What is The World

The Biblical Words for “World” (Hebrew & Greek)

The English word “world” is actually a cluster of ideas in Scripture:

  • the physical earth
  • humanity
  • the nations
  • the present age
  • the fallen system opposed to God

Let’s break down the original words.

HEBREW TERMS (Old Testament)

A. אֶרֶץ — ’erets

Meaning: earth, land, ground, territory, the whole earth.

This is the most common Hebrew word for the physical world.

Key ideas:

  • the planet
  • the land of Israel
  • the ground itself
  • the inhabited earth

Key uses:

  • Genesis 1:1 — “God created the heavens and the earth.”
  • Psalm 24:1 — “The earth is the LORD’s…”

This is the physical world.

B. תֵּבֵל — tevel

Meaning: the inhabited world, the productive earth.

This word emphasizes the ordered, inhabited, flourishing world.

Key uses:

  • Psalm 96:10 — “The world is firmly established.”
  • Isaiah 13:11 — God will punish the world for its evil.

This is the civilized, populated world.

C. עוֹלָם — olam

Meaning: age, eternity, forever, the long duration of time.

Not “world” in the physical sense — but often translated as “world” in older English Bibles (“world without end”).

Key ideas:

  • the age
  • the long span of time
  • eternity
  • the world as a time‑realm

Key uses:

  • Ecclesiastes 3:11 — God has set olam in the human heart.
  • Psalm 90:2 — “From everlasting to everlasting…”

This is the world as an age or era.

GREEK TERMS (New Testament)

The NT uses three major Greek words for “world,” each with a different meaning.

A. κόσμος — kosmos

Meaning: world, ordered system, humanity, the world-system.

This is the most important NT word for “world.”

It can mean:

  • the physical world
  • the human race
  • the world system opposed to God
  • the beauty and order of creation

Key uses:

  • John 3:16 — “God so loved the world…” (humanity)
  • John 15:19 — “The world hates you…” (fallen system)
  • 1 John 2:15 — “Do not love the world…” (evil order)
  • Romans 1:20 — creation reveals God (physical world)

Kosmos is multi-layered:

  • God loves the world
  • but believers must not love the world-system

This tension is central to NT theology.

B. οἰκουμένη — oikoumenē

Meaning: the inhabited world, the civilized world, the Roman Empire.

Key ideas:

  • the populated world
  • the political world
  • the empire

Key uses:

  • Luke 2:1 — Caesar’s census of “the whole world”
  • Acts 17:31 — God will judge “the world”
  • Revelation 3:10 — testing coming on “the whole world”

This is the humanly organized world.

C. αἰών — aiōn

Meaning: age, era, world-age, the present world order.

This is the word behind:

  • “this present age”
  • “the age to come”
  • “forever and ever”

Key uses:

  • Romans 12:2 — “Do not be conformed to this age.”
  • Matthew 28:20 — “I am with you to the end of the age.”
  • 2 Corinthians 4:4 — Satan is “the god of this age.”

This is the world as a time‑realm, not a place.

Timeline of the Concept of “World” from Genesis to Revelation

Stage 1: The Created World (Genesis 1–2)

The world is:

  • good
  • ordered
  • beautiful
  • God’s temple

The world is God’s masterpiece.

Stage 2: The Fallen World (Genesis 3–11)

The world becomes:

  • corrupted
  • violent
  • filled with rebellion

The world is broken but still God’s.

Stage 3: The World of Nations (Genesis 12–Malachi)

The world becomes:

  • the nations
  • the Gentiles
  • the political powers

Israel is called to be a light to the world.

Stage 4: The World God Loves (Gospels)

Jesus enters the world:

  • as light
  • as Savior
  • as the one who overcomes the world

John 3:16 becomes the turning point:

  • God loves the world
  • God sends His Son to save it

The world is loved but lost.

Stage 5: The World-System Opposed to God (Epistles)

Paul and John describe the world as:

  • under the power of the evil one
  • hostile to God
  • seductive
  • temporary

Believers live in the world but not of it.

Stage 6: The World to Be Judged (Revelation)

Revelation shows:

  • the world-system collapsing
  • the nations judged
  • Babylon (the world’s corruption) destroyed

The world is purged.

Stage 7: The New World (New Creation)

Revelation ends with:

  • a new heaven
  • a new earth
  • a restored world
  • God dwelling with humanity

The world is reborn.

Comparison of “World” in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam

Judaism

The world is:

  • created good
  • the stage for covenant
  • the place where God’s kingdom will be revealed
  • destined for renewal

Judaism emphasizes this world, not escape from it.

Christianity

The world is:

  • created good
  • fallen
  • loved by God
  • opposed to God
  • redeemed through Christ
  • destined for new creation

Christianity holds a dual tension:

  • love the people of the world
  • reject the world-system of evil

Islam

The world (dunyā) is:

  • a temporary testing ground
  • full of beauty but also distraction
  • not evil, but dangerous if loved too much
  • preparation for the afterlife

Islam emphasizes balance:

  • use the world
  • do not be owned by it

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