Watchtower ONLINE LIBRARY
Watchtower
ONLINE LIBRARY
English
  • BIBLE
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • MEETINGS
  • ad p. 983
  • Juniper

No video available for this selection.

Sorry, there was an error loading the video.

  • Juniper
  • Aid to Bible Understanding
  • Similar Material
  • Juniper
    Insight on the Scriptures, Volume 2
  • Cypress
    Aid to Bible Understanding
  • Cypress
    Insight on the Scriptures, Volume 1
  • Ash
    Aid to Bible Understanding
See More
Aid to Bible Understanding
ad p. 983

JUNIPER

1. [Heb., berohshʹ].

The Hebrew name for this tree has been translated in different ways, as “fir,” “cypress,” and so forth; however, some authorities recommend the juniper tree on good basis. (See Koehler and Baumgartner’s Lexicon in Veteris Testamenti Libros, page 148; The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible, Volume 2, page 293.) Since the tree was imported from Lebanon by King Solomon (1 Ki. 5:8-10; 9:11; 2 Chron. 2:8), it may be identified with the Juniperus excelsa, a tall, robust evergreen growing up to sixty-five feet (19.8 meters) in height, with spreading branches, small scalelike leaves, and dark, small, globular fruit. It is highly fragrant. The timber from this juniper tree is greatly valued for its durability.

The Juniperus excelsa is a native of Lebanon and is regularly associated with that land, being included with other trees as the “glory of Lebanon.” (2 Ki. 19:23; Isa. 14:8; 37:24; 60:13) The psalmist spoke of the juniper trees as the “house” or nesting place of storks. (Ps. 104:17) Juniper wood was used extensively in the temple built by Solomon. (2 Chron. 3:5) The leaves of the main doors were made of juniper wood (1 Ki. 6:34), and the floor was overlaid with it. (1 Ki. 6:15) It is elsewhere spoken of as being used for rafters (Song of Sol. 1:17), planking for ships (Ezek. 27:5), spear shafts (Nah. 2:3) and musical instruments. (2 Sam. 6:5) As a “luxuriant tree” it is used in the restoration prophecies to describe the beauty and fruitful fertility to be brought to the land of God’s people.—Isa. 41:19; 55:13; 60:13.

2. [Heb., ʽaroh·ʽerʹ or ʽar·ʽarʹ]. The Arabic word ʽarʽar aids in identifying this tree as probably the Juniperus phoenicia, a shrublike tree to be found in the Sinai region and also in the area of the Desert of Edom. The root word in the Hebrew from which the tree’s name is drawn has the idea of “nakedness” or being “stripped” (compare Psalm 102:17), and this dwarf juniper is correspondingly described as of rather gloomy appearance, growing in rocky parts of the desert and on crags. It is fittingly used in the book of Jeremiah when comparing the man whose heart turns away from Jehovah with a “solitary tree [ʽar·ʽarʹ] in the desert plain,” and also in warning the Moabites to take flight and become “like a juniper tree [ʽaroh·ʽerʹ] in the wilderness.”—Jer. 17:5, 6; 48:1, 6.

[Picture on page 983]

The juniper’s scalelike leaves and dark round fruit are evident here

    English Publications (1950-2026)
    Log Out
    Log In
    • English
    • Share
    • Preferences
    • Copyright © 2025 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Privacy Settings
    • JW.ORG
    • Log In
    Share