Lexical Summary chalal: Slain, pierced, wounded, dead Original Word: חָלָל Strong's Exhaustive Concordance kill, profane, slain man, slew, deadly wounded From chalal; pierced (especially to death); figuratively, polluted -- kill, profane, slain (man), X slew, (deadly) wounded. see HEBREW chalal Brown-Driver-Briggs I. חָלָל90 noun masculine pierced, ׳ח absolute Deuteronomy 21:1 25t.; construct חֲלַל Numbers 19:16; plural חֲלָלִים Numbers 23:24 28t.; construct חַלְלֵי Isaiah 22:2 21t.; suffix חֲלָלֶיךָ Psalm 69:27, etc. + 11 t. suffixes; — 1 pierced, fatally wounded Psalm 69:27; Jeremiah 51:52; Ezekiel 26:15; Ezekiel 30:24; Lamentations 2:12. Elsewhere 2 slain Numbers 19:18; Numbers 31:8,19 (P), etc.; singular collective 2 Samuel 23:8,18 = 1 Chronicles 11:11,20; Ezekiel 6:7; Ezekiel 30:11, etc., but usually plural 1 Samuel 17:52 (RV wounded) Jeremiah 51:49, etc.; חַלְלֵי חֶרֶב Isaiah 22:2; Jeremiah 14:18; Ezekiel 31:17,18; Ezekiel 32:20,21,25,28,29,30,31,32; Zephaniah 2:12; Lamentations 4:9; חַלְלֵי רעב Lamentations 4:9; חַלְלֵי יהוה Isaiah 66:16; Jeremiah 25:33. II. חָלָל adjective profaned; — חָלָל רָשָׁע (read construct חֲלַל SS) profaned, dishonoured wicked one Ezekiel 21:30 (so AV Thes MV SS Co Or; but RV H" deadly wounded, Ew Sm fallen, slain); plural construct חַלְלֵי רְשָׁעִים Ezekiel 21:34; feminine singular חֲלָלָה of woman sexually dishonoured Leviticus 21:7,14 (H; "" זָנָה). Topical Lexicon Meaning and Overview חָלָל (chalal, Strong’s 2491) designates the slain, the pierced, or the defiled corpse. Across roughly ninety-three Old Testament occurrences the noun keeps two central ideas in tension: (1) violent death—especially in warfare—and (2) the ritual impurity that contact with such death conveys. The word therefore carries weight both in narratives of battle and in legislation touching holiness. Foundational Usage in Genesis Genesis 34:27 introduces the theme: “The sons of Jacob came upon the slain and looted the city, because their sister had been defiled.” Here chalal marks both the victims of the Shechemite massacre and the moral stain that triggered the brothers’ vengeance. From the outset chalal alerts readers to a breach in covenant ethics that must be reckoned with. Purity and Ritual Law Leviticus and Numbers integrate chalal into Israel’s holiness code: In Numbers 31 purification with the water of cleansing is required for soldiers who have “killed a person” (31:19). The slain body defiles not only the individual but also the camp, underscoring the incompatibility of death’s corruption with the presence of the living God (cf. Deuteronomy 23:14). Justice and the Sanctity of Life Deuteronomy 21:1-9 prescribes a solemn ritual when “a man is found slain” in open country. The elders, priests, heifer, and flowing water all testify that innocent blood pollutes the land (cf. Numbers 35:33) until atonement is made. Chalal therefore establishes the theological baseline that every life is sacred and that blood guilt demands resolution. Warfare and National Tragedy The majority of occurrences cluster in historical narratives that recount Israel’s battles: Prophetic Oracles of Judgment Prophets employ chalal to paint scenes of divine retribution: Psalms and Wisdom Literature Psalm 88:5: “I am set apart with the dead, like the slain who lie in the grave,” uses chalal to voice the psalmist’s extreme desolation. Conversely, Psalm 110:6 celebrates Messiah’s final victory: “He will judge the nations, heaping up the dead.” Proverbs 7:26 warns that the seductive adulteress’s