Gracious (To Be) - Vine's Expository Dictionary of Old Testament Words

Usage Number: 1
Part Of Speech: Verb
Strong's Number: H2603
Original Word: hanan

Usage Notes: "to be gracious, considerate; to show favor." This word is found in ancient Ugaritic with much the same meaning as in biblical Hebrew. But in modern Hebrew hanan seems to stress the stronger meaning of "to pardon or to show mercy." The word occurs around 80 times in the Hebrew Old Testament, the first time in Gen. 33:5: "The children which God hath graciously given thy servant." Generally, this word implies the extending of "favor," often when it is neither expected nor deserved. Hanan may express "generosity," a gift from the heart (Psa. 37:21). God especially is the source of undeserved "favor" (Gen. 33:11), and He is asked repeatedly for such "gracious" acts as only He can do (Num. 6:25; Gen. 43:29). The psalmist prays: "… Grant me thy law graciously" (Psa. 119:29).

God's "favor" is especially seen in His deliverance from one's enemies or surrounding evils (Psa. 77:9; Amos 5:15). However, God extends His "graciousness" in His own sovereign way and will, to whomever He chooses (Exod. 33:19). In many ways, hanan combines the meaning of the Greek charis (with the general classical Greek sense of "charm" or "graciousness") and the New Testament sense of "undeserved favor" or "mercy."

Usage Number: 2
Part Of Speech: Noun
Strong's Number: H2580
Original Word: hen

Usage Notes: "favor; grace." The root with the meaning "to favor someone" is a common Semitic term. In Akkadian, the verb enenu ("to have compassion") is related to hinnû ("favor"), which occurs only as a proper noun. The Hebrew noun hen occurs 69 times, mainly in the Pentateuch and in the historical books through Samuel. The word's frequency increases in the poetic books, but it is rare in the prophetic books. The first occurrence is in Gen. 6:8: "But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord." The basic meaning of hen is "favor." Whatever is "pleasant and agreeable" can be described by this word. When a woman is said to have hen, she is a "gracious" woman (Prov. 11:16); or the word may have the negative association of being "beautiful without sense" (Prov. 31:30). A person's speech may be characterized by "graciousness": "He that loveth pureness of heart, for the grace of his lips the king shall be his friend" (Prov. 22:11; cf. Psa. 45:2).

Hen also denotes the response to whatever is "agreeable." The verbs used with "favor" are: "give favor" (Gen. 39:21), "obtain favor" (Exod. 3:21), and "find favor" (Gen. 6:8, rsv). The idioms are equivalent to the English verbs "to like" or "to love": "[She said to him, Why have I found favor in your eyes, that you should take notice of me, when I am a foreigner" (Ruth 2:10, rsv).

The Septuagint translations are: charis ("grace; favor; graciousness; attractiveness") and eleos ("mercy; compassion; pity").
Usage Number: 3
Part Of Speech: Adjective
Strong's Number: H2587
Original Word: hannûn

Usage Notes: "gracious." One of the word's 13 occurrences is in Exod. 34:6: "And the Lord passed by before him [Moses], and proclaimed, The Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth…."

Vine's Expository Dictionary of Old Testament Words