard or more hard to make firm or compact to indurate as, to harden iron or steel to harden clay.

1. To confirm in effrontery to make impudent as, to harden the face. 2. To make obstinate, unyielding or refractory as, to harden the neck.  Jeremiah 19 3. To confirm in wickedness, opposition or enmity to make obdurate.

Why then do ye harden your hearts, as Pharaoh and the Egyptians hardened their hearts?  1 Samuel 6

So God is said to harden the heart, when he withdraws the influences of his spirit from men, and leaves them to pursue their own corrupt inclinations.

4. To make insensible or unfeeling as, to harden one against impressions of pity or tenderness. 5. To make firm to endure with constancy.

I would harden myself in sorrow.  Job 6

6. To inure to render firm or less liable to injury, by exposure or use as, to harden to a climate or to labor.

H`ARDEN, h`ardn. To become hard or more hard to acquire solidity or more compactness. Mortar hardens by drying.

1. To become unfeeling. 2. To become inured. 3. To indurate, as flesh.

Webster's Dictionary [2]

(1): ( v. i.) To become confirmed or strengthened, in either a good or a bad sense.

(2): ( v. t.) To make hard or harder; to make firm or compact; to indurate; as, to harden clay or iron.

(3): ( v. t.) To accustom by labor or suffering to endure with constancy; to strengthen; to stiffen; to inure; also, to confirm in wickedness or shame; to make unimpressionable.

(4): ( v. i.) To become hard or harder; to acquire solidity, or more compactness; as, mortar hardens by drying.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [3]

har´d ' n ( חזק , ḥāzaḳ , קשׁה , ḳāshāh  ; σκληρύνω , sklērúnō ):

(1) "Harden" occurs most frequently in the phrase "to harden the heart," or "the neck." This hardening of men's hearts is attributed both to God and to men themselves, e.g. with reference to the hearts of Pharaoh and the Egyptians; the Hiphil of ḥāzaḳ , "to make strong," is frequently used in this connection (  Exodus 4:21 , "I will harden his heart," the Revised Version margin (Hebrew) "make strong";  Exodus 7:13 , "And he hardened P.'s heart," the Revised Version (British and American) "was hardened," margin (Hebrew) "was strong";  Exodus 7:22;  Exodus 8:19;  Exodus 9:12;  Exodus 10:20 ,  Exodus 10:27 , etc.;  Exodus 14:17 , "I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians," the Revised Version margin (Hebrew) "make strong"; compare  Joshua 11:20 ); ḳāshāh , "to be heavy," "to make hard" ( Exodus 7:3 ); kābhēdh , "heavy," "slow," "hard," not easily moved ( Exodus 10:1 , the Revised Version margin (Hebrew) "made heavy"). When the hardening is attributed to man's own act kābhēdh is generally used ( Exodus 8:15 , "He hardened his heart, and hearkened not," the Revised Version margin (Hebrew) "made heavy";  Exodus 8:32 , "Pharaoh hardened his heart" (the Revised Version margin as before);  Exodus 9:7 ,  Exodus 9:34;  1 Samuel 6:6 twice). The "hardening" of men's hearts by God is in the way of punishment, but it is always a consequence of their own self-hardening. In Pharaoh's case we read that "he hardened his heart" against the appeal to free the Israelites; so hardening himself, he became always more confirmed in his obstinacy, till he brought the final doom upon himself. This is how sin is made to become its own punishment. It was not confined to Pharaoh and the Egyptians nor does it belong to the past only. As Paul says (  Romans 9:18 ),"Whom he will he hardeneth" ( sklērunō );  Exodus 11:7 , "The election obtained it, and the rest were hardened" (the Revised Version (British and American) and King James Version margin, pōróō , "to make hard" or "callous");  Exodus 11:1-10 :25, a "Hardening in part hath befallen Israel" ( pō̇rōsis ); compare  John 12:40 (from   Isaiah 6:10 ), "He hath blinded their eyes, and he hardened their heart";  Isaiah 63:17 , "O Yahweh, why dost thou make us to err from thy ways, and hardenest our heart from thy fear?" ( ḳāshaḥ , "to harden"); compare on the other side, as expressing the human blameworthiness,  Job 9:4 , "Who hath hardened himself against him, and prospered?"  Mark 3:5 , "being grieved at the hardening of their heart;"  Mark 6:52 , "Their heart was hardened";  Romans 2:5 , "after thy hardness and impenitent heart." In Hebrew religious thought everything was directly attributed to God, and the hardening is God's work, in His physical and ethical constitution and laws of man's nature; but it is always the consequence of human action out of harmony therewith. Other instances of sklērunō are in  Acts 19:9;  Hebrews 3:8 ,  Hebrews 3:13 ,  Hebrews 3:15;  Hebrews 4:7 .

(2) "Harden" in the sense of "to fortify one's self" (make one's self hard) is the translation of ṣāladh , "to leap," "exult" (  Job 6:10 the King James Version, "I would harden myself in sorrow," the Revised Version (British and American) "Let me exult in pain," margin "harden myself").

(3) In  Proverbs 21:29 "harden" has the meaning of "boldness," "defiance" or "shamelessness" (brazen-faced); ‛āzaz , Hiphil, "to strengthen one's countenance," "A wicked man hardeneth his face"; Delitzsch, "A godless man showeth boldness in his mien"; compare  Proverbs 7:13;  Ecclesiastes 8:1; see also Hard .

For "harden" the Revised Version (British and American) has "stubborn" ( Exodus 7:14;  Exodus 9:7 , margin "heavy"); "hardenest" ( Isaiah 63:17 ); "made stiff" ( Jeremiah 7:26;  Jeremiah 19:15 ); for "is hardened" ( Job 39:16 , the American Standard Revised Version "dealeth hardly," and the English Revised Version margin); "at the hardening" instead of "for the hardness" ( Mark 3:5 ); "hardening" for "blindness" ( Ephesians 4:18 ).

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