victims are “a mighty host of the slain,” equating moral folly with spiritual demise. Messianic Foreshadowing Isaiah 53 employs the cognate verb (“He was pierced”) to describe the Suffering Servant. Although the noun chalal itself does not appear in the verse, the semantic link directs readers to see Christ as the ultimate “slain” One. Revelation later echoes this typology, calling Jesus “the Lamb who was slain,” thereby gathering all Old Testament chalal into a single redemptive focal point. His resurrection, by contrast, empties the category of its finality for those united to Him. Eschatological Hope While chalal graphically depicts judgment, Scripture also promises reversal. Ezekiel’s valley of dry bones culminates in the Spirit’s life-giving breath, and Daniel 12:2 foresees those “who sleep in the dust” awakening. Thus chalal underscores humanity’s universal sentence of death, but it also frames the gospel promise that death itself will be swallowed up in victory (Isaiah 25:8; 1 Corinthians 15:54). Ministry and Pastoral Implications 1. Funeral and Bereavement Care. Numbers 19 demonstrates that proximity to the dead carries both emotional sorrow and spiritual weight. Pastors help mourners confront death realistically while pointing to cleansing through Christ (Hebrews 9:14). Summary חָלָל binds together the biblical testimony to the horror of death, the seriousness of defilement, and the necessity of atonement. Whether on ancient battlefields, in prophetic visions, or at the empty tomb, the slain body points simultaneously to sin’s wage and to the righteousness of the God who both judges and saves. Forms and Transliterations בֶּֽחָלָ֗ל בֶֽחָלָ֔ל בַּֽחֲלַל־ בחלל בחלל־ הֶחָלָ֑ל הֶחָלָֽל׃ הַ֣חֲלָלִ֔ים הַֽחֲלָלִ֑ים הַחֲלָלִ֑ים החלל החלל׃ החללים וְחַלְלֵיהֶ֣ם וַחֲלָלָ֣ה וַחֲלָלָה֙ וחללה וחלליהם חֲ֝לָלִ֗ים חֲ֠לָלִים חֲלָלִ֔ים חֲלָלִ֖ים חֲלָלִ֗ים חֲלָלִ֜ים חֲלָלִ֣ים חֲלָלִ֤ים חֲלָלִ֥ים חֲלָלִ֨ים ׀ חֲלָלִֽים׃ חֲלָלִים֙ חֲלָלִים֩ חֲלָלֵֽינוּ׃ חֲלָלֶ֖יהָ חֲלָלֶ֣יךָ חֲלָלַ֙יִךְ֙ חֲלָלָ֑יו חַֽלְלֵ֣י חַֽלְלֵ֤י חַֽלְלֵ֥י חַלְלֵי־ חַלְלֵיהֶ֗ם חַלְלֵיהֶֽם׃ חַלְלֵיכֶ֔ם חַלְלֵיכֶ֖ם חַלְלֵיכֶם֙ חָלָ֑ל חָלָ֖ל חָלָ֗ל חָלָ֜ל חָלָ֣ל חָלָֽל׃ חָלָל֙ חלל חלל׃ חללי חללי־ חלליה חלליהם חלליהם׃ חלליו חלליך חלליכם חללים חללים׃ חללינו׃ כֶּֽחָלָל֙ כֶחָלָ֣ל כחלל מֵֽחַלְלֵ֖י מחללי ba·ḥă·lal- bachalal baḥălal- be·ḥā·lāl ḇe·ḥā·lāl bechaLal beḥālāl ḇeḥālāl chaLal chalaLav chalaLayich chalaLeicha chalaLeiha chalaLeinu chalaLim chalLei challeiChem challeiHem chechaLal ha·ḥă·lā·lîm ḥă·lā·la·yiḵ ḥă·lā·lāw ḥă·lā·le·hā ḥă·lā·le·ḵā ḥă·lā·lê·nū ḥă·lā·lîm ḥā·lāl hachalaLim haḥălālîm ḥal·lê ḥal·lê- ḥal·lê·hem ḥal·lê·ḵem ḥālāl ḥălālāw ḥălālayiḵ ḥălālehā ḥălāleḵā ḥălālênū ḥălālîm ḥallê ḥallê- ḥallêhem ḥallêḵem he·ḥā·lāl hechaLal heḥālāl ke·ḥā·lāl ḵe·ḥā·lāl kechaLal keḥālāl ḵeḥālāl mê·ḥal·lê mechalLei mêḥallê vachalaLah vechaLal vechalleiHem wa·ḥă·lā·lāh waḥălālāh wə·ḥal·lê·hem wəḥallêhemLinks Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel TextsEnglishman's Concordance Genesis 34:27 HEB: בָּ֚אוּ עַל־ הַ֣חֲלָלִ֔ים וַיָּבֹ֖זּוּ הָעִ֑יר NAS: came upon the slain and looted KJV: came upon the slain, and spoiled INT: came upon the slain and looted the city Leviticus 21:7 Leviticus 21:14 Numbers 19:16 Numbers 19:18 Numbers 23:24 Numbers 31:8 Numbers 31:19 Deuteronomy 21:1 Deuteronomy 21:2 Deuteronomy 21:3 Deuteronomy 21:6 Deuteronomy 32:42 Joshua 11:6 Joshua 13:22 Judges 9:40 Judges 16:24 Judges 20:31 Judges 20:39 1 Samuel 17:52 1 Samuel 31:1 1 Samuel 31:8 2 Samuel 1:19 2 Samuel 1:22 2 Samuel 1:25 93 Occurrences |