Lexical Summary asar or asrah: To tithe, to take a tenth Original Word: עֲשַׂר Strong's Exhaustive Concordance ten, twelve (Aramaic) masculine aasrah (Aramaic). {as-raw'}; corresponding to eser; ten -- ten, + twelve. see HEBREW eser NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Origin(Aramaic) corresponding to eser Definition ten NASB Translation 12* (1), ten (4), twelve* (1). Brown-Driver-Briggs עֲשַׂר, עַשְׂרָה noun masculine and feminine a ten (see Biblical Hebrew); — masculine (following feminine noun) Daniel 7:7,20,24; feminine (before masculine noun) Daniel 7:24; תְּרֵי עֲשַׂר = twelve (following masculine noun) Daniel 4:26; Ezra 6:17. Topical Lexicon Numerical Function in Biblical Hebrew עֲשַׂר serves as the masculine component for the compound numbers eleven through nineteen and, by extension, can denote the base number ten when joined to another numeral. Where a masculine count is required—animals in sacrifice, months in a royal chronicle, or horns in apocalyptic vision—this form is chosen instead of the more common עֶשֶׂר. The six inspired occurrences span narrative, liturgical, and prophetic settings, demonstrating the word’s flexibility and theological richness. Usage in Ezra 6:17 During the dedication of the Second Temple the returned exiles offered “twelve male goats for a sin offering for all Israel” (Ezra 6:17). The number twelve, formed by שְׁנֵים plus עֲשַׂר, intentionally matches the tribes of Israel. By employing עֲשַׂר, the writer anchors post-exilic worship to the covenant community’s original structure, underscoring continuity between pre-exilic and restored Israel. Usage in Daniel 4:29 “Twelve months later” (Daniel 4:29) marks the completing of a full year before Nebuchadnezzar’s judgment. Here עֲשַׂר quietly underlines divine patience: an entire divinely allotted cycle elapses before the prophetic word falls. The precision of the numeral stresses God’s sovereignty over time and kings. Usage in Daniel 7:7, 7:20, 7:24 Daniel’s fourth-beast vision is saturated with the numeral ten: In each line עֲשַׂר is the chosen term. Prophetic literature often invests numbers with symbolic force; ten conveys completeness of earthly power, echoing earlier usages such as the ten plagues or Decalogue. Yet in Daniel this seeming fullness is temporary and fragile: three horns fall, and an eleventh horn arises, confronting Heaven and sealing its own doom. Thus עֲשַׂר becomes a literary marker of both the pervasiveness and the limitations of human dominion under God’s overarching rule. Symbolic Theological Themes 1. Covenant Identity (Twelve) – Whether the temple dedication or the later New Jerusalem foundations, twelve points to the people of God in their ordered wholeness. Historical Context Ezra’s usage belongs to the Persian period, when Israel was politically marginal yet spiritually being reconstituted. Daniel references the Babylonian and Medo-Persian eras but look forward to eschatological fulfillment. In both settings עֲשַׂר grounds cosmic events in concrete counts, reminding readers that redemptive history moves through real chronology and measurable entities. Practical Ministry Reflections • Worship leaders can draw on Ezra 6:17 to illustrate how precise obedience in offerings reflects dedication to the covenant community. By tracing עֲשַׂר through sacrificial liturgy, royal chronicle, and apocalyptic vision, believers gain a fuller appreciation of how even Hebrew numerals proclaim God’s unchanging authority over worship, time, and nations. Forms and Transliterations עֲשַׂ֑ר עֲשַׂ֔ר עֲשַׂ֖ר עֲשַׂר֙ עַשְׂרָ֥ה עשר עשרה ‘ă·śar ‘aś·rāh ‘ăśar ‘aśrāh aSar asRahLinks Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel TextsEnglishman's Concordance Ezra 6:17 HEB: יִשְׂרָאֵל֙ תְּרֵֽי־ עֲשַׂ֔ר לְמִנְיָ֖ן שִׁבְטֵ֥י INT: of Israel second ten to the number of the tribes Daniel 4:29 Daniel 7:7 Daniel 7:20 Daniel 7:24 Daniel 7:24 6 Occurrences |