def ( חרשׁ , ḥērēsh ; κωφός , kōphós ): Used either in the physical sense, or figuratively as expressing unwillingness to hear the Divine message ( Psalm 58:4 ), or incapacity to understand it for want of spirituality (Psalm 38:13 ). The prophetic utterances were sufficiently forcible to compel even such to hear (Isaiah 42:18; Isaiah 43:8 ) and thereby to receive the Divine mercy (Isaiah 29:18; Isaiah 35:5 ).
The expression "deaf adder that stoppeth her car" (Psalm 58:4 ) alludes to a curious notion that the adder, to avoid hearing the voice of the charmer, laid its head with one car on the ground and stopped the other with the tip of its tail (Diary of John Manninghan , 1602). The adder is called deaf by Shakespeare (2 Hen VI , iii, 2, 76; Troilus and Cressida , ii, 2, 172). The erroneous idea probably arose from the absence of external ears.
Physical deafness was regarded as a judgment from God (Exodus 4:11; Micah 7:16 ), and it was consequently impious to curse the deaf (Leviticus 19:14 ). In New Testament times deafness and kindred defects were attributed to evil spirits (Mark 9:18 ). See DUMB .
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (ISBE) was edited by James Orr, John Nuelsen, Edgar Mullins, Morris Evans, and Melvin Grove Kyle and was published complete in 1939. This web site includes the complete text.
